There’s a type of eDiscovery company that’s very easy to describe. It’s backed by private equity. It has a management team that came up through finance, sales, or consulting. It tracks the market, watches what competitors are building, and assembles a roadmap designed to impress a board deck. It is, in every sense of the word, run from the outside.
IntrepidX is not that company.
Our CEO came from operations. He came from eDiscovery — from the actual work, the actual problems, the late-night case emergencies and the workflows that should have taken an hour but somehow ate up ten days. He knows this industry not because he studied it, but because he lived it. And that difference shapes everything about how we operate — including why XSuite exists at all.
“I don’t love programming; I love solving problems. I like tangible results — seeing what took 10 days become one hour.”
Parkash Khatri
It Started with a Wish List
XSuite wasn’t born in a product strategy session. It started with a real wish list — a collection of things that our team genuinely needed to do their work better, and that no one in the market was offering.
So, our CEO, who has a programming background, started building. The first tool solved a real problem. Then we built another. Then another. Today that wish list has become XSuite — a growing family of apps for eDiscovery and forensics, some built inside Relativity, some standalone, that are designed to solve problems that Relativity itself doesn’t solve and that no one else has bothered to solve either.
That’s the origin. Not a market opportunity identified from 30,000 feet. A person in the weeds, frustrated by the same friction his clients were frustrated by, who decided to fix it.
No Private Equity. No Board. No Permission.
Here’s something worth saying plainly: IntrepidX has no private equity backers. We’re not beholden to a fund’s return timeline or a quarterly growth narrative. We don’t build things because a board thinks AI is hot right now. We don’t race toward whatever the rest of the market is racing toward.
The eDiscovery industry is full of companies doing exactly that — driven by PE pressure to build “the next AI thing.” They’re saturating the market with products that look innovative from the outside but don’t reflect the real, granular problems that attorneys and review teams face every day. When your priorities are set by people who have never done a document review, you end up solving problems that don’t matter and ignoring problems that do.
We get to solve what matters. And what matters is what our clients actually tell us — in real conversations, on real cases, in real moments of frustration when a workflow breaks down or a capability doesn’t exist.
“We’re not prioritizing solutions based on what a private equity board thinks is important.”
Catherine Pray
The Products in XSuite
Each tool in XSuite came from a real gap — something that didn’t exist, or that existed in such a clunky form that it might as well not have. Here’s what the suite includes today:
- SightWords™
AI-powered OCR that reads handwriting and degraded documents. Supports 164+ languages. Relativity has offered OCR for over a decade — it has never supported handwriting. Now it does. - XpressView™
Lightning-fast document viewer and translation tool, with instant page rendering and zero lag. Built for review speed when every second counts. - SearchTermValidator™
Validates dtSearch syntax against 30+ rules and auto-suggests fixes. What used to require internal scripts and expert knowledge is now a self-service tool. - RedactionManager™
Bulk find-and-replace across markup sets via saved searches. Update thousands of redactions in seconds — a task that was once manual, tedious, and error-prone. - RedactionChallenger™
AI that detects 165+ redaction types across global jurisdictions — FOIA, classification, privacy codes. Built from a real FOIA-driven client need. - WebVault™
Forensic web capture with 24-hour turnaround and chain-of-custody. Collect social media, websites, and online evidence before it disappears. - ForensicIQ™
Comprehensive forensic analysis with multi-format support and processing readiness reports. Know before you process. - XTractor™
Extract forensic images 3x faster with a multithreaded engine, metadata preservation, and hash verification.
Solving for X — Whatever X Is
Our tagline is “Solve for X.” It’s not a marketing line — it’s an operating philosophy. We don’t have a minimum case size. We don’t have a minimum problem size. Facebook or a mom-and-pop shop. A case with millions of documents or a single matter with a handful of handwritten lab notebooks. The only question we ask is: is this problem real, and does solving it materially help the person in front of us?
That orientation toward real problems is why XSuite looks the way it does. SightWords exists because handwritten documents are everywhere in banking forms, medical records, asbestos and toxic tort cases, criminal matters — and the industry had mostly decided the problem was too niche to bother with. Redaction Manager exists because review teams were manually fixing redaction sets one by one, and everyone had just accepted that this was how it worked. WebVault exists because a client needed to preserve a Facebook page for a matter, got a $1,000 quote from a competitor, and we thought: we can do this better.
None of these tools came from a trend report. All of them came from someone saying, “I have a problem,” and us saying, “Let’s fix it.”
“At bigger companies, a client problem might get shrugged off as ‘can’t be done.’ Here, we ask: how do we fix it?”
Renee Quezada
The Rarest Thing in eDiscovery
Having a CEO who builds things is, to put it plainly, extremely rare in this industry. Most eDiscovery executives are experienced in selling, managing, and scaling — but they can’t evaluate whether a tool is actually good, can’t identify the friction a workflow creates, and can’t make something better with their own hands. When a client describes a problem, they have to relay it through layers of product managers, developers, and budget approvals before anything moves.
And because XSuite runs in our environment — not yours — when a client brings a case to IntrepidX, they get access to capabilities that simply don’t exist elsewhere in the Relativity ecosystem. That’s not positioning. That’s a statement about what the tools can actually do.
What’s Next
XSuite will keep growing. Not because we have a product roadmap approved by investors, but because our clients keep having problems. As data types evolve, yesterday’s solutions stop working for today’s data. We’re close enough to the work to see those shifts coming — and to move fast when they do.
If you’ve ever hit a wall in your eDiscovery workflow — something you were told couldn’t be done, a workaround you’ve just accepted as permanent — we’d like to hear about it. That’s exactly how XSuite was built in the first place. One real problem at a time.