Office always a fire drill?

Is every day a Firedrill? Too much data, too little time? Can't catch up? That's why you need case chronology. The size of case files has been growing exponentially for years. Regulation demands documentation for every expense. Technology has made it easier to track specific aspects of an entity. While all this information may be meaningful, the cumulative value of all variables remains unknown. During litigation, organizing these different data sets becomes a challenge. The team that efficiently and effectively organizes the information will have the advantage. The data from these different aspects grows.

Each entity or person has different sources of data. With personal injury litigation, these sources, come in broad general categories. 1. Medical records. 2. Employment records. 3. Financial records 4. Personal communications records.

This information will form the client's perspective. More data will yield more potential additional data sources. More correlation yields a better understanding.

Let's look at an example scenario. Jane Doe was in an accident with an uninsured motorist. She has claims for a permanent back injury. Her medical records were consistent with a permanent injury. Her work timesheets demonstrate she was no longer working despite the attempt to accommodate her physical impairment. Her W2 forms indicate a significant drop in her income, while her credit card expenditure changed dramatically. Her online social media posts no longer show social engagement. Her smartphone activity data records little walking. Her driving mileage on her affiliated vehicles was limited. In this scenario, the medical records correlated with the other aspects of her life. Both plaintiff and defense attorneys see similar valuations.

In the other scenario, John Doe was involved in a similar accident and had a similar back complaint. While the medical reflects a permanent injury, the other aspects of Mr. Doe's life were inconsistent with the medical records. He continued to work, doing overtime. He received an Employee of the Month award. His credit care expenses showed continued participation in his hobbies and travel. His social media posts indicate full participation in team sports and vigorous vacation activities. The inconsistency with the medical opinions compared to the other data sets caused the plaintiff and defense counsel to reassess the case.

Case Chronology organizes All data efficiently and effectively. Spend your time on analysis, not organization. Let Case Chronology do the mundane so you can spend time using your skills to drive a better client outcome.

Get to Win-Win. Resolve the case. Put out the fire.

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