Contact Information: Lynette Tschabold Marketing Communications ZL Technologies, Inc. 2000 Concourse Drive San Jose, CA 95131 408.240.8989
ZL Technologies Explores Why Most Large Enterprise Archiving Projects Fail
ZL Unveils the Hard Questions to Ask Vendors and Avoid Failure in Large Archiving Projects
| Quelle: ZL Technologies, Inc.
SAN JOSE, CA--(Marketwire - April 9, 2009) - The task of electronic records retention and
management in large enterprises is still relatively new and the challenges
are daunting. The sheer volume of data far exceeds any other application in
the large enterprise, with the number of e-mails being generated in one
year typically exceeding the total number of documents in the U.S. Library
of Congress.
In addition to the challenge of scaling to handle such staggering data
volumes, the archiving system must also be flexible enough to accommodate
the fast-changing archiving requirements of the large enterprise, which
have evolved rapidly to include storage reduction, regulatory compliance,
litigation support, and records management.
Lacking in scalability and flexibility, the archiving products available in
the marketplace are mostly unable to deliver the performance required in
large records retention projects. For these large scale projects, the vast
majority have failed due to lack of scalability in processing and searching
and data accountability. To minimize the risk of failure, ZL Technologies
has collected below a series of key questions which relate to breaking
points encountered in many of the failed projects.
Of the many hurdles facing archiving, the most critical issues relate to
the search engine. Archiving, in the most fundamental essence, is not about
storage, but about finding. Without the ability to find, the storage
capability is rendered meaningless. To assess the search capabilities,
these are three of the key questions to ask of all vendors:
1. How fast is the search across all mailboxes?
Due to weak search engines, most archiving solutions try to narrow the
search to a small portion of the data, such as 50 mailboxes or
"custodians," because a complete search could take days. However,
escalating requirements make this approach of limited searching
unacceptable. "The traditional search by selected custodian mailboxes alone
often is no longer adequate. E-Discovery has developed to the point where,
for many, the ability to search across mailboxes in a quick and timely
manner has become a critical requirement," says George Socha of Socha
Consulting, Inc., a leading E-Discovery consultancy. "The shortcomings of a
limited custodian search can be substantial. For example, searching
custodian mailboxes for messages containing attorney email addresses in the
To:, From: and Bcc: fields may completely miss those e-mails involving
attorneys which were subsequently forwarded to other people. With forwarded
e-mail, client-attorney privileged information could be buried in the body
and may well not be found with a custodian search. A search-all-mailboxes
capability can highlight these privileged documents and help reduce the
chances of inadvertent waiver of privilege."
2. How accurate is the search?
Search accuracy is just as important to e-discovery as search speed,
especially in finding the most relevant documents and in reducing the cost
of legal time to review search results. Search capabilities such as
proximity search (finding a word within n words of another) are critically
important to reduce false positives. It should be noted that many
well-known archiving products are not able to do proximity search. A
related but equally unsettling flaw is inaccurate or inconsistent searches
whereby search results can change depending on the order of search words.
For example, searching for "promise" within 5 words of "stock" could return
different results from "stock" within 5 words of "promise." With such
inaccuracies, the archive runs the risk of non-responsiveness and
inadvertent liability exposure such as privileged waivers.
3. Does the archive's search engine have a future? Or will it trigger
punitive costs ahead?
The life of a search engine plays a critical factor in the success of the
archive. Some archiving products use an obsolete or end-of-life search
engine, such as AltaVista, where a replacement will soon be necessary.
However, when the replacement does happen, users will either be saddled
with a massive cost of data migration to the new search engine, or
encumbered with the high cost of running two separate archives. These
hidden costs should be factored in the purchase decision, as they often
exceed even the original acquisition cost.
"The above points represent only a few of the many core elements which
impact the chances of success in archiving implementations," said Kon
Leong, ZL's CEO. "Other key elements include assessing the real cost of
ownership and the quality of support for what is a complex application. The
archiving market is still in its developing stages and there needs to be a
continuing education on these critical issues."
About ZL Technologies, Inc.
Established in 1999, ZL Technologies, Inc. (ZL) provides cutting-edge
enterprise software solutions for e-mail and files archiving for regulatory
compliance, litigation support, corporate governance, and storage
management. ZL's Unified Archive, offers a single unified platform to
provide all the above capabilities, while maintaining a single copy and a
unified policy across the enterprise. With a proven track record and
enterprise clients which include top global institutions in finance and
industry, ZL has emerged as the specialized provider of large-scale email
archiving for e-discovery, records management and compliance. For more
information, please visit www.ZLTI.com