Skip to main content
Home
Home

Jury Economics: Use Visual Persuasion to Socialize With Your Audience

Jury Economics: Use Visual Persuasion to Socialize With Your Audience

Listening to someone talk is exhausting. Zoom is just as exhausting. Looking at yourself is stressful and distracting. Looking at others' faces is richer than only hearing voices but poorer than engaging our whole brains. Your judge, colleagues, opposing counsel, and certainly your jurors need more from you than being a person asking them for something — especially if that "person" is a mere digital representation on a screen. Where do we turn at this juncture of the remote litigation experience and how do we create more engaging and interesting dynamics to satisfy your audience's attention spans, limited focus, and shrinking bandwidth?

Read the full article on King County Bar Bulletin.*

*Subscription-based publication

Print and share

Authors

Profile Picture
Business Professional
KBoully@perkinscoie.com

Notice

Before proceeding, please note: If you are not a current client of Perkins Coie, please do not include any information in this e-mail that you or someone else considers to be of a confidential or secret nature. Perkins Coie has no duty to keep confidential any of the information you provide. Neither the transmission nor receipt of your information is considered a request for legal advice, securing or retaining a lawyer. An attorney-client relationship with Perkins Coie or any lawyer at Perkins Coie is not established until and unless Perkins Coie agrees to such a relationship as memorialized in a separate writing.

303.454.2915
Home
Jump back to top