Top 30 Trial Tips from the Courtroom Trenches
After years of trying cases in courtrooms across Georgia, I’ve learned a thing or two (or thirty) about what makes a trial run smoothly and what doesn’t. Whether you’re a first-chair trial lawyer or supporting your team from the benches, preparation is everything. Here are 30 tips I swear by when heading into trial:
Logistics & Prep
- Reserve a conference room at the courthouse. Bonus points if it locks. You’ll thank yourself when your exhibits and team are steps away.
- Order lunch in advance. Don’t waste time searching for food mid-trial.
- Start your day with a protein shake and water. No food is allowed in the courtroom, and you need to stay sharp.
- Bring backup comfy shoes. Those courthouse hallways are long, and limping in front of the jury is not the move.
Evidence & Strategy
- Organize by witness. Use labeled file folders with outlines and exhibits grouped together.
- Enter multiple exhibits at once. Save the jury from death by foundation.
- Video your trial. File a Rule 22 and bring a videographer. Reviewing footage is gold for future trials and closing prep.
- Keep damages witnesses brief. Everyone should bring something new but keep it short.
- Get clear depo admissions. A solid cross starts with a well-pinned-down depo.
- Prep your witnesses. They should walk in knowing exactly what to expect.
Execution in the Courtroom
- Know your impeachment material. Page and line. Ask the same question as in depo.
- Plan your evidence entry. Know the who, how, and backup plan if it doesn’t come in.
- Bring snacks. Emergencies happen. A protein bar goes a long way.
- Have appellate counsel on deck. Someone needs to argue the law while you manage the case.
- Use a trial tech. Tech problems are not your job mid-cross.
- Know your spot. Plaintiffs sit closest to the jury. Trial tech sits right behind.
- Play to strengths. Split duties and let everyone do what they do best.
- Print case law. Don’t just cite it. Hand it to the judge.
- Bring visual models. Especially for complex cases. Think anatomy, timelines, maps.
- Use flip charts. Write down key answers in real time. It sticks.
Jury, Presentation & People
- Pick multiple alternates. Life happens.
- Use PowerPoint strategically. Clean, visual, and on message.
- Print large boards. FedEx is your friend.
- Plan your outfits. Steam, prep, and get them ready before trial week.
- Bring sealed depo transcripts. Needed for impeachment.
- Know the bathroom locations. Trust me.
- Bring the right client. If you can picture the jury hugging your client after the verdict, you’re in good shape.
- Detach from the verdict. All you can control is your courtroom effort.
- Protect your team. Don’t tear each other apart over every strategic decision.
- Trust the jury. They’ve heard the story. Let them do what they were called to do.
Final Thought:
Every trial is different, but preparation is the great equalizer. This is what I do to show up ready and to make sure my client gets everything I’ve got.