Posts Tagged 'communication'

Stories make Jurors take Action

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If you make an argument, you’re implicitly asking the jury to evaluate your argument – to judge it, debate it, criticize it and then argue back. But when you tell a story, you are inviting the jury to accompany on a trip that ends with your desired outcome.

The power of ...

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Emotions make Jurors Care

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The purpose of making a message emotional is to make the jury care enough to act. There are three ways you can infuse emotions into your presentation to the jury:

  • Use Associations: The easiest way to make a juror care is to create an association between something that the juror does ...
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The Curse of Knowledge

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I see your Nunc Pro Tunc and I will raise you one Ex Parte Motion and a Habeas Corpus. Boy, talk about a Non Sequitur.  As a trial attorney, you probably know and use more Latin phrases in a week than most jurors will hear in a lifetime and that is a curse. Specifically, ...

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Keep it Simple

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As a trial attorney you probably know that if you argue ten points, when the jury goes to deliberate, they won’t recall most of your points. On the other hand, if you argue a few points, jurors will recall those points and carry them into the jury room.

The challenge to the trial attorney is to ...

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Credible Messages

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As a trial attorney, you want the jury to believe your message. Jurors will believe a credible message.  A credible message is a message that offers reasonable grounds for being believed. A message can draw upon two sources of credibility:

  • External Credibility: We believe ideas because family and friends believe, we have ...
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And Now for Something Completely Different…

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How do you gain and hold a juror’s attention? Use unexpectedness – but be sure that you use the right kind of unexpectedness.

You can use surprise to gain the attention of the juror. You can use mystery to hold the attention of the juror. Surprise is a brief emotional state and it only ...

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