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Trial Preparation Best Practices Opening Statements

Holland & Knight LLP

Openings of Openings

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In this episode of his "The Trial Lawyer's Handbook" podcast series, litigation attorney Dan Small describes different approaches to opening statements in a trial, outlining three common styles: dramatic, theme-oriented and...more

Holland & Knight LLP

The Basics of Opening Statements

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Litigation attorney Dan Small continues his insightful "Trial Lawyer's Handbook" podcast series with a new episode focused on opening statements. Drawing from his extensive trial experience, Mr. Small offers practical tips...more

Holland & Knight LLP

Podcast - The Unwritten Rules of Trial Practice

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In the first episode of his "The Trial Lawyer's Handbook" podcast series, litigation attorney Dan Small breaks down the unwritten rules of trial practice that must be learned through experience and observation over time. Mr....more

Nextpoint, Inc.

[Hybrid Event] Trial and Deposition Readiness Bootcamp - July 11th, Chicago, IL

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Join us in-person at our Chicago HQ or virtually through Zoom for this two-hour trial tools and preparation boot camp where Nextpoint’s legal technology experts will present invaluable tips and strategies to leverage...more

Butler Snow LLP

“Oh, Do I Have a Story for You…”

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I had the privilege to collect the following “war stories” for Pro Te: Solutio. Our goal was to demonstrate the wide range of litigation experience we have at Butler Snow, but as I heard these stories, I found them to be so...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Compliment in Order to Persuade

I’ve got to say it: I think I have the best readers in the whole litigation-blogging space. You’re thoughtful, committed, and willing to reach out to me with feedback and ideas for new posts. Honestly, I don’t think I could...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Reduce Resistance, Tell Stories

In legal settings, the emphasis is often on the positive act of giving arguments and evidence for a given outcome: Share the proof and the reasons to believe, and let those appeals work their magic on your audience. But there...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Add a Plot Twist to Your Trial Story

We know that movie viewers love a plot twist. A surprising turn of events can make a movie memorable, and in films like “The Usual Suspects,” or “The Sixth Sense,” your understanding and perspective on a story can suddenly...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Perfect Your Public Speaking: Six Ways to Reduce Your “Crutch Sounds”

We have all used them. It might be a repeated word or phrase like, “I would say,” “it seems to me that,” or “like.” It might be a repeated sound like “uh,” “um,” “ah,” or “er.” Not all of the speech is content; some of it is...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Be Thankful (Jurors Like You Better That Way)

In the current wave of this pandemic year, as many trials and in-person jury research projects are on hold, the social science research has continued. I’m thankful for that, and for this post, I want to appreciate a new study...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Don’t Hedge

The habit of sort of just filling in your speech with expressions of uncertainty, when you’re not really that uncertain, is probably a bad habit. I mean, I am fairly sure that these hedges cut down on your perceived...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Adapt to Evolving Attention

You’ve probably seen the claim, but is it really true that our attention spans are becoming shorter than that of a goldfish? Last year, the presentation software company called Prezi released its 2018 State of Attention...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Defendants, Include a “Here’s What You Haven’t Heard” in Your Opening Statement Introduction

The law allows counsel on the other side to deliver their opening statement first, so they get the early opportunity to tell you their story. But, there are two sides to every story. And, despite all you have heard, I...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Appreciate the Nuance of a Theme

When you are working on boiling down your message, there will often be that indefinable “something” that makes you recognize when you have the right language. A good trial theme, for example, doesn’t just summarize the...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Develop Your Story Early

In the days leading up to trial, you wrestle with the task of creating an opening statement in a complex case. Of course, you remember the core advice from your very first trial advocacy class, but the sheer complexity at...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Tap Into Your Jurors’ Reward System

Next time you’re in a public place, look around at all the people and what they’re doing. Looking at their phones? Yes! Nearly all of them. Now, some might be working. Some could be keeping up on the news or reading great...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Tell a Different Story During Closing

Lawyers tend to think of opening statement as the time for stories. But I think you’re telling a story in closing argument as well: not the same story, but a different one. And I don’t mean you should change the facts or...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Improve Your Storytelling: Seven Ways

So you have worked up your case for trial and, now the question is, what is the best way to convert all of that factual detail and law into comprehension and persuasion? The answer you’ve probably heard since your first trial...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

In Opening, Dispense With “The Evidence Will Show”

Unlike many other moments in trial, the opening statement is often defined in terms of what it isn’t. It isn’t evidence, and it isn’t argument. So, what is it? It is a preview of what the evidence will be. That creates a...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Connect with Jurors: Five Practical Ways

We know that when presenting to jurors, the goal is not just to present, but to engage, to relate, to adapt, and ultimately to persuade. You don’t want to simply lay information in front of jurors and hope they will pick it...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Think About Your Juror’s Epistemology

“Epistimology,” or the question of how we know what we know, seems like an abstract rather than a practical idea. But when it comes to the practical task of assessing and persuading jurors, the epistemological habits of those...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Use Present Tense

You know how the joke begins: “A guy walks into a bar…” But wait, for you to know the punch line, this has to be past tense. So wouldn’t it be, “A guy walked into a bar…?” It could be. But usually it is “walks” – present...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Make It Chunky: Eight Best Practices for a Structure that Sticks

It is one of those factors of advocacy that is understood at a basic level, but not practiced at an effective level: Structure. Whenever you are verbally presenting — opening statement, closing argument, oral argument, CLE’s...more

Robins Kaplan LLP

[Event] Trial Advocacy 2018 Seminar: Jurors Live - October 9th, Minneapolis, MN

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Join Robins Kaplan For Trial Advocacy 2018: Pulling The Curtain Back on October 9th, in Minneapolis, MN. ...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Think About Transitions

It is one of the basics emphasized in your first public speaking class: Have a clear transition between your main points. But it is also a rule that many experienced communicators set aside or start taking for granted. As you...more

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