The Ways to Know When to Go to Mediation and How Best to Proceed

16 Jan , 2024

To register for the upcoming live webinar, please Click Here

Practitioners Often Wonder “when is the best time to proceed to Mediation for a Client?” In this one-hour course, Robert Jossen, an experienced mediator, will discuss the considerations when to move toward mediation and how best to do so to achieve a desirable result for your client. 

The course will cover topics relating to whether discovery is needed before starting mediation, what your client should expect about the mediation process and how to best achieve client goals in mediation. This course is appropriate for practitioners at all levels of experience and for attorneys working in house who are in charge of matters that may require mediation.

 

To register for the upcoming live webinar, please Click Here

More Webcasts

Litigation Series: E...

Evidence Demystified Part 2 covers key concepts in the law of evidence, focusing on witnesses, credi...

Litigation Strategie...

This program is geared towards lawyers, experts, commercial property owners, and others in the envir...

Litigation Series: C...

This program provides a comprehensive analysis of the Sixth Amendment Confrontation Clause as reshap...

Generative AI for Li...

Explore the transformative potential of generative AI in modern litigation. “Generative AI for...

Resilience in the Wo...

Resilience in the Workplace, delves into the critical importance of resilience in navigating the cha...

The Loneliness Epide...

Loneliness isn’t just a personal issue; it’s a silent epidemic in the legal profession t...

Key 2025 Development...

United States patent law and the United States Patent and Trademark Office’s patent-related gu...

Legal and Tax Consid...

In “Choosing the Right Business Entity,” I will walk through the issues that matter most...

Freediving Through F...

Most legal professionals are operating in survival mode whether they realize it or not. Not crisis-l...

Navigating Governmen...

Contracting with the Federal Government is not like a business deal between two companies or a contr...