Supporting Your Boss in Negotiation

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This post is about how to support your boss in negotiation.

As a young lawyer, you may not be in charge of a negotiation but may be asked to be an assistant or second chair. There is quite a bit that you can do to help the principal lawyer prepare for and execute the negotiation. The fact that you lack experience will be made up by the thoroughness of your briefing book. Your primary function is information gathering and synthesis.
While the final negotiation strategy will be developed between the principal attorney and client, to the extent that they are well informed by you, they will be that much better prepared. So your job is to put together the information, distillate, synthesize it, and presented in a way that is immediately usable.

Your secondary function is to provide devil’s advocacy. You will want to take the other side and develop its negotiation strategy based on the information you have developed to date. This will, of course, require some research on the other side. Fortunately, as you have probably learned, the explosion of social media sites provides a vast amount of information on people. Spending some time doing this research can give you tidbits of information and insight into who people are, their backgrounds, and their predispositions.

The usual function of young lawyers is to do legal research until you learn more about the other skills of lawyering. That role is no different in negotiation, where you are called upon to do a thorough case analysis. This will include a distillation of the salient facts and an analysis of the law applied to those facts. This is core lawyering with which you should be very familiar.
You will also want to do a comprehensive damage analysis. Again, you will have to start with the basic remedial concepts of damages, understand the claims, and work up various damage scenarios. You may be relying upon experts for some of this information and analysis. Do not be afraid to ask them hard questions and do not be afraid to professional ignorance if damage analysis and numbers are not your thing. It is their job to educate you, not impress you with how smart they are.

Very few lawyers are familiar with decision tree analysis so you can provide a useful addition to your briefing book with a decision tree. You may not be able to build a complex tree, but that is unnecessary. If you do nothing else than assess the probabilities of for trial outcomes, you will be adding value to the briefing book.

The briefing book can be something as short as a 2-3 page memo or a binder with detailed analysis and appendices. The amount of time and effort you put into a briefing book will depend upon the nature and size of the case, the litigation case budget, and your time constraints. You will probably never be asked to produce a negotiation briefing book. However, imagine the surprise of the principal lawyer when you present a detailed briefing book for review. I can pretty much guarantee you that you will create a positive buzz about your competency as young lawyer when you do this. The briefing book should contain all of the elements that we have discussed so far. In addition it should have a blank concession strategy plan that can be filled out by the principal lawyer and the client.

You may find yourself in the interesting position of having to explain a concession strategy to them as most lawyers have no clue what they are. We will be covering concession strategies later on.
In all of this work your primary job is to learn. You will take the information you’re learning in this course and apply it on the job. You will probably see behaviors and strategies that I recommend against. Be very careful not to criticize. Simply make note of what is observed and engage in the kind of reflective practice I discussed at the beginning of this course. What you want to do is learn from mistakes of others rather than adopt those behaviors and strategies as acceptable practice.
 In addition, you will see smart negotiators. Watch them very carefully and learn as much as you can about what makes them so good. Again, having taken this course will give you insight as to why they have become master negotiators.

I cannot emphasize enough how important reflective practice as an associate is. The first five years of law practice are an intense learning experience. You have to find time to step back and reflect upon what you are learning.

•    What works?
•    What does not work?
•    What did you do wrong?
•    What did you do right?
•    What could do better?

If you do not engage in reflective practice, your education will be hit or miss. Just do it.

Remember, the best way to win the game is to call it yourself.

Better still, change the game completely.

Douglas E. Noll
Mediator, Author, and
California Lawyer 2012 Attorney of the Year
for Pro Bono Service
Creator of Negotiation Mastery for the Legal Pro
A new online course in cutting-edge legal negotiation
legalpronegotiator.com

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