Working With Lawyers by Cheryl Stephens, Canada

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Working with Lawyers Advice to Plain Language Experts from Cheryl Stephens

description

Based on Cheryl Stephens' article in Clarity Journal #66, Clarity International, How to get lawyers to use plain language and be cooperative. Covers: 1. The nature of lawyers' writing tasks 2. How work with the lawyer temperament 3. Three ways to work more effectively with lawyers.

Transcript of Working With Lawyers by Cheryl Stephens, Canada

  • 1. Working with LawyersAdvice to Plain Language Experts from Cheryl Stephens
  • 2. Clarity Internationalhttp://www.clarity-international.net/ This is based on an article in Clarity Journal #66
  • 3. Cheryl StephensThe Plain Language Wizard
  • 4. Scourge
  • 5. Helping Lawyers The nature of lawyers writing tasks How to work with the lawyer temperament Work more effectively with lawyers
  • 6. Daily Legal Writing
  • 7. Legal Writing ProductLawyers write 2 kinds of documents Part of daily life or business Creating rights and setting up duties
  • 8. Transactional Drafting
  • 9. What Is Legal Drafting2 types of drafting:Transactional--dealings betweenpeople Legislative--between people andgovernments
  • 10. Legislative
  • 11. Research on Lawyer Personality Lawyers are different from the most common personality types in the general population.
  • 12. There is a Typical Lawyer
  • 13. Lawyerswho dont fit pattern go into other fields of law
  • 14. Lawyer Attitudes Lawyers are Skeptics Pessimists Cynics WaryBe prepared emotionally.
  • 15. Lawyers Are Left-brainedTechnical competenceValued overemotional intelligence.Accept the lack of rapport,cold reserve, andlack of interpersonal connection.
  • 16. Dont Expect Warmth Sandor Weisz photo
  • 17. Lawyers Want Critical Analysis Primed to criticize. Not likely to see the positive. Trained to expect the worst. Uncomfortable saying anything positive. You must not expect praise.
  • 18. Traditional and Conservative
  • 19. Lawyers Are Traditional Wont see benefit of change involving risk. Risk-averse by nature.epSos .dephoto
  • 20. Constant High Urgency Need quick conclusion. A quick decision, likely a no.Allow time for careful thought.
  • 21. Put It in Writing
  • 22. Independent and Autonomous Not team players. Competitive. Profession rewards individual performance.
  • 23. Lawyers want to control when and how they invest time, complete tasks, andadopt new techniques.
  • 24. By Nature Adversarial Tolerant of conflict. Aggressive by training. Sensitive and thin-skinned. Dont get defensive or emotional. Dont make it personal. Appeal to competitive nature.
  • 25. Crave Structure and Organization Hate disorganization, inefficiencies. No patience for the planning. Need detail. Want clear objectives.
  • 26. Like Clear Structure
  • 27. Create a Work PlanSchedules, closure on decisions,planning, follow through, and a"cut-to-the-chase approach.Stick to deadlines.Expect the lawyer to do thesame.
  • 28. Organize Communication ProcessGet lawyer involved early in the process,but get client permission. Mike Licht, NotionsCapital.com photo
  • 29. Protocol of Communication Recruit intermediaries. Try to connect with the lawyer. Be aware: They hear things literally.
  • 30. You can work moreeffectively with lawyers
  • 31. Show Respect for Legalities
  • 32. You Write for the Client or PublicLow High
  • 33. When Persuasion Is NeededProvide examples of plain language.Clarity increases precision.Not an experiment:an economic or market imperative.
  • 34. Prove Your PointWords and Phrases Judicially-Considered
  • 35. Lawyers Concept of JusticeJustice means achieving well-definedand expected outcomes.Abstract ideal of justicenot a motivator. Get them to share a goal like access to justice.
  • 36. Cheryl StephensPlain Language WizardPlainLanguage.comE m a i l @ cherylstephens.comPlainLanguageWizardry.com
  • 37. Plain Language Wizardry