Client Social Media Discovery for Plaintiff Attorneys

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Social media has become a routine part of litigation strategy. Defense teams regularly examine posts, photos, and comments when evaluating a case, yet many plaintiff firms still lack a consistent process for reviewing client accounts. That reality is why Private Footprint will be attending the FJA John Romano Workhorse Seminar in Orlando, March 16–20.

This annual event brings together plaintiff attorneys for intensive education, networking, and more than 45 CLE credits in a single week. For firms handling personal injury litigation, it is also an opportunity to discuss one of the growing challenges in case preparation: building a consistent process for reviewing client social media activity and reducing potential litigation risk.

Why Plaintiff Firms Struggle With Social Media Review

Defense teams routinely examine social media as part of their litigation strategy, using any contradictory posts as points of scrutiny during depositions, mediation, or trial preparation.

For plaintiff firms, the challenge is rarely awareness. Most attorneys recognize the risk. The difficulty lies in consistently reviewing client accounts in a way that fits within an already busy workflow.

Manual review takes time, often falling on legal support staff who must gather and organize posts across multiple platforms. As the volume of digital content continues to grow, firms are looking for more efficient ways to conduct plaintiff attorney social media discovery while maintaining professional standards of care.

Making Social Media Review Routine And Easy

Private Footprint will be in Booth #43 to connect with attendees and discuss how law firms are approaching social media review for personal injury cases as part of their discovery process.

Attorneys and legal support staff who stop by the booth can learn how firms review both pre- and post-date-of-loss social media content to build visual timelines that establish baseline activity, lifestyle, and character context before the incident. This context helps attorneys present a clearer narrative and strengthen the value of the case.

Attendees can also see how firms are:

  • Identifying potentially harmful posts before depositions.
  • Organizing social media content into clear reports for case preparation and production.
  • Reducing hours spent on manual social media review for only $100 per client.

Across many plaintiff firms, the focus is shifting toward making client social media review a routine step in case preparation rather than an occasional or manual task.

Connect With Private Footprint At The FJA Workhorse Seminar

Are you attending the FJA John Romano Workhorse Seminar? Stop by Booth #43 to connect with our team or schedule time with us during the event to discuss how firms are reviewing client social media and reducing risk before deposition or trial.

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