4 Online Legal Marketing Trends Every Other Industry Knows About

Don’t you wish you had a crystal ball to peer into the future?  Some way to tell what the next few years would bring?  What would you do with that information?  Would you put money on the Super Bowl?  World Series?  Or would you take the opportunity to move ten giant steps ahead of the competition?

OK, it’s no and either-or sort of thing.  You’d probably do all of those things and a lot more.  But when it comes to marketing your law firm online there’s a certain amount of forecasting we can do without any help.  All it takes is a quick glance around to see where the rest of the world is today.

That’s right, we can see the future of online legal marketing by looking around us right now.  As a backwards-looking profession, we live in the past.  It’s in our legal pleadings, our reliance on precedent, and our education.  But the fun thing is that the rest of the world is living in the present.

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6 Reasons To Syndicate Your Legal Marketing Content

Legal marketing is only as effective as the audience it reaches.  Our goal is to educate as many people as possible with our content – why shouldn’t we leverage the tools available to us?

There’s an old cartoon about a guy who finds a frog in a box.  The frog can sing and dance, top hat and all.  Elated, the guy begins taking the frog around to theatrical producers in an effort to get the little green guy to put on a show.

Each time, Michigan J. Frog would utter a lone ribbit and nothing more.  Seems as if he wasn’t so into the public spectacle, and preferred to perform in private.

Of course, we all know the end of the episode. The guy realizes that his buddy isn’t going to be the ticket to wealth and throws him and the suitcase he came in into the time capsule for a skyscraper. Froggy is found in 2056 and repeats the story.

The frog was valuable only if someone else knew about him. But without widespread knowledge of his abilities, he was … just a frog.

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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.

Guest Posting – The Dark Side

Legal Marketing And Guest Blogging

Guest posting is important for blogging, search engine optimization, and legal marketing in general.  When you guest post you have the ability to reach a new audience, expand your reach, and spread your message.  You also get the chance to add a quality backlink to your arsenal, which is a major SEO boost.

That having been said, not all guest posts are created equal from a legal marketing standpoint.

Two weeks ago I undertook a familiar legal marketing tactic by doing a guest post on the subject of estate planning as it relates to bankruptcy.  Rather than ask, I did the guest post and sent it off to the firm for which I wanted to see it appear.  This particular firm has a nice blog and I assume it does well for their legal marketing efforts if for no other reason than the fact that it ranks well for a particular search term.

My post was about 450 words of solid content, and well written.  Within 12 hours I got a response from the lawyer that he thought it was very good post and he’d get it up immediately.

About 10 minutes later I got the following email, sent to me by a “Legal Communications” person who apparently didn’t understand the concept of “reply all.”  The email said:

This is how it works. Nice tie in. Now, we can identify some bloggers for <name of lawyer’s paralegal> to write the same kind of email to.

I’m not worried at this point.  It’s good that someone who gets paid for this sort of thing has been taught the “hidden secret” of guest blogging as legal marketing vehicle.

The following day I get an email from the lawyer saying:

It looks like it needs a partial rewrite now that I have reviewed it (since there are some other alternatives) so I will simply borrow most of it, give you attribution and link to your site.

A partial rewrite?  OK, no problem.  A little editorial control in the interests of clarity is a good thing.  After all, I’m not an estate planning lawyer.

Now remember why we guest blog, people – to increase our reach and audience, to provide value, and to get noticed in a field in which that may not otherwise be the case.  Legal marketing in the online world, this is.  Tried and true content marketing.

In hindsight my mistake was clear.

Fast forward to the other day.  I get an email from the “Communications Director” of this law firm (my oh my, they do have a lot of people working in the field of communications) telling me as follows:

Sending you a link to the blog with <lawyer> did based on your recent email.  Please note that you are quoted in the blog and we have provided a link to your website.  Thank you for the suggestion.

The content is noted as having been written by the attorney, and encompasses the content I provided.  Of course, it’s wrapped in pure promotion for this attorney’s firm and not offered as a substantive piece of content written to inform and educate.

I am quoted with a link to one of my sites, but it is not my post.  I did not give this attorney an interview, and I did not agree to ghostwrite a post for him.  I did not offer to feed him ideas, and I certainly did not knowingly give him a “suggestion.”

What this proves, however, is that this attorney does not necessarily control his own content.  His “communications” people are handling that, thank you very much.  And rather than either accept or reject a guest blog post they chose to co-opt the content for their own purposes.

No, I’m not telling you the name of the other lawyer.  It’s not relevant.

What is relevant is this – guest posting is a valid form of legal marketing.  I’ve done it before, and I’ll do it again.  But before you submit a proposed guest post you need to remember that it is your intellectual property.  You need to retain full editorial control or, at the very least, final say on the content being published.

Photo courtesy of chick pea pie.
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