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Please Contact me at the {Email Address} should you wish to discuss
any of these services which are not available via the web-site.
Conflict checks will be done for any of the more in-depth services
below if ordered.y
| Informal Focus Groups |
$5000.00 |
| In-depth Focus Groups |
$10,000.00 |
| Witness Preparation |
$1000.00 |
| Jury Selection |
$3000.00 |
| Jury Shadowing |
$3000.00/day |
Trial Consultant/Litigation Strategist meets with a representative
group of potential jurors from a selected venue to discover what
is important to potential jurors, how they would decide the case,
any analogies or themes that the jurors believe would be helpful,
and their reactions to various arguments or problem areas.
Trial Consultant/Litigation Strategist spends an entire day with
representative sample of potential jurors and attorneys are invited
to "present their case. The Trial Consultant/Litigation
Strategist acts as a facilitator to skew the decision against our
client in an effort to determine what issues are important to the
jurors and how to strengthen our case. The jury will "rate"
the witnesses, "evaluate" the attorneys, and discuss the
demonstrative evidence tools, in addition to deliberating the underlying
argument and deciding the case or amount of damages.
Trial Consultant/Litigation Strategist works one-on-one with the
witness in order to make him/her more relaxed, likeable to the jurors,
believable, and persuasive using various relaxation techniques,
practicing cross-exam, working on demeanor and communication skills,
and shaping attitude.
The Trial Consultant/Litigation Strategist attends voir dire with
trial counsel to evaluate juror responses, body language, attitudes,
to assist the attorney in selecting the most favorably disposed
jury possible.
Trial Consultant/Litigation Strategist is an observer in the courtroom
during opening, directing/crossing witnesses, and closing to evaluate
the jury, including what they choose to write down, their facial
expressions and body language. This helps predict what is important
to them, what they believe, and what the trial attorney needs to
go back over and address (make more clear, stress, counteract, or
rebut).
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