February

Aujourdʼhui
Aujourdʼhui

Beware the ‘chaotic herd’ when litigating high-profile cases

  • 14 août 2016

Disponible uniquement en anglais. En cours de traduction. That’s Don Bayne’s best advice for lawyers when facing a trial that’s likely to be tried in the court of public opinion. Bayne knows whereof he speaks – the partner at Bayne, Sellar, Boxall in Ottawa is most recently known for representing Senator Mike Duffy on fraud charges.

Control, shift: Communicating in plain language

  • 14 août 2016

What are some of the reasons people might not get legal help? Cost is the obvious reason. But according to Sarah McCoubrey, a strategist on access to justice issues, people with legal needs often point to two other reasons. They’ll say they’re too intimidated or afraid to ask for help. And that dealing with lawyers and legal documents is too confusing.

Susan Pinker on the importance of communicating face to face

  • 13 août 2016

Psychologist Susan Pinker was one of the keynote speakers at the CLC in Ottawa today. CBA National caught up with Pinker author of The Sexual Paradox and The Village Effect: How Face-to-Face Contact Can Make Us Healthier, to ask her about the importance, in the digital age, of human contact between lawyers and their clients and colleagues.

Polls suggest clients like being asked for feedback

  • 13 août 2016

What do your clients think about you? The answer to that question, Sandra Goodwin might say, referring to an old Saturday Night Life bit, will be found in the Journal of Duh. That is, it’s obvious – ask them.

Vous croyez que vous pouvez faire cent choses à la fois… Auriez-vous tort?

  • 13 août 2016

It happens every day – you sit down to work on an important task and constant interruptions keep you from finishing it: people drop by, the phone rings, notifications keep popping up in the lower right-hand corner of the screen telling you you have new email that looks far more urgent than whatever you’re working on.

Cesser de geindre : techniques avancées de négociation

  • 13 août 2016

La capacité à négocier est une compétence de base. Tout jeune enfant qui veut obtenir quelque chose en apprend rapidement les règles, essayant de nouvelles tactiques à chaque fois qu’une ne fonctionne plus. Vous élaborez une stratégie, que vous révisez au fil de l’évolution des situations, a déclaré Sean McGee, de chez Nelligan O’Brien Payne, aux participants à une séance de FC offerte dans le cadre de l’édition 2016 de la Conférence juridique de l’ABC à Ottawa.