While I’ve been working on improving the legal skills of new bankruptcy lawyers, my friend Jay Fleischman has taken another route. Not that he’s working on illegal skills: he’s training lawyers in all kinds of practices on getting clients, providing superior service, and finding the best ways to harness the internet and technology to do so profitably.
Jay’s Legal Practice Pro website has spawned a membership service with online seminars and instructional material on all the things Jay is expert at. The Community is open at a discount til July 30. It’s a monthly subscription, $77/month if you sign up before month’s end. Money back guarantee, terminate at any time. Can’t imagine that you’d want to, but that’s my opinion.
If you want a more robust skill set in the business side of the practice of law, mosey on over and sign up.
Thursday night I’m presenting a workshop on the basics of creditor claims in bankruptcy for new consumer bankruptcy lawyers. We’ll look at;
• When you need to review claims
• What to do if you find objectionable claims
• Procedures for claims objections
• Survey of ground rules for contested matters
Sign up in advance for two hours of training in bankruptcy practice skills.
Save June 17 for a two hour presentation on Creditor Claims and Contested Matters. Truly the product of popular demand (and incessant questions<g>) this class will look at reviewing proofs of claim; claims objections, and the rules governing contested matters. As always, we will focus on basics with an eye to what you can’t learn in books.
More information to follow but plan on being there June 17 5-7 p.m. at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View.
Law-full is the access point for all things related to bankruptcy law and practice.
Begun as Cathy Moran’s personal on line law library, it serves as a bulletin board for bankruptcy law activities in the San Francisco Bay Area. With deference to copyright on some of the material stored here, parts of the site are not freely accessible.
Cathy