Read about what document and recommendations you should ask the lawyer you are interviewing. Get to know how to choose a good lawyer and the main points of your conversation.

Choosing an Attorney

Choosing an Attorney

lawyer_choosing  Ask specific questions and wait for the attorney to explain legal activities in language that you can grasp. Do not turn over documents or finances until you are satisfied that the attorney understands your problem and is eager to seize your case. Find out the rules of the foreign country relating to attorney-client privacy.

Here is the list of questions to ask when interviewing an attorney

• Are you qualified? Don't be afraid to ask straight questions about a lawyer's qualification. If you know you want to incorporate your business, for example, ask if he or she has ever handled absorption.

  • Are you well-attached?
Your business attorney should be something of a legal "physician "--one who can identify your problem, perform any "small surgery" that may be needed, and submit you to local specialists for "main surgery" if needed. No lawyer can possibly know everything about every part of law. If your business has specialized legal needs, your lawyer should either be familiar with that unique part or have a working relationship with someone who is. You shouldn't have to go sponging for a new lawyer each time a different type of legal problem comes up.

• Do you have other clients in my business?
Your lawyer should be somewhat familiar with your industry and its legal surroundings. If not, he or she should be ready to learn everything about it. Examine your candidate's bookshelf or magazine bracket for copies of the same journals and professional literature that you read.

• Are you a good tutor?
Your attorney should be willing to take the time to educate you and your staff about the legal location of your business. He or she should tell you what the law says and explain how it affects the way you do business so that you can blemish problems well in proceed. The right lawyer will issue such freebies as newsletters or memorandum that describe recent developments in the law touching your business.

• Will you be stretchy in your billing?
Because there is currently a "flood" of lawyers, with far too many practicing in most geographic locales, lawyers are in a position to have to confer their bills as never before, and it is absolutely a "buyer's market."
If a lawyer asks you for a payment or place against future amount, make sure the money will be used and not seized for ever in escrow, and that the lawyer commits to return any vacant piece of the payment if the deal fails to close for any reason. You should be doubtful of any lawyer who offers to take an ownership interest in your business in compensatory time off of a fee.