Online Legal Marketing Demands A Reason, Not Just A Plan

It drives me crazy to listen to all of these legal marketing folks talking about getting together a plan.  Not because they’re wrong – in fact, I think they are all very right – but because the notion of an online legal marketing plan conjures up visions of this step-by-step routine that you’ve got to follow in order to make it all happen.  My experience is that it just doesn’t work that way for the solo and small firm lawyer.

I call this technique the “marketing diet.”  You’ve got to start blogging, engage on social networks, get into video marketing (which means you need to understand how to use that video camera), podcast, on and on and on down the line.  Exposure!  Fame!  Fortune!

Of course, it all comes with price tags attached.  You get a kick-ass blog designed, a killer email marketing campaign, and even a customized Twitter background.  Why?  Because you’ve got to be there.  If you’re not, you’re falling behind.

So you cut those big checks and go your merry way.  The blog goes live, you submit to the “training session” (which goes by so fast you can’t pay attention), hook up Tweetdeck or some other Twitter client du jour, and are sent to meet your success.

You chug along dutifully for a few weeks, bouncing around in the dark with that blog and that stream of tweets.  But when your coffers don’t fill up in that time period you get seriously bummed out and burned out.  ”Why avoid that cheesecake if I’m not going to drop 20 pounds in time for my brother’s wedding next month?” seems to be the same thinking that creeps into your life right around that time.

Online legal marketing is clearly a fraud.  You’re not hitting the top of the search engines.  Twittering masses aren’t hanging on your every word.  That blog isn’t getting any traffic.

You fail slowly at first, then really quickly because you never ask for a reason.

At first it’s a missed blog post. Maybe a day away from Twitter or Facebook.  A Craigslist post doesn’t get put up because you’re too busy.  But whatever it is, there’s a small hiccup in your online legal marketing plan.  Sort of like an extra piece of cake after dinner.  It feels bad, like you’ve done something wrong.  Down deep you’re guilty.  But there’s another voice in your head telling you it’s OK because this stuff doesn’t work that well in the first place.

If you’re like me, you just stop doing anything at all.  When I first got online I was podcasting, blogging and (trying to be) active in a variety of places.  At first it was fun.  But it wasn’t feeding my business in a way that made it compelling, so when I stopped there wasn’t a reason to go back to “the grind.”

Until I took a look at my goals, and how my online legal marketing plans fit into them.  Remember, I was doing this to feed my practice and my family – not as a cool experiment in futility.

I’d been sold on the bright shiny object of the platform rather than on the ways in which a particular one fit into how I wanted to market my law firm.

Sound familiar at all?

When you turn the notion of an online legal marketing plan on its head and focus instead on your business goals, your strategy becomes clearer.

You need to ask yourself, “Why should I engage in this legal marketing medium?  Why should I spend my time here on this platform?”

Look at your goals and objectives.  Then do your homework to learn how you’re going to get found on a particular platform by the people most likely to have need of your services.  Doing so will lead you to the platforms that will work best for your online legal marketing efforts rather than the other way around.

Best of all, it will help you understand the importance of engaging on a particular platform and save you money and time on wasted efforts in the wrong places.

Save money, use your time wisely, get the results you’re looking for.

So here are my questions:  why do you use a specific tool for your online legal marketing efforts?  What is the defined goal for that particular tool?  And how exactly is it working in your favor?

Online Legal Marketing Tip – Check Your Site For Broken Links

W3C Link CheckerYour website or blog is critical to your online legal marketing efforts.  It’s got to be clean, well-organized and accessible.  Take the time to do some housekeeping to maximize your search engine results.

In order to engage in online legal marketing you need to understand search engine optimization, that nebulous field that deals with maximizing your search engine placement and visibility.  Without at least a minimal grasp of search engine optimization, your online legal marketing will never be as effective as it can be.  Period.  After all, how can you do something really well unless you know how to do it?

Remember that online legal marketing means attracting people to your content, keeping them involved, and educating them about how you can help.  As a result, you become a trusted resource and more likely to get a particular client as opposed to another lawyer.

One of the important search engine optimization factors you need to know about is the use of links on your website.  Links between pages on your site as well as links that go to other sites are useful not only to the search engines, but to your readers as well.

When someone visits your law firm website or blog and sees a link, they’re going to click it.  If that link takes them somewhere else on your site, you’ve kept them interested and engaged.  More interest and engagement leads to a greater likelihood that your online legal marketing efforts will lead to a paying client.  Paydirt, baby!

That greater level of engagement also serves to reduce your site’s bounce rate, one of the visitor engagement metrics that’s so important to search engines when determining how and where to rank you.  I’ve already talked about how to lower your bounce rate, and why doing so is an important facet of your online legal marketing strategy.  Lower bounce rate means better rankings in the long-term.

