Weekly Review for Law Practice Tips for Monday, October 13, 2014

weekly review for Law Practice Tips

weekly review for Law Practice TipsHere are some recent articles of interest that I found this week related to law practice management, law technology, and legal marketing. Enjoy!

Lawyer Websites & SEO: Getting Indexed Fast in Google
A lot of people seem to think it takes weeks (or even months) to get indexed in Google, but that’s just not true. Almost anyone can get his or her site crawled and indexed in two weeks or less – sometimes you can even be listed in the Google index in as little as a few hours!

There are several ways to get indexed quickly. All of them involve getting links to your site on other sites that have high PageRank, or sites that are updated often and get crawled frequently by search engine spiders.

You don’t have to pay to do this. There are plenty of ways to get these types of links to your site without paying a penny. One of the easiest ways to get indexed quickly is to use WordPress as your web platform. If you don’t have a WordPress site, you can still ping your site at places like pingoat.com or Pingomatic.com.

Read more here

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for Law Practice Tips!

Weekly Review for Law Practice Tips for Monday, September 29, 2014

Weekly review for Law Practice Tips

Weekly review for Law Practice TipsHere are some recent articles of interest that I found this week related to law practice management, law technology, and legal marketing. Enjoy!

Law Practice Management: 12 Rules for Turning Initial Consultations Into Retainers
They don’t just happen.

Getting a client into your office for an initial consultation is the culmination of a great deal of effort.
You’ve done your networking, advertising, content creation, and social media, and you’ve finally got someone sitting in the seat across from you.

This is it. The game is on. Everything comes together for this one meeting.Can you feel the pressure?

Now is the time when you convert that marketing energy into money. This is where the rubber meets the road.

Don’t blow it.

Seriously, don’t blow it. You won’t get another chance with your prospects. Make it happen. Be magical. Be amazing. Bring your “A” game.

Read more here

Law Practice Management: Business Development: Save Time and Do Less!
Most lawyers I know jam their calendars each day with more than two people could accomplish in a week. Is this you?

It’s a vicious cycle because we feel terrible not being able to accomplish what’s on the list… instead of feeling great about what was accomplished. We literally sabotage our success and the feeling of accomplishment! Now, how ridiculous is that! Maybe it’s time to start looking at things differently.

Read more here

Legal Marketing & Practice Tips: What to do when people ask you for free advice

Do people ever ask you for free advice? Of course they do. So, what do you do about it?

Do you tell them to make an appointment? Give them the speech about “all a lawyer has to sell is his time and advice”? Or do you answer their question and hope you’re not wasting your time?

I have another suggestion. In fact, if you agree with my suggestion, you will no longer dread calls or emails asking legal questions or seeking free advice, you will encourage them.

The next time someone asks for your advice, don’t answer them over the phone or in an email. Write your answer and turn it into a blog post or newsletter article.

Read more here

Why Successful People Never Bring Smartphones Into Meetings
You are annoying your boss and colleagues any time you take your phone out during meetings, says new research from USC’s Marshall School of Business, and if you work with women and people over forty they’re even more perturbed by it than everyone else.

The researchers conducted a nationwide survey of 554 full-time working professionals earning above $30K and working in companies with at least 50 employees. They asked a variety of questions about smartphone use during meetings and found:

• 86% think it’s inappropriate to answer phone calls during meetings
• 84% think it’s inappropriate to write texts or emails during meetings
• 66% think it’s inappropriate to write texts or emails even during lunches offsite
• The more money people make the less they approve of smartphone use.
The study also found that Millennials are three times more likely than those over 40 to think that smartphone use during meetings is okay, which is ironic considering Millennials are highly dependent upon the opinions of their older colleagues for career advancement.

Read more here

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for Law Practice Tips!

Weekly Review for Law Practice Tips for Friday, September 19, 2014

weekly review for Law Practice Tips

weekly review for Law Practice TipsHere are some recent articles of interest that I found this week related to law practice management, law technology, and legal marketing. Enjoy!

Legal Tech Gadgets: Apple’s New Watch: No One Predicted It Would Be This Cool
A relaxed, confident and effervescent Tim Cook wowed the Apple faithful with the long-awaited, heavily-hyped (though, as I’ll argue later, underhyped) Apple Watch. Cook’s almost childlike enthusiasm seems entirely justified: Based on first impressions, Apple Watch has the potential to be yet another transformative device for the company. It’s the ammunition needed to put to rest the Haunted Empire/Apple-After-Steve-Is-Dead meme if not once and for all, at least until this time next year when the restless tech press will almost certainly ask: “What have you done for me lately?”

