3 Compelling Reasons Why Marketing Your Law Firm Should Begin With Lead Generation



lead generation - marketing your law firmYou’re sitting in your office and the phone rings, or that annoying little ping signals you’ve got an email.  It’s a new potential client!  Stop the presses!  All work halts!  Why?  Because when a new client contacts you, it means you’re on the precipice of making money.  This is what marketing your law firm is all about.  But is that the right way to do business?

Lawyers, especially those in historically direct response fields such as bankruptcy, personal injury and criminal defense, typically get the client when there’s an immediate need.  I get rear-ended and wind up in the emergency room, so I start looking for an attorney to represent me.  But as I’ve said in the past, it would be so much better if I, the client, met my lawyer before I needed any help.  In that way I wouldn’t have to scramble at the last minute – my choice would already be made in my head.

For the lawyer, it makes sense as well.  When you’re marketing your law firm, your goal is to be the first attorney someone thinks about when they think about a lawyer.  There’s always a steady stream of people who are interested in learning a bit about the attorney’s services.  It’s called lead generation, and it’s what makes the business world go around.

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When Marketing Your Law Firm Online, Remember The Lurkers

When marketing your law firm online, your focus is on the prospective clients who take action to contact you – either through a form, a phone call, or email marketing opt-in.  But that ignores a whole segment of valuable readers.

When I started blogging as a part of my online legal marketing plans, it was as if I was shouting down a sewer in the middle of Manhattan.  All around me there was noise, but my shouts brought back only echos of my own voice.

For months I blogged (and produced a podcast) about issues central to my field of practice, news of the day, and other things that would be important to anyone who was interested in the solutions I provided.

And for months, nothing happened.  [Read more...]

Online Legal Marketing – 11 Reasons Why Content Is King

Online Legal Marketing - 11 Reasons Why Content Is King

Online legal marketing efforts typically consist of a thin website or a blog that collects dust.  You’re all fired up about “getting online,” that you forget one critical point – if you’re using your website as a brochure filled with platitudes and hollow verbiage then why would someone ever consider hiring you?

Answer – they wouldn’t.

Consider the text of this website, created by an excellent law firm with high hopes for a killer online legal marketing effort:

<name of firm> is a full-service <location> bankruptcy law firm providing legal assistance to individuals and families in <area of practice>. As a <location> Board Certified Bankruptcy Attorney, <name of lawyer> has the legal knowledge, experience and resources to help you, just as he and his legal team have helped thousands of clients.

Your may now proceed to enter your name and location in that paragraph.  Once you’ve done that, substitute the name of your closest competitor.

Can you tell the difference?  I didn’t think so.

It’s boring and doesn’t provide any useful information.  Online legal marketing at the lowest possible level, indeed.

The rest of this lawyer’s site is filled with similarly empty-sounding paragraphs, providing zero substance and consisting of the online legal marketing equivalent of a brochure.

There’s no meat on those bones.  Nothing’s there but something for the dog to gnaw on.

Online legal marketing, if it’s going to be effective, must be formed around a content-based strategy.  That’s anathema to most lawyers because there’s still that annoying voice in their head that says:

If you give prospective clients a ton of information for free, why would they pay you for it?

It’s a point I used to brush off, dismissing the concerns as those of dinosaurs who refused to embrace the “new rules”of online legal marketing as it progressed from a one-dimensional brochureware approach to an interactive and content-based strategy.  But as with the stock market and the world of business, the old rules are exactly the same as the new ones.  The only difference is that the new rules wear more stylish clothing.

My law practice has engaged in online legal marketing  using a content strategy for 5 years, and it’s paid off in myriad ways: people come to me with more information under their belt, a sense of confidence in my abilities and, to a large extent, a level of preparation I’d never seen before I started marketing my law firm with content.

More to the point, they’re pre-sold on my services – I don’t need to quibble over legal fees or convince them that I’m the right choice.  They’ve already gotten to the point where they have made the decision on their own, which is far more effective than trying to sell them.

This isn’t a “new rule” of marketing your law firm.  None of this stuff is particularly new, in fact.  It’s easier to get a client when you’ve had the opportunity to educate and convince that person about the need for, and value of, your services.

Online legal marketing strategies consist of nothing more than a using a new platform.  The Internet enables you to get it done more effectively and on a larger scale than pressing the flesh or direct mail. All we’re doing here is using a new delivery mechanism for reaching out and educating people.

