How Expert Witnesses Form, Test, and Refine Opinions Before Deposition

By the time an expert witness sits down for a deposition, the opinions shouldn’t be new—to the expert or to counsel. What’s said under oath is the result of a deliberate process that starts long before deposition notices go out.
For attorneys, understanding how expert opinions are formed, tested, and refined can make the difference between confident testimony and avoidable problems under cross-examination.
Let’s walk through how that process typically works when it’s done right.

It Starts With Framing the Right Question
Experienced experts don’t begin by drafting opinions. They begin by defining the scope of analysis.
Early questions usually include:
This step matters more than it sounds. Opinions that fall outside the expert’s lane—or stray into advocacy—are far more vulnerable later.

Separating Evidence From Assumptions Early
Once the scope is clear, the next step is sorting the record.
Good experts are disciplined about identifying:
The key here is transparency. Assumptions aren’t inherently bad—but undisclosed assumptions almost always become deposition problems.
By flagging these early, the expert avoids being cornered later with, “Isn’t it true you assumed…?”

Applying Methodology Before Reaching Conclusions
This is where defensibility is built—or lost.
Rather than working backward from a conclusion, experienced experts apply a recognized, repeatable methodology, such as:
Courts don’t expect perfection. They expect process. When an expert can clearly explain how they got from evidence to opinion, their testimony holds up far better under scrutiny.

Stress-Testing Opinions Internally
Before deposition, strong experts actively try to break their own opinions.
This internal stress-testing often includes:
This isn’t about weakening testimony—it’s about strengthening it. Opinions that survive internal challenge are far more likely to survive external attack.

Refining Language Without Changing Substance
As deposition approaches, refinement becomes critical—but that doesn’t mean rewriting history.
This phase typically focuses on:
The goal isn’t to change conclusions—it’s to make sure those conclusions are communicated clearly and consistently.

Coordinating With Counsel (Without Crossing Lines)
Productive collaboration between expert and attorney matters—but so do boundaries.
At this stage, coordination usually involves:
What it doesn’t involve is coaching answers or reshaping opinions to fit a narrative. Courts are quick to spot that—and it rarely ends well.

Why This Process Matters in Deposition
Depositions aren’t where expert opinions are created. They’re where those opinions are tested.
When opinions have been:
the deposition becomes far less adversarial—and far more controlled.
Opposing counsel may still disagree, but disagreement is very different from disqualification.

The Bottom Line
Strong expert testimony doesn’t happen by accident. It’s the result of a disciplined process that starts early and evolves as the case develops.
When expert witnesses take the time to form, test, and refine their opinions before deposition, they don’t just protect admissibility—they help attorneys move through litigation with confidence.
And in complex insurance matters, that confidence is often just as valuable as the opinion itself.

Have Questions About Expert Testimony Strategy?
If you’re evaluating expert involvement in an insurance dispute or preparing for deposition, a conversation about methodology and preparation can clarify next steps.
Talk with Gulf Coast Risk Management about expert witness support that’s built for scrutiny.
Dean Chrisp

Scott Margraves

Gulf Coast Risk Management