About Author Unknown

This author has not yet filled in any details.
So far Author Unknown has created 331 blog entries.

10 Fears That First-Time Users of Litigation Consultants Have

February 27th, 2017|

by Ken LopezFounder/CEOA2L Consulting At A2L, we have worked with thousands of clients over the last several decades. When we first started, almost no trial lawyers had experience with litigation consultants. However, as time went on, the majority of the people we work with have used either jury consultants, litigation graphics consultants, or trial technology in-court specialists at some point in their careers. All these years later, perhaps 20 percent of our clients are first-time litigation consulting users. Not surprisingly, first-time users exhibit many of the same fears that newcomers have shown for decades. Most of these fears are simply

Talking Bull, Episode Fifteen, A Real Jury Consultant Watches a Fictional One

February 22nd, 2017|

Roy Futterman, Ph.D. In the fifteenth edition of his weekly column in Law360, DOAR’s real-life New York City Jury Consultant and Psychologist reviews the fictional NYC Jury Consultant/Psychologist on the television series “Bull,” focusing on what litigation is really like in the trenches. [Spoiler Alert]…         This week, an interesting episode full of strategy and counterstrategy goes out the window when Bull has a romance with the opposing counsel during trial. This is a consistent problem for jury consultants: We cannot turn off our hearts, your honor. Caution: Sanctimonious preaching ahead. The Case Of The Super-Rich Guy

12 Reasons Using Trial Consultants (Like Us) Is Possibly Not Fair

February 16th, 2017|

by Ken LopezFounder/CEOA2L Consulting When I speak to an audience about the work A2L does (other than trial lawyers from large law firms), I sometimes hear the question, “Is the kind of work A2L does fair?” That is, is it fair to have trial consultants support a trial team and use the latest in persuasion science to advocate only one side of a case? In a group setting, my lawyerly answer is usually something like, “What does ‘fair’ mean to you?” Then we litigate the nuances of fairness. What I really think, however, is that the work we do definitely tips

Talking Bull, Episode Fourteen, A Real Jury Consultant Watches a Fictional One

February 15th, 2017|

Roy Futterman, Ph.D. In the fourteenth edition of his weekly column in Law360, DOAR’s real-life New York City Jury Consultant and Psychologist reviews the fictional NYC Jury Consultant/Psychologist on the television series “Bull,” focusing on what litigation is really like in the trenches. [Spoiler Alert]…         This week, the team is told that they will not be able to hack into computer networks nor can they do anything sneaky, so they will be forced to do jury consulting like us muggles. They do not, but that is at least the premise. The Case of the Leaky Soldier

Using Litigation Graphics in Bench Trials: How Different Is It From Jury Trials?

February 9th, 2017|

by Tony KlapperManaging Director, Litigation ConsultingA2L Consulting We’ve spoken here more than once about the fact that jurors, unlike most attorneys, tend to be visual learners who like to be shown, not told. The best way to show them what they need to know, as we have said, is through litigation graphics. Science has also taught us that the best way to keep a jury’s attention is by telling a story in the courtroom. These insights obviously have major implications for how trial lawyers should use the arts of persuasion in a jury trial. What about a bench trial or

Talking Bull, Episode Thirteen, A Real Jury Consultant Watches a Fictional One

February 8th, 2017|

Roy Futterman, Ph.D. In the thirteenth edition of his weekly column in Law360, DOAR’s real-life New York City Jury Consultant and Psychologist reviews the fictional NYC Jury Consultant/Psychologist on the television series “Bull,” focusing on what litigation is really like in the trenches. [Spoiler Alert]…         This episode was calm, even sedate, and featured an actually sympathetic three-dimensional defendant. The jury consulting techniques were close to realistic and sophisticated. Not a single felony was committed by anyone on Bull’s staff. All is forgiven! This affords us an opportunity, much requested by our far-flung readers ranging from the

NITA Experts Agree: Jurors Want Lawyers to Show, Not Tell

February 2nd, 2017|

by Tony KlapperManaging Director, Litigation ConsultingA2L Consulting We have written many times about the fact that scientific studies have shown that nonlawyers (who are the vast majority of jurors) tend to be visual learners, and tend not to be auditory learners or kinesthetic learners –people who learn by experiencing. Lawyers (who are the ones who present facts and tell stories to jurors) tend not to be visual learners and are often drawn from the ranks of auditory or kinesthetic learners. Of course, this can present an intrinsic problem that we have discussed before. If most lawyers like to tell but

How to Get Great Results From a Good Lawyer

January 31st, 2017|

by Ken LopezFounder/CEOA2L Consulting Not all lawyers are created equal. It's amazing how hard it is for those outside the legal industry to understand this. Many people regrettably believe that those human aptitudes that require creativity and skill are binary. Either you can design a house or you can't. Either you can knit or you can't. Either you have a singing voice or you don’t. And in that same vein, either you're a lawyer or you're not. This is the wrong way to look at it. In all these areas, there are variations and gradations of skills. This is never more

2017 Will be a Great Year for (Most Types of) Trials

January 27th, 2017|

Ken LopezFounder/CEOA2L Consulting This is the fifth consecutive year that I've written a new year economic outlook article focused on litigation. Please review some of my previous articles that were focused on 2016, 2015, 2014, and 2013. While I believe that 2017 will be a very good year for litigation, it will not be good for everyone. From where I sit, things look and sound remarkably different during this current economic expansion than they did in previous years. A2L's litigation consulting business, one focused almost entirely on trials, is thriving. We've grown more than 50% in each of the past two years, and

Talking Bull, Episode Twelve, A Real Jury Consultant Watches a Fictional One

January 25th, 2017|

Roy Futterman, Ph.D. In the twelveth edition of his weekly column in Law360, DOAR’s real-life New York City Jury Consultant and Psychologist reviews the fictional NYC Jury Consultant/Psychologist on the television series “Bull,” focusing on what litigation is really like in the trenches. [Spoiler Alert]…         In this episode, with a story credited to Dr. Phil himself, a woman blows up a bomb and takes hostages in order to get jury consulting services. I should be flattered. The Case of the Easily Convinced Bomber This episode is so outlandish that it may be a “Mulholland Drive”-esque last