Susan, the Worldox user, panicked. She couldn’t access a single document. The files were trapped on the office server, a digital hostage to the power grid. She called Marcus: “I have a deposition in ten minutes and I’m blind!”
Across the hall, associate Jay, on , was fighting a different battle. He uploaded the same PDF, but the “smart” auto-naming misread a date, filing it under the wrong matter number. He had to manually re-tag it. Then, at 9:30, the office Wi-Fi stuttered. His upload froze. He stared at the spinning blue wheel of death. worldox vs netdocuments
“NetDocuments is more expensive. It’s a subscription, so we pay forever. Migrating our 2.5 million existing documents will be a nightmare,” Marcus admitted. “But Eleanor… we aren’t an office firm anymore. We have lawyers in three time zones. Worldox requires a VPN, which slows everyone down. NetDocuments is the internet. It’s search is AI-driven, it never crashes, and it has built-in disaster recovery.” Susan, the Worldox user, panicked
Marcus Webb, the IT Director of Harrison & Reed, a 200-attorney firm, stared at the two blinking icons on his screen. On the left: the familiar, forest-green folder of . On the right: the sleek, cloud-shaped NetDocuments logo. She called Marcus: “I have a deposition in
The next day, Eleanor needed every email, draft, and memo containing the phrase “liquidated damages” from the last seven years for an audit.