Here are my top 11 reasons why online legal marketing efforts must be centered around the creation of real content instead of marketing fluff:

  1. Content informs people about the basics before they pick up the phone to call you for an initial meeting;
  2. Your online legal marketing efforts need to be designed to prove that your law firm is well-educated in solving client needs, and can communicate those solutions effectively;
  3. When you show how much you know, you don’t need to tell your prospective clients about your competence – the proof is in the pudding;
  4. Informative content gets passed along from one person to the next, providing exposure to more people than would otherwise be possible using other marketing techniques;
  5. When your law firm creates useful content – not fluff – it helps you learn more about it even if you’ve been practicing law for years;
  6. Valuable content allows your online legal marketing efforts to weed out those people who do not need your help – someone reads your stuff, they realize the solution you offer isn’t for them, and they move on without wasting your time or theirs;
  7. Providing information as the basis of your marketing efforts gives people the ability to do some of the “grunt work” that you’d like them to do before meeting with you.  Stuff like writing a letter to a debt collector to stop contacting them, initiating an effective credit reporting reinvestigation request, or putting together all of the documents they’ll need to start a bankruptcy case.  Why would you not want them to do this legwork before coming to you in the first place?
  8. While you’re marketing your law firm by providing valuable information, others are marketing with the bland and forgettable 30 second TV spot (and people are skipping it to hit the bathroom or grab a snack);
  9. Creating a blog post, article or other form of content takes time but no money;
  10. You can re-purpose your content by taking blog posts and turning them into an ebook or informational package to provide to clients, so you can create it once and spin it out to use over and over again;
  11. More content marketing = more search engine saturation = higher placement on the search engines = more traffic to your website or blog = more clients = more money.

So here’s my question for you: if you’re not using a content market strategy, why not?  What’s getting in your way?  And how can we break down those roadblocks to make you more successful?

Photo courtesy of badgerxx.

Online Legal Marketing – Fish Where The Fish Are

Online Legal Marketing Is Like Fishing

When you’re marketing your law firm online it’s easy to get caught up in the blogging whirlwind.  After all, that stuff takes nothing more than time – and it’s entirely within your control.  There are technical issues to contend with, but they’re easily tackled.

Most people will tell you to work on excellent content and optimize it for the search engines.  Once that’s done, optimize for actual readers to decrease bounce rate, increase time on site, and overall create an environment that makes it easier for potential clients to interact with and, ultimately, hire, you.

But what’s missing for this equation is that by providing excellent content and optimizing it, you’re taking too passive of a position.

That’s right, I called you passive.  Your online legal marketing efforts are reliant upon someone stumbling on your site.  It’s like opening up a store on a dead-end street and hoping that someone will magically find it.

Not gonna happen.  At least, not quickly.

The toughest part of your online legal marketing efforts are to get as many qualified prospective clients to your websites, blogs and social media circles as possible.

Your need to promote your content overtly by using Twitter, Facebook and other social networking sites, and indirectly by establishing yourself as a trustworthy professional who knows a thing or two about your field of practice.

How?  You need to fish where the fish are.  In the world of online marketing, you still need to (and I dread this statement) get yourself out there.

I’m talking about consumer finance listservs, debt and credit forum sites, and blogs that discuss personal finance issues.  You can hang out on the lawyer listservs too, but that’s for you – not your online marketing.  Use the lawyer sites for education and camaraderie, but don’t expect to get much business there.

You’ve got to fish where the fish are.  And those fish are on the consumer finance sites.  You need to take the time to get to know these online communities and start answering questions.  Give from your base of knowledge – without promoting yourself or your sites.  In time, people will come to realize that you’re a smart lawyer and will begin to rely upon you as a referral source.

Yes, it takes time.  But so does any relationship.  You didn’t marry your spouse on the first date.  You didn’t wake up one morning with a new best friend or business partner.  It took time.  So does this.  But it will also give you the reputation that’s earned only when people know and trust you.  People who are your potential clients and referral sources.

People who may need help someday – help you can give.  And isn’t that the goal?

Photo courtesy of bogdog Dan.

Marketing Your Law Firm – A Signed Retainer Doesn’t Equal Success

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Marketing your law firm is often thought to begin with an ad or some promotional piece – a blog, an article, press release, whatever.  And the legal marketing ends when the client signs the retainer agreement.  We breathe a sigh of relief.  Game over.

Not so much.

Have you ever had a client who was just perfect?  Showed up in your office with everything organized, fee in hand, patient and happy to be with you?