Apple Watch — not iWatch — puts the brand front and center in a sophisticated piece of personal technology that has been smoldering, but hasn’t caught fire. Pebble really got the niche going when its Kickstarter campaign broke all records. But while Pebble has gained considerable techie cred (I don’t leave home without it), few people outside that bubble even know what it is.  Read more here

Law Practice Management Tips: Are Your Clients Losing Confidence at Your Front Door?
Don’t you hate that awkward feeling when you walk into a restaurant and you’re not sure what to do?

There’s no “seat yourself” sign, and there’s no “wait to be seated sign.” There’s something that kind of looks like a host stand, but there’s no one standing there to greet you.

There are people seated nearby and at the bar. They turn to look at you as you stand there looking perplexed, and you only feel more confused as they all stare at your awkwardness.

Is that what it’s like when clients show up at your office? Does it feel awkward? Do they wonder where to go, where to stand, and what to do?

Read more here

Legal Tech Tips: App of the Week: Pomotodo – Manage Your To-Do Lists the Pomodoro Way
Recently, I came across a post on the Lawyer’s Mutual site about how law students can guard their time using the Pomodoro Technique. So can lawyers, or anyone interested in managing their time more efficiently and focusing on tasks more effectively, one project at a time.

We’re huge proponents of the technique here on the Legal Productivity blog: working in short bursts – usually 25 minutes – focusing on only one thing with no distractions, followed by a 5-minute break. So much, in fact, that we made a video. Watch it here

Law Practice Management: Nine Tips for Handling Unpaid Fees
“As night follows day, a counterclaim for malpractice will follow a lawsuit for fees.”

So said Chicago insurance claims manager Brant Weidner at an ABA-sponsored legal malpractice panel.

And it will surprise exactly nobody that an insurer is not wild about the idea of an insured going around suing clients for unpaid fees.
But the truth is everybody loses in a fee suit. In fact, by the time it reaches that point the lawyer has already lost.

Read the Nine Ways to Avoid a Fee Dispute here

Law Practice Management: Why Your Referral Partners Won’t Refer You
Having another attorney, business owner or colleague recommend you is a great compliment as well as one of the best ways to build your law firm. However, not all law firm referral partner relationships are successful. If you’re wondering why some of your connections are simply not referring new business your way, there may be some very specific reasons why.
If you are looking for ways to build a network of referral sources for your law firm, check out this post and video 4 Steps to Building a Network of Referral Sources For Your Law Firm – it includes great tips you can implement right now.

Read the 5 Reasons Why Your Referral Partners Won’t Refer You here

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for Law Practice Tips!

Weekly Review for Law Practice Tips for Monday, September 8, 2014

Weekly review for Law Practice Tips

Weekly review for Law Practice TipsHere are some recent articles of interest that I found this week related to law practice management, law technology, and legal marketing. Enjoy!

Law Business: 12 pieces of LinkedIn advice you’ve (likely) never heard
Did you know there’s a way to make second- and third-degree connections appear in your feed, or that you can message people in the same groups as you? Read on for more LinkedIn hacks here

Legal Marketing: Why Social Media Doesn’t Work For Attorneys and what to do about it
If you’ve seen any of the ‘ALS Challenge’ videos over the last few weeks, you have witness the power of social media. The ‘ALS Challenge’ has captured the attention of millions of people all over the world and at the same time it’s raised millions of dollars over a very short period of time.

The lesson here is learning just how to leverage the power of social media for your law practice. No, you don’t HAVE to do use social media, but if you don’t, your competition will and they will be happy to take your business.

One thing that Joel shared stuck out to me. Do you know what social media is really about? It’s about life. It’s about relationships. It’s about real people sitting behind a computer and they’re just like you – they have successes, they have problems … and they need a solution to those problems.

As a practicing attorney, YOU are the solution to many of those problems.
Here’s what social media is not.

Read more here

Lawyer Tech and Trial Tips: Tips for Better Presenting Photographs in Court
Well-presented photographs are powerful tools for litigators. In this post, I’ll share some samples that show how we’ve helped litigators use photographs in court, along with a number of tips for getting the most from your photographs in litigation.

Read more here

Law Practice Management Tips: How To Run A Law Firm Like A Startup
Most law firms bill clients by the hour. It’s been this way for decades. But the system is fundamentally flawed: It rewards employees for being unproductive.
Social enterprise attorney Kyle Westaway is trying to change that. He works out of his Brooklyn loft and has found some of his young startup clients via social media. He uses virtually no paper and bills on a by-project basis.

Read more here

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for Law Practice Tips!

Weekly Review for Law Practice Tips for Friday, August 29, 2014

Law Practice Tips August 29, 2014

Law Practice Tips August 29, 2014Here are some recent articles of interest that I found this week related to law practice management, law technology, and legal marketing. Enjoy!

Legal Tech Tips: Best Gmail features: Unsubscribe button added at last
Earlier this year we heard rumblings that Google was planning to add a killer new feature to Gmail: An “unsubscribe” button at the top of every promotional email that would make it vastly easier for you to get rid of annoying promotions once and for all. Months later, it looks like Google is finally ready to take the wraps off the feature, which it touted on Wednesday in a new post on Gmail’s Google+ page.  Read more here

App of the Week: Pushbullet- Share Anything Instantly Between Your Electronic Devices (Looks like a game changer!)
In June’s WWDC Keynote, Apple introduced their new iOS for mobile devices as well as Yosemite, their new Mac operating system (both of which are due sometime in the fall). One of the most talked about features is the way it will connect your computer and mobile devices. Phone calls and SMS can be pushed to your computer, and with the new “handoff” feature you can pass whatever you’re doing from one device to another.

If you don’t own a mac, or you’re just tired of being left of of the Apple loop and would still like to have similar functionality on your devices, download the free Pushbullet app today.  Read more here

Legal Practice Tips: Review: Presentations by David Sparks — Keynote manual and speaking tips
Most lawyers that I know give presentations from time to time, whether they be formal opening statements or closing arguments to a jury, teaching a CLE, client presentations or even just running a small meeting. Considering this, you would think that most lawyers should be pretty good at it. But I am amazed at the number of presentations I see in which lawyers use PowerPoint slides with almost every word of the presentation typed, typically in a small font to fit all of those words on the slide (so the audience can barely read them anyway), and then the presentation consists of little more than reading those slides.  Read more here

Law Practice Tips: Lawyer mindfulness, best meditation apps for iPhone
Looking for the best iPhone apps to help you relax, track, and make the most out of your meditation time? Sometimes the stresses of our everyday lives can make mental health more important than ever. Even if it’s only for 30 minutes, being able to disconnect from our devices and the outside world can help eliminate stress and clear your mind. The App Store is full of apps to help you make the most of every meditation session, but which meditation apps for iPhone are the absolute best?
Read more here

Legal Tech Tips: What is So Awesome About Dropbox?
Dropbox is awesome. I love Dropbox. What’s cool about it is that you can save things on your computer and access it from anywhere at any time.

So the way it works is that you have an agent on your computer that synchronizes with Dropbox in the cloud. So the files are stored both locally on your computer and in Dropbox. You update any of your files, it automatically gets synchronizes with the cloud, and it’s instantaneous.

Now, imagine this. You can go to another computer and install Dropbox on that, and if you log in with the same credentials, your files are instantly replicated onto that other computer. It’s really amazing because it allows you to work with other people and have a completely synchronized file system.

Furthermore, you can access it from your mobile devices. So if you’re on the road and you need access to a document that’s on your computer, you can get to it.

Read more here

Legal Practice Tips: The Best Subject Line to Get Your Email Opened
Believe it or not, the best subject lines start with “Re:” “RE: Follow Up” “Re: update” “Re: Introduction” and “Re: Checking in”.  Read more here

Law Practice Management: Monetizing your time for solo success
As I approach my 10th year of practice, I have fine-tuned various systems that have allowed me to stay in business this long. Let’s face it, being a solo-practitioner is difficult when you have to wear many hats to do it profitably.

As solos, we have to be responsible for business development, accounting, delivery of legal work, customer service, social media and many other roles. The reality is that we have too many demands to meet in a 40-hour workweek.  Read more here

Legal Marketing Tips: Should Law Firms Focus on Social Media or Search Engine Marketing?

It is difficult to respond to legal marketing questions with a simple answer. For instance, what source of referral traffic should you care about most, social media or search engines?  Read more here

Law Practice Management Ideas: Size Matters – downsizing for retirement.
The most common exit strategies for retiring solo practitioners and small law firm owners typically include recruiting a successor, merging with another law firm, or selling the practice. All of these options have advantages and disadvantages.
However, there’s one strategy that is rarely considered, though it may make the most sense in terms of the retiring lawyer’s financial and personal well-being. That strategy is downsizing.

It’s a rather simple concept, and works well for both solo practitioners and small law firm owners. In a nutshell, the attorney takes fewer cases and works less while reducing overhead expenses.  Read more here

Legal Tech Tips: An Android App – Tasker review: The thing you need to do all the things
Android is an enigmatic and wondrous ecosystem in which many, many things are possible. Unfortunately, many of those things aren’t possible out of the box. That’s where automation apps like Tasker come in.

Tasker helps our supposedly smart smartphones do more for themselves, and do more for us. Tasker is the duct tape that many of us use to bind apps and sensors together into many wacky inventions. Like duct tape it cannot fix everything, nor is it the easiest substance to work with, but almost every house has duct tape, and almost every serious Android user should have Tasker in their back pocket — or wherever they keep their phone.  Let’s take a deeper dive into Tasker.  Read more here

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for Law Practice Tips!

Weekly Review for Law Practice Tips for Friday, August 8, 2014

Law Practice Tips for August 8, 2014

Law Practice Tips for August 8, 2014Here are some recent articles of interest that I found this week related to law practice management, law technology, and legal marketing. Enjoy!

Legal Tech Tips: Video depositions, Lights, camera, deposition
A few tips to help witnesses handle video-recorded Q&A’s
I once believed that when being deposed, the best strategy was to answer the question as tersely as possible. After all, the purpose of the deposition is to know what the other side knows.

It is an attempt to level the information playing field. You get to see inside their file cabinet, and they get to see inside yours. There was no need to wear a suit, sit up straight or be polite. Each side just hunkered down for a few hours or a few days; one side digging and the other side dribbling until it came time to switch roles.

Read more here

Law Practice Management Tip: So you’re not up at 5am to work? What’s wrong with you? Nothing.

I cringe every time I read a story about a person who starts their day at 4am, after surviving on only 5 hours sleep, to get up and start yet another highly productive day. They’ve written their first client brief before their ‘all greens’ smoothie and done a mini-triathlon by 7am.

After a quick shower, they ride 10kms to their work and ‘start’ their day by reading all their newspapers in an allocated 30 minute slot. Then it’s the team meet up before a full one day of meetings, workshops, team time outs and a session at the gym topped off with a protein shake. It goes on. You get the drift.

By the time I also learn they have their two, five and ten year plan mapped out, I am weeping.

Read more here

Legal Technology Tips: Persuasive Litigator: Don’t Assume the Camera Is Neutral
Cameras don’t simply record what is in front of the lens. Every movie director knows that the camera highlights, frames, hides, emphasizes and distorts. The Francis Ford Coppola’s among them know that they’re not simply filming, they’re ‘painting with light’ using the film as a canvas. The legal uses of cameras – interrogations, depositions, site visits — are a bit more prosaic than that, but they’re not immune to the camera’s lack of neutrality. In a legal setting, the consequences of mistaking the recorded image for unfiltered reality can be greater. And the practical need to check out the camera’s influence is great as well.

Read more here

 

Legal Marketing: Is it unethical for lawyers to use ghostwritten blog posts?
Kevin O’Keefe says that ghostwritten blog posts are unethical for lawyers. Unlike legal briefs or other work a lawyer may have penned by others, blogs are considered a form of advertising. If you say you wrote the piece but you didn’t, you are guilty of misrepresentation.

O’Keefe says that clients rely on blog posts to choose attorneys. “The ghost-written post may be better written, funnier, or just plain different than the attorney’s own work product. Even worse, the post may have a completely different perspective or contain better ideas than what the attorney is capable of.”

Basically, clients might hire you because you made them believe you are a better lawyer than you really are.

Read more here

 

Law Practice Management Tip: The First Step to Heading Off Unpaid Receivables

I’m addicted to using my law firm to earn points and miles on our credit card expenditures. On top of that, I love getting the signup bonuses.
To further my addiction, I signed my wife up for cards after I’d used up all the offers in my name. She was promptly approved for cards with Chase, American Express, and others.

The fact that she was approved only gets interesting if you know that she hasn’t earned any significant income in more than two decades. Her applications were instantly approved online as she hit the “apply” button.
So with no income, she was approved for credit. That’s interesting, but what does it have to do with your practice? Everything.

Read more here

 

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for Law Practice Tips!

Weekly Review for Law Practice Tips for Monday, July 28, 2014

Weekly Law Practice Tips for July 28, 2014

Weekly Law Practice Tips for July 28, 2014Here are some recent articles of interest that I found this week related to law practice management, law technology, and legal marketing. Enjoy!

Legal Tech Tips: Testing Unroll.Me to unsubscribe from unwanted emails and lists. Learn more about this useful app here…https://unroll.me/?eWRkqPwA

Florida Contract Law: When Should I Review and Revise my Contracts?
If you run a business you are selling goods or selling services. In either case you will be making deals to do your business. The best reference for the terms of your deal is a written contract, not a handshake or notes on a napkin. But you got that covered, you had a contract written up when you first started business… twenty years ago. Maybe you even got a real nice official looking form from an office supply store. Better yet, you recently went online and downloaded a generic contract from the web. I cannot tell you how many times over the past twenty years I have heard business owners tell me precisely this when they seek help for a good deal gone bad. See anything wrong with this picture? As a practicing Miami contract lawyer, I do.  Read more here

Legal Tech Tips: 5 Ways to Keep Email from Ruining Your Life
Email is out of control. For many of us in the working world, there’s just too much of it. Email has become a source of anxiety, a measurement of our failure to keep up.

I’ve done a ton of reading on the subject, trying to peer over my virtual backyard fence to see how other people manage their email tsunamis.
Some people treat email like it’s Twitter: a living stream of communiqués that’s constantly rushing beneath our feet, to be dipped into when there’s a free moment — but otherwise, without feeling any obligation to answer every single one.  Read more here

Law Practice Management: Two Approaches to the Commoditization of Legal Practice
In Richard Susskind’s book, Tomorrow’s Lawyers, he predicts that legal work will fragment. In particular, he talks about “bespoke”‘ (a tailoring term for made-to-measure clothing) work. Matters requiring bespoke work need careful crafting and design from scratch; this is because each of these matters are unique, without repetitive elements and workflows. According to Susskind, bespoke matters will become increasingly rare.

Instead, because most clients have legal needs that are routine, commoditized legal work will meet the needs for most legal consumers. Employment contracts, incorporations, wills, leases, and more have become products that consumers can purchase. For many, these products will be perfectly sufficient. The law and requirements for many of these services are well established. Form and even content can be prescribed by regulation or case law.  Read more here… 

Thank you for reading (and sharing). Stay tuned for next week’s weekly review for Law Practice Tips!

When Should I Review and Revise my Contracts?

Florida Contracts

Florida Contracts

Reading this article will teach you when and why you need a Miami contract lawyer for Florida contract review and Florida contract drafting.

 

If you run a business you are selling goods or selling services. In either case you will be making deals to do your business. The best reference for the terms of your deal is a written contract, not a handshake or notes on a napkin. But you got that covered, you had a contract written up when you first started business… twenty years ago. Maybe you even got a real nice official looking form from an office supply store. Better yet, you recently went online and downloaded a generic contract from the web. I cannot tell you how many times over the past twenty years I have heard business owners tell me precisely this when they seek help for a good deal gone bad. See anything wrong with this picture? As a practicing Miami contract lawyer, I do.

Florida Contracts Gone Wild

In the cases above, all the terms of your business deal may not be adequately covered in your contract. An outdated and dusty contract could be your worst enemy. Often such a document gives you a false sense of security. Something that made sense twenty years ago may not even apply today. The office supply form, while cheap and convenient, is often way too simple for what is required. Remember you get what you pay for. Likewise, a generic contract from the web was not drafted specifically for your business and certainly will be missing terms you need. Besides, what nameless person put that form on the web you will now base your business on? Was this even a licensed lawyer from the state where you do business? From a legal standpoint, a contract is not optional or a luxury. A well written and specifically crafted contract for your business is a necessity for your own protection.

