Blog
- Advocacy Article Types (70)
- AIPLA Direct (33)
- CLE (96)
- Congresses (1)
- Document Type (2)
- Event Types (36)
- Global (33)
- Government Department (45)
- Innovate (54)
- News Types (39)
- Newsstand (529)
Location
Credits
90 minutes
Communicating Complex Ideas Efficiently & Effectively: Part II
We will continue working through the techniques and communication challenges put forward in Part I, offering you a chance to further internalize the techniques, and to link them to communication topics presented throughout the rest of the conference.
James Rea - Experts/Clearly, Montpelier, VT
From Session 1:
This workshop is crafted from the ideas and lessons learned in the twenty-plus years of James Rea’s communication experience. It will offer training that is foundational to any communication an attorney might seek to undertake. Whether the attorney is writing or speaking, and whether the audience is a client, a witness, a judge, the media, or even other attorneys, the ideas and exercises herein can help those interactions become more successful. In particular, the workshop seeks to arm participants with a new awareness of audience, and with the agility to meet each audience with the most impactful language possible. The result, we believe, will be attorneys who can meet the goals of their work more efficiently and effectively.
Scenario Volunteers
Patrick Coyne, Finnegan
Troy Grabow, Pax Labs
Michael Piper, Conley Rose
Jennifer Nall, Baker Botts
Speakers
-
Rea, James
ExpertsClearly | Communications Coach
James has spent more than twenty years helping scientists, engineers, policymakers, attorneys and other experts communicate their work to the world. Through his work with ExpertsClearly, and in five years as a lead workshop instructor with the Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science, James has coached staff and leadership at institutions such as Toyota, Pfizer, the Mayo Clinic, the US Environmental Protection Agency, NASA, the US Department of Energy, and many of the nation’s leading research universities and medical centers.