Maybe they brought along all the documents on CD-ROM as well as in hard copy, just in case you wanted them on your computer?

How did that make you feel about how well you were marketing your law firm – the fact that you could attract such a PERFECT client?

How much easier did that make your job?

Now . . . why couldn’t ALL bankruptcy clients be just like that?  The world would be a better place, roses would smell sweeter, and you’d whistle as you walked into the office each morning.

The mantra of the consumer bankruptcy lawyer is, “If I can get ‘em in the office, I can get ‘em to sign up with me.”

Though that’s laudable, it’s only a small portion of the equation.  Marketing your law firm begins here, it doesn’t end here.

Why?  Because the real work starts the minute the prospect becomes a client and signs a retainer agreement.  Whether $100, $200 or more changes hands it is not enough to compensate you for the work you need to do merely to get the Petition into shape for signature.

Tax returns, bank statements, bills, financial information . . . not to mention the seemingly endless barrage of phone calls from clients demanding your attention.

But that’s only the beginning.  Your client is undoubtedly paying your fees in installments.  So that means you’ve got to chase the client down for money.  And if that money doesn’t come in fast enough you’re looking a whole new round of documents to be provided.

Round and round it goes.

If you’re lucky, the client comes back (eventually) and signs the Petition.

But we all know there’s a decent chance Mr. Debtor is gonna fall off the dark side of the moon.  Someone put a bug in his ear that bankruptcy is the end of the world, or maybe he thinks his world is better merely for having hire you in the first place.

Let me ask you to do this simple exercise:

  • List the number of clients who have retained you in each month since June 2008;
  • List the number of clients from each month who have paid your fees in full as of February 25, 2009.

Is there a disparity, even a small one?

There’s a reason WHY this phenomenon occurs in the world of the consumer bankruptcy lawyer.

It’s called . . . the effective marketing of your law firm.

Ouch!

Every day I hear a bankruptcy lawyer tell me that he or she doesn’t need and legal marketing strategies . . . there are plenty of clients.  The problem is in juggling the workload!

But here’s the rub.  If you have solidified your marketing into a system designed solely to attract your most compliant and desirable clients then they will make your life easier.

Market like a blindfolded kid playing “Pin The Tail On The Donkey,” however, and you’re going to get people you don’t want – people who are just not a good fit for you, and who will be tougher clients to work with.

Do the exercise.  Let me know how it turns out.

Legal Marketing And The Bankruptcy Lawyer – Remember The Similarities

How you choose to market a consumer bankruptcy practice must be based in some measure on who your client really is in order for it to succeed.

We’re taught by legal marketing folks that we need to engage in target marketing.  That is, slicing and dicing our market using geography and demographics.  Who they are, where they live, what they look like, and where they eat for dinner.  The more granular we get, the thinking goes, the easier it is to be able to find our target.

Find the target, find the client.  Legal marketing nirvana.

You do need to know everything about your potential client to make sure you’re talking their language and addressing their concerns.  But you also need to know everything about yourself.

If you and your client don’t have a common point of view, getting together is nearly impossible.

Putting aside the problems your ideal client is currently facing, there’s really no difference between the two of you.  After all, there’s not that far to fall from success and failure in any aspect of our lives.  We’re all just a few paychecks away from bankruptcy.  That’s not to scare you, but to make you understand that 99% of your client’s world looks just like yours.

The old saying is, “know thyself,” and there’s truth to that.  If you’re going to figure out who you want to attract as a client, your legal marketing has to recognize who you are before anything else.

It begins with communication.

Once you have a handle on your own background, your lifestyle, and your ideas of right and wrong it’s important to be able to communicate effectively.  When you market a consumer bankruptcy practice those words need to come from your life, not your profession.  Terms like “discharge” and “reaffirmation” hold no sway in your vocabulary – they set you apart, creating distance between you and your ideal client.  So you’ve got to strip those words away and talk like you talk when the office is closed.

Consumer bankruptcy lawyers have a habit of marketing to their own best instincts.  What they like, what they hate, where they congregate . . . those are how they decide where and how to market.

But when you move into your client’s shoes, lines open up.  Trust is built.  Communication is clearer, and clients are better educated.  They gravitate to you and trust your advice, because you’re one of them.

Always remember where you came from, and where you are in life.  What makes us the same is what helps our legal marketing efforts, and sweeping away the differences is key to our ability to connect with our potential clients.

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