>> My name is Scott Sternberg
and I'm a consultant
with Berkeley Research Group
and I do litigation consulting.
So what that means is we provide economic
or statistical expertise to lawsuits
and help the legal team who is devising a
client determine their best legal strategy based
on what the data shows.
I primarily work with employment
litigation cases.
So, for example, you could
have a group of employees
who claim my employer didn't pay me
overtime properly or I missed my breaks
and my employer never compensated me for that.
So what we're really doing is diving into the
data and attempting to determine is that true.
Did the company fail to pay them properly?
If so, was it an isolated thing that was
sort of an oversight or was it some sort
of systematic thing that they
have in their payroll system
that just is not catching instances of times
when they should have been paid
and they actually were not paid.
So then we try to assess, you know, if this went
to trial would there be high economic damages
and then the lawyers, you know, their goal
is really do you want to take this to trial
and take our chances and hope for, you know,
no damages or do we want to try to settle it
because we're not sure how this
is going to play out in court.
Most of my days are not typical, but an
example of a busy day would be I come in,
I'm working on something that I was working on
yesterday or, you know, the rest of the week,
and I get a call, okay, we need to switch
cases, swear gears to a different case
which may not have been on our plates for
the past several weeks or months and there's,
you know, one of the worst things about
working in a client-based industry is
that you're always at the mercy of the client.
If the client says I need something, you
can't say well, no, you can't have it.
You say, sure, I'll get you that as soon
as I can and especially when we're dealing
with the law and there are
different legal deadlines.
Maybe the court is requesting that the
lawyers provide something right away
and so that means we need to
provide it even more right away
so that the lawyers have a chance to review it.
So, I think that that's probably one of the best
examples of a busy day where you just come in
and you think you're working on one thing,
totally have no idea something is about to hit
and this, you know, this ideally would happen
9 to 9:30 and sometimes it happens 2, 3, 4,
5 o'clock and hey, I need this by the end of
the day and if it's 5 o'clock end of the day,
you know, you're probably going
to be working until 10 or 11.