How long does it take to get a second offer?
How long does it take to get a second offer?
And is it possible to do this with a "second round"?
Sixtofour. You can negotiate terms on any offer. You might or might not get everything you want. A second round is when a company negotiates additional terms after they already signed you on the first round. -----. Jtokoph. Great post! I think as a founder, you are in a tricky spot -- If you make a really bad. Decision, do you want someone else to take the heat? My solution was just to keep trying new stuff. When you don't believe in anything anymore, you'll try anything. Also, find someone to have 'second-round' conversations with. I would be super pissed if I wasn't able to negotiate any of my terms with a later round. How much do you have to make per year to be a "founder?" How much do you need. Per year to feel like an entrepreneur and start your own company, instead of. Working for someone else?
How long does it take for an insurance company to make a second offer?
How well do I know these guys?"
"I don't know." "Then we have to work on that angle, which isn't so big. But there's something else too. You remember the guy who was driving in the second incident? He was an agent with a car and life policy through his employer. He went to work on the car for less than a week, and they just decided to change the policy."
"That doesn't help me much. You might run into trouble finding him again."
"I know. Do you want to talk to my agent? He can keep you straight, you said so yourself."
"I didn't say that. But it would be nice if you did. Are you going to pay this guy?"
"Yes, and I would do it sooner or later. But it wouldn't be worth it to me now."
"Well, I'll try him." "Do it this evening. We have plans and don't want to be interrupted."
We ate dinner together again. "If you had your way, the world would be in chaos," said Lotte. "What does your friend have that he wants that badly?"
"He has everything." "Is it so impossible to understand that the way you feel may actually not be correct, that he maybe doesn't want all of it as he thinks? I have no children myself." "You're too soft." Lotte laughed. "It's true. It's a sad thing, I think. That you have to get to understand that your children should be allowed to develop a personality and find out how to act, and you have to do that yourself as well."
"We've talked about that before." "Has it worked?". "Not completely." Lotte got up and took a couple of steps, "When people become parents themselves it's like a sickness that turns them into animal. And I know what I'm talking about. My parents thought they had a good idea. But when they had me, they didn't change at all. Not even a little bit. They were always so gentle that I could stand it all the way. If you don't change, you're no different than the rest of them. So I want to do away with children. I want to abolish them.
Is it good to accept a settlement offer?
Answers from an LCR lawyer experienced in resolving claims. Question: I received a letter offering a settlement. My car was hit and pushed into a fence, and I had been told that the insurance company would not pay anything for personal injury or property damage. The letters said that I could make the insurance company pay out of my own pocket if I wanted to, even though I did not have any insurance. (I had to sell the car at a loss after the accident to get some funds.)
It seems like a good offer, but I think it will be too difficult for me to collect if I don't have the money. It's my fear that a large judgment will scare off the insurer and I will have no chance of collecting against it, or that it might better for me to pay something toward it rather than go through with a lengthy trial and have the chance of a small judgment. I'm also leery about accepting such a small amount because I'm afraid that the insured could later raise the settlement as part of their defense, that is, that I'm taking advantage of them.
Can you offer me some help on this issue? Can I do anything else besides rejecting this offer? Thanks! -Karen. Answer: Generally speaking, any offer made prior to a trial verdict is referred to as a pretrial offer. Because settlements are often structured so as to be a no-low-ball offer, where the defendant has absolutely no risk of losing anything on liability or damages, and is always trying to pay a sum less than any eventual liability exposure on liability, the plaintiff has absolutely no downside.
The same is true on the flip side, where the plaintiff has no interest in any money up front. If your offer comes in at 50% of what a jury award might bring, for example, it will be rejected. As you suggest in your question, your offer may well be a pretrial offer, which typically runs afoul of the Rules of Evidence.
Should you accept the first offer of compensation?
This is a discussion on ?00 to come back from the dead. He did. The first thing he .
Should you accept the first offer of compensation? The first thing he did was look at his wife and say, "I don't know about this." Then he looked at his lawyer and said, "I need time to think about this." Then he turned to the doctor and said, "I want to go back to the beach." The doctor said, "There's no way we can keep you alive like that." And the lawyer said, "If it's not too late, he'll be dead by lunch." Then the doctor went to work on him, and he didn't make it through the afternoon. So the lawyer called the doctor and said, "It's too late to do anything now. Do you have anything you can give him?" The doctor asked what he wanted and the lawyer said, "I want my life back." The doctor said, "Well, I'm sorry to tell you that I don't have anything that can give your life back. It's gone, and you are not going to get it back until you die." The lawyer said, "That's fine. I have to go now, but if there is anything that can be done, call me."
The doctor said, "Hold on a minute. You said you want your life back, but you're going to die anyway. Why don't you live just long enough to see if you can get it back?" The lawyer told him, "Listen, I have to go now, and I'll talk to you when I get back."
The doctor got on the phone and said, "I've got him. He says he wants his life back. What can I give him?" The lawyer said, "Tell him he can have his life back right now. If he wants it." The doctor said, "You mean he wants his life back and he wants it right now?" The lawyer said, "That's what I said.










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