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  • Psychological tendencies that are at play in traditional negotiating postures greatly impede litigation settlement discussions. Following are several examples of these tendencies.

    July 01, 2004Ruth D. Raisfeld
  • It's been a decade since the case entitled Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579 (1993), changed the rules by which federal judges determine the admissibility of expert testimony. Daubert and subsequent opinions refining it have established guidelines for ensuring that expert witnesses use credible methodologies for drawing their conclusions. Many state courts have adopted similar rules.
    Daubert-related work in some types of litigation is now so costly that attorneys should anticipate it in deciding whether to accept a case. Doing so is aided by a good understanding of Daubert, however, and many attorneys hold a wide variety of misconceptions about the subject.

    July 01, 2004Joe Danowsky
  • You've heard the story before and it goes like this. A hardworking associate has served the firm well and is made partner, but he has no practice development experience and no business. Now, he is advised that his world has changed and he must get out from behind his desk and generate business. Notwithstanding his status as a top-performing attorney, he now faces the painful task of prospecting for new clients. Does this sound familiar?

    July 01, 2004Gina Pirozzi
  • At most firms, the transition to partnership requires that an attorney "buy into" the organization. The amount varies considerably, but it is often more than a year's salary. And partners almost always pay for their benefits out of pocket. And partners' draws are often wildly inconsistent from month to month. The eventual financial rewards of partnership can be huge, but the first couple years aren't easy.
    And what do law firms do to prepare associates for partnership? If the three stories above are any indication, partners terrify associates, lead them to believe that marketing is a sign of corporate weakness and fail to educate them on the basics of firm finance. All that in preparation for the day when they'll be asked to "buy into" the partnership. If you're asking somebody to buy something, they're a customer. And firms should treat associates like customers from the day they begin interviewing until the day they make partner.

    July 01, 2004Andy Havens
  • Loyalty is built on the value/price equation. It says: A client will stay loyal to you as long as he perceives the value of the services he receives to be greater than the fee he pays. Other things are important, too, but if you don't deliver value that is greater than your fee, you will never earn your client's loyalty.

    July 01, 2004Trey Ryder
  • You will find spirited debates in the conference rooms of many law firms about the criticality of employing Client Relationship Management (CRM) processes and technology to better deliver legal services. The promise of CRM is enticing, but it is sometimes misunderstood and under managed.

    July 01, 2004Darryl Cross
  • When it comes to marketing and client development, law firms with multiple offices or with lawyers who practice in different practice groups face challenges that are substantially different from the issues that single office firms or specialized boutiques must handle. This is true whether the larger firm has only a few practice groups or is a full service general practice firm as well as whether its offices are located in one state, across the same region of the United States, spread widely throughout the U.S., or both here and overseas.

    July 01, 2004Dawn Gertz
  • The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit decided that, under 17 U.S.C. Sec. 504(c), statutory copyright damages for a single defendant should be based on the amount of works infringed, rather than the amount of infringements of those works. Venegas-Hernandez v. Sonolux Records.

    July 01, 2004ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • Finding talent and being rewarded for it are common music industry pursuits. After Carl Jackson discovered singer/songwriter Bobbie Cryner while she was waitressing at a Tennessee restaurant, he negotiated an October 1991 songwriting deal for Cryner with the California-based Famous Music Corp., to whom Jackson was also signed. Though Jackson wasn't a contractual party to the Cryner/ Famous Music agreement, with Cryner's knowledge he entered into a separate contract the same day with Famous Music for him to co-produce Cryner and to re-assign him a 50% of the copyrights that Cryner transferred to Famous Music. In 1993, Bobbie Cryner executed a copyright assignment for Famous Music to file with the U.S. Copyright Office.

    July 01, 2004Stan Soocher
  • Recent cases in entertainment law.

    July 01, 2004ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |