New Medmal Service

Dr. David Frankel from Iowa State and the Cambridge Economics Group has unleashed a new tool for plaintiff's attorneys handling medical malpractice claims. The program, MedMal Express, is an interactive website that allows you to figure out what a case is worth.

From Dr. Frankel:  The program lets the user see expected settlements in up to 20  medical malpractice cases (or case scenarios) in real time. Our predictions are tailored to the trial's location and to other specific case features. One advantage of the service is that a user can easily try out  different scenarios (e.g., to drop a defendant; to stress one accusation over another) to see what would happen if a Plaintiff's condition were to change.

I tried the program and like it. I received a report that provided me with information to help me evaluate a case. It looks nice and has useful information.

Dr. Frankel is offering a free two week trial. Just go to his website and you can sign up. After that, it is only $95 per month.

Top 25 + 1 more! (Plus some books)

I can't believe I left AccessLaw off my list. Thankfully, Julie Goren of Litigation By the Numbers reminded me.

By the way, if I were putting together a list of books you need, I would tell you that you need:

1. Litigation By the Numbers;
2. Rules of the Road;
3. Ball On Damages;
4. Ben Glass' Great Legal Marketing (not really a book, but reading materials).

Enjoy!

Congrats to a Marketing Guru!

Ben Glass of Great Legal Marketing fame has been selected by the Information Marketing Association for inclusion in its new book, The Official Get Rich Guide to Information Marketing.

For those of you who do not know, Ben has created what is, in my opinion, the best legal marketing program for personal injury attorneys. But, don't stop reading if you are not a PI attorney. I have successfully used Ben's program to market my debt collection practice. Ben's program works.

Give it a peek and remember to congratulate Ben on this accomplishment!

Top 25 + 1

Okay, in my research I missed one product. Now, I could debate why I missed it: not enough marketing, not marketing to the right groups, it slipped through the cracks or I wasn't looking for it. But, alas, I missed it.

The Daily Case Report is a website you want to see. These guys, two attorneys in San Jose, CA give updates on California slip opinions - via video! And you can get MCLE credit for it. How cool is that? From them:

Daily RSS feed announces all new Slip Opinions.  Subscribers also get Slip opinion alerts by email that they can personalize to notify them only of new cases in the areas of law that they practice.  And, best of all, when you watch 15 minute video programs discussing the new cases, you earn MCLE credit. If you find something interesting only once every 2 and a half weeks, you can easily earn all the MCLE you need, just by keeping current on the cases that matter to your practice.

Hey, its free and it looks pretty cool. Give this a spin and let me know your thoughts. I like it!

My top 25

No, I am not going to give you my top 25 college football teams this year. (Although, I do think USC should still be #1 and LSU #2, but I also don't think they should release a preseason top 25 since no one knows how good anyone will be until they play a game. But, that is for another post.)

I just got back from Anaheim and the California State Bar annual meeting. I gave a CLE program on technology and the law firm. In doing so, I prepared a list of 25 programs you should have for your firm. Here they are, in no particular order:

  1. Audacity
  2. Mirra Personal Server
  3. Adobe Acrobat Pro 8.0
  4. Webex
  5. ProDoc
  6. Basecamp
  7. Verizon EVDO
  8. Paperport Pro
  9. Logmein.com or Gotomypc.com or gotomeeting.com
  10. Dragon 9.0
  11. Skype
  12. DepoSmart
  13. Scanner
  14. Dual monitors
  15. Listserves
  16. Etran manager from RealLegal
  17. Snagit
  18. Copernic Desktop
  19. Google earth, Myspace, Friendster, Google, Zillow
  20. Cybersecretary (www.speakwrite.com)
  21. Accurint
  22. TimeMap and TextMap
  23. Stamps.com
  24. Ureach/efax
  25. Activewords

Let me know what you think is missing. But, this list is what I think you need, after spending quite a bit of time last week researching this.

Buy Party of the First Part

I just found out that my friend Lisa Solomon over at The Billable Hour now has Party of the First Part for sale! (You do remember my prior post, right?)

Now, if you don't subscribe to Lisa's newsletter, this is a good time to do so. The Billable Hour has a lot of great information, resources, and humorous lawyer gifts.

Of course, don't forget to visit Lisa's practice website for all of your legal research and writing needs. And trust me, she writes in such a way that even Mr. Freedman, author of "Party of the First Part" would appreciate. Clear, concise and in plain English!

Nominate bad legal writing!

We have all seen it - bad legal writing. Some of it is worse than others. "By all men these presents known" is how an old insurance release started. What? Huh?

Well, now you can nominate it for the Party of the First Part hall of shame. Now, I don't know if I would nominate opposing counsel for writing a letter where, say, he claims how smart he is, how busy he is and how great he is. (Yes, it comes from a real letter.) I would, however, send it in while taking off one's name from it. (No, I haven't done that yet. It reads better as an exhibit to a motion.)

By the way, from the fine folks who bring you the website:

The debate over Plain vs. Precision English rages on in courtrooms, boardrooms, and, yes, even bedrooms. In The Party of the First Part, Adam Freedman explores the origins of legalese, interprets archaic phrasing (witnesseth!), explains obscure and oddly named laws, and disputes the notion that lawyers are any smarter than the rest of us when judged solely on their briefs. (A brief, by the way, is never so.)

Enjoy!

Law Firm Funding

Face it - sometimes it is expensive to run a law firm. It costs money, especially if you are going to take on plaintiff's cases. And traditional banks don't want to lend us money. But there are other people out there who will help.

I just met Beth Robbins. She has money she is looking to lend to law firms - and a lot of money. Here is her information. If you call her, tell her Jonathan Stein said hi.

Beth Robbins

Nationwide Litigation Funding

578 Washington Blvd Ste 249
Marina Del Rey, CA 90292
Tel: (310) 306-1001
Fax: (310) 388-0576
Email: Beth@nlfunding.com
Website: http://www.litfundingusa.com

New Payroll Company

I hate doing payroll. Even paying myself is a pain. Its just not fun. I can't imagine doing it with employees. YUCK! But, I have a solution: Compupay. And here is my contact's information:

Michael J. Pyefinch
916-690-3541 (cell)
916-929-1900 (office)
916-405-4349  (Fax)
michaelpyefinch@compupay.com
www.compupay.com

Michael does payroll nationwide. Give him a call if you need this service. And remember that if you let them do it, you have more time to do what you need to do: practice law.

You MUST read this

I am not a fan of providing links to other sites. You know that by now. But, this is one I have to provide.

My friend Grant Griffiths and Michael Sherman of the Alabam Family Law Blog are creating a program to walk solos through creating, launching, marketing and maintaining a blog. It is like Vince Lombardi teaching you how to coach a football team!

Oh, and the best part: Grant will be at the California State Bar Annual Meeting in September giving a CLE program on Web 2.0 and blogging. You will be able to hear from him, ask questions, and if I am right, and I think I am, Grant will probably stay and keep talking about this and answering questions until everyone has had a chance.

DISCLAIMER

  • Notice
    This blog is made available by the lawyer publisher for educational purposes only as well as to give information and a general understanding of the law, not to provide specific legal advice. By using this blog site you understand that there is no attorney client relationship between you and the Blog publisher. The Blog should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a licensed professional attorney in your state. Jonathan G. Stein, is licensed to practice law in the state of California only.