Mental Mining
Mental Mining

Exploring both the conscious and the subconscious.

Mental MiningWe believe that when a juror is learning new information, two things are happening simultaneously—the conscious mind is memorizing such vital information as names, dates, places, and more, and the subconscious is finding ways to understand the new information by arranging the facts into a story, and comparing this newly created narrative to information that is already familiar.

Through our Mental Mining® methodology, we consciously search for the relevant metaphors, analogies, and themes that the subconscious creates to make sense of new and complicated information.

Working with you and your team, The Focal Point will:

Facilitate a guided discussion during which we will explore subconscious associations to develop and refine a story that is understandable and persuasive to a jury.

Ask probing questions designed to help you think about what really matters in your case, the answers to which ultimately lead to more persuasive arguments.

Listen critically both to what is being said directly and what is being inferred, to ensure that we delve into important ideas and themes.

Record images, analogies, and other descriptions that come up spontaneously as we examine the particulars of your case together. Every “this case reminds me of” or “this case goes to prove the adage that” is documented and saved as a potential cue.

Challenge you when your story needs clarification or constructive narrowing.

By the end of a Mental Mining session, we will have developed a story that can be the basis for your case, a case strategy, and a list of potential visual tools that will communicate the facts and themes of the case clearly and convincingly.

“The Focal Point brings insight and creativity to the process. They listen with an open mind and are always committed to working at the highest level. They bring an uncanny ability to quickly immerse themselves into a case and help develop the best trial themes...and graphics. There is simply no one better.”

John PhillipsJohn Phillips
Paul Hastings

Mental Mining