Though external links don’t do much for your rankings, broken ones tend to annoy visitors.  Ever go to a website, click a link and find out that it’s busted?  That sucks, and you’re less likely to visit that website again.  As the owner of the site, your online legal marketing efforts have been wasted if you lose a visitor because of something as simple as that.

On the pure search engine optimization front, you need to realize that the spiders are constantly looking at your site and making sure all those links work.  If they do, everyone’s happy.  But if they don’t, the spiders are decidedly unhappy.  It looks like you’re falling down on the job, delivering a less-than-optimal user experience to visitors.

And if the search engines think you’re doing a bad job then your rankings are going to suffer.  Bad rankings mean bad rate of online legal marketing return.

These are the reasons why you need to check your site for broken links, and do so often.  The tool I use is a free web-based on called the W3C Link Checker.  The tool will go through your entire website or blog and report back on any broken links.  If there’s a problem, you know where to look for it – and fix it immediately.

So check those links with this free tool.  Your wallet will thank you.

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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5 Online Legal Marketing Hacks To Get More Traffic Fast

Online Legal Marketing HacksWhen you’re marketing your law firm online, you need to always look at maximizing the traffic to your website or blog.  The more people who visit, the better your raw conversion numbers will be.  I don’t take issue with those who say that it’s the quality of the visitor as opposed to the quantity, but if you’re optimizing your content to maximize search engine coverage then the quality thing tends to sort itself out over time.

The beauty of online legal marketing with a blog or website is that you can create valuable content once and let it act as your mouthpiece for months – if not years – to come without any additional investment of time.

So again, the question becomes one of quantity. Especially when your blog is so young it’s wet behind the ears, you need to generate as much traffic as possible.

Why?  Because writing great content is useless if you’re not getting anyone to read it.  The more people who read your pearls of wisdom, the more likely it is to get passed around.  And even if it isn’t getting passed from person to person, more readers yields a greater number of blog subscribers or opt-ins to your email list.

We’re not talking about long-term online legal marketing tactics, these are hacks – quick hits to get a little leverage.  Some cost a few bucks, and others are free.  But they’re all effective.

  1. Tell your clients. Yes, your clients are already sold on your expertise – but how about their friends and family members who aren’t quite ready to talk with a lawyer?  Send a letter to your clients asking them to let people know you’ve got a great online resource for legal information and to tell them to visit it.  Totally old school offline referral marketing, but absolutely effective.
  2. Ask a question and post to your social networks. You’re probably on Facebook, Twitter, or LinkedIn – perhaps all of them.  Post a link to your blog post with a question, asking people to comment directly on the blog.  This social media traffic registers with the search engines – in fact, Google uses social media traffic as one of over 200 “signals” in ranking sites.  More social traffic translates into better long-term rankings for your site.  Better rankings translates into online legal marketing success.
  3. Give away an ebook or special report. There’s value to putting an ebook behind an opt-in form and requiring people to give up their email address in exchange for your item of value.  But if you’re looking to create awareness of your website or blog, you’re looking to garner as much traffic as possible in the short run.  Consider removing the barriers by ditching the opt-in form and giving away the ebook or special report to all visitors.  Not only will more people come to your site, but that giveaway will get passed around and turn into a long-term client generation magnet.
  4. Hitch your wagon to a star. Something going on locally that you can somehow tie into your practice area?  Sports hero busted for DWI?  Local business going belly-up?  If so, there’s a good chance people in your area are going to the search engines to read the news – and typing in the name of that sports hero or local business.  Creating content around that person or business and fitting it into your practice area will yield huge traffic spikes, which is exactly what this online legal marketing hack is all about.
  5. Coffee shop postcards work – really, they do. If you’re a lawyer, you’re a local business.  So you’ve got an edge over the multi-national companies marketing online – you can go grassroots without breaking a sweat.  Go to your local printer or click over to VistaPrint and get a bunch of postcards printed up with a headline like, “Where Can You Find Answers To All Your Questions About Getting Out Of Debt?” (if you’re a bankruptcy lawyer, that is – if you do divorce work, this headline probably won’t work for you) and the URL for your website or blog.  Grab a stack and start putting them in every coffee shop in town.  Tack them up on community bulletin boards.  Anywhere you can go guerilla, go for it.

As you can see, online legal marketing need not start online – that’s just the platform.  Your information is online, so the goal is to drive traffic there.  But you need to take off the blinders and realize that people still live offline – they eat, sleep, meet, and communicate in the real world before going online for their information.

Your online legal marketing efforts will get a shot in the arm by looking to the technological edge as well as going old school (just not in the Will Ferrell way).

But remember – this is not a long-term fix for your efforts. It will not serve as a substitute for creating valuable content that keeps people coming back again and again.  It won’t fix poorly-converting copy, a bad user experience, or lack of optimization.

What it will do is provide a jolt of energy to your blog or website, exposing more people to the intelligence and information you provide.

Photo courtesy of grewlike.

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.
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