Contract or Bust

A written contract for your business is the only time when you can define all the rules for how your deal will go down. The who, what, where, when and how for your transaction. I cannot stress how important this is. Think of your contract as the backbone for your business, plain and simple. This is an investment and part of your business infrastructure. If there is something wrong with your contract then there is something wrong with your business. Cutting corners or skimping on your contract will cost you dearly down the road in headaches, lost business, customer disputes and lawsuits.

Florida Contract Review

As a good business practice, all of your contracts should be reviewed regularly by a Florida contract lawyer to ensure the terms are still relevant. During this periodic review, the contract lawyer can also update existing terms when required due to different business procedures or methods. Periodic Florida contract review ensures that new ideas and lessons learned from previous deals can be incorporated into your contract. Never allow your contract to become stale, outdated and perhaps meaningless.

Florida Contract Drafting

In the instance you are using no written contract (gasp) or a generic purchased document (shudder), now would be a good time engage a lawyer for Florida contract drafting. A personal consultation with a Miami contract lawyer will allow the lawyer to review your business needs and operations to craft a contract that specifically protects your legal interests. Think of this as custom carpentry work. With custom carpentry work, you do not complete the job with just a single hammer. There are many different tools to use all depending on what you want to achieve. Same applies to your business contract. Don’t just use a generic form but arm yourself with a custom crafted contract geared towards your business needs.

Florida Contract Consults

We stand ready to assist you with your Florida contract drafting and Florida contract review needs. Contact us for a consultation concerning Florida contracts and see how a Miami contract lawyer can help you get the benefit of your bargain.


Related Topics: Florida contract law, Miami contract attorney, Florida contract drafting, Florida contract review, Florida contract revision, Florida contract amendment, Florida contract attorney

Attorney’s Fee Provision in Florida Contracts Are Strictly Construed

Florida Contract Law

Florida Attorney’s Fees Entitlement in Contracts

In Florida Hurricane Protection and Awning, Inc. v. Pastina, 35 Fla. L. Weekly D2024a (Fla. 4DCA 2010), the Florida Fourth District Court of Appeal considered a case involving a Florida contract dispute.  In this case, a Florida homeowner hired a contractor to install window shutters on a home.  The contract between the homeowner and the contractor contained an attorney’s fee provision that stated that the purchaser was responsible for all costs of collection and attorney’s fees.  The contractor failed to complete the job and the homeowner filed a complaint for breach of contract against the contractor.  Eventually, the homeowner prevailed in the breach of contract claim against the contractor and requested that the Court award attorney’s fees pursuant to the fee provision in the contract.  The contractor opposed the demand for attorney’s fees arguing that legal fees could only be awarded in a collection action as stated in the contract and not for a breach of contract action by the homeowner. 

The trial court sided with the homeowner on the basis of Florida Statute 57.105(7) which provides reciprocity for the award of attorney’s fees in a Florida contract.  What Florida Statute 57.105 provides is that where there is a unilateral right to collect attorney’s fees in a contract for one party, the other party has a right to collect attorney’s fees if it should prevail. The trial court awarded attorney’s fees to the homeowner on the basis that the contract must provide reciprocity to collect attorney’s fees if it has an attorney’s fee provision.  The contractor appealed this ruling.

The Fourth District Court of Appeal held that Florida Statute 57.105(7) as applied to this case only meant that if the homeowner prevailed in a collection action brought by the contractor that the homeowner would be entitled to attorney’s fees.  That is to say, each side had the right to collect attorney’s fees in a collection action as provided in the contract.  In this case, this was not a collection action but a breach of contract action by the homeowner.  Thus there is no attorney’s fee provision that applies to this case and therefore the award of attorney’s fees to the homeowner was improper.

The lesson to be learned from this case is that Florida courts will strictly construe a Florida contract when attorney’s fees are at issue.  If the ability to collect attorney’s fees is important, the parties must state with specificity the exact circumstances to which attorney’s fees will be awarded.  Likewise, if a Florida contract lawyer wants to limit the exposure of attorney’s fees awards, he or she need only exclude a provision for attorney’s fees or reference a specific instance when they are awardable.

If you should need help with a Florida contract or need a Florida contract lawyer, please feel free to contact Russell Law and Florida lawyer, Patrick Russell, Esq., who can assist you with your Florida contract needs.  We can be reached at 305.373.3826.  Please be sure to inquire as to our experience, qualifications and our level of service and how it can help you.
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