5 Things You Should Know About Twitter

If you’ve been paying attention to internet media lately, you know that Twitter has become the favorite social media vehicle for all kinds of marketers – including bankruptcy lawyers.

The concept of Twitter can be a bit overwhelming at first – millions of people writing 140 character blurbs (called “tweets” that are immediately posted for the world to see – but more and more marketers are finding success with this social media site.

But how do you use Twitter to attract clients and build your practice?

Here are 5 tips that can help you effectively use Twitter to engage potential clients:

  1. Twitter is a social networking site first, and a marketing vehicle second. The whole point of Twitter is to converse with other users on a personal level. It might seem counterproductive to talk about your weekend trip to the Poconos, but these are the things that make potential clients feel like they really know you. Of course, you’ll want to promote your practice as well, but this shouldn’t be your main focus. If it is, people will start ignoring you very quickly.
  2. The more engaging your “tweets” are, the more followers you’ll attract. Twitter users who focus on interesting, informative tweets often attract thousands – or tens of thousands – of followers. That’s a pretty impressive audience, especially when you consider that any one of your followers could become your next client.
  3. To make the most of Twitter, use it every day. Tweeting consistently is an excellent way to make sure your followers are paying attention to what you have to say. If you take a few days off, people will tend to forget about you – that’s just the downside of a social media vehicle that moves so darned quickly.
  4. “Retweeting” is a valuable act of goodwill. Retweeting is when you read someone else’s tweet, and copy it to send it to your own followers. It essentially says, “What you wrote was so interesting that I had to tell my friends about it.” Just make sure to credit the original author, and place the letters “RT” at the beginning of your retweet so the author will know you passed it on.
  5. Respond to your followers’ tweets. Okay, it would be literally impossible to respond to every single one – you’d never have time for anything else! Still, responding to the occasional tweet lets your followers know that you value their insights… which helps you build strong online relationships.

So are you on Twitter?  If you are, just put your Twitter name in the comments section so everyone can find you!

Getting Your Bankruptcy Practice To GREAT . . . And Leaving GOOD Behind

Important Factor In Marketing Your Law Firm: Listening To Client Feedback

You can be a good bankruptcy lawyer, filing cases and getting your clients a discharge.  Cure the mortgage arrears, save the car, wipe out the unsecured debt – that’s all good.  Very good, from your perspective.

But what do your clients think?

Do you ask them?  Do you take the time to listen when they tell you?

Can you handle bad news when your clients give it to you?

Some years ago I ran across Jed Berliner, a Massachusetts bankruptcy lawyer with whom I had never spoken.  Didn’t know him from a hole in the wall, in fact.  But I read an article in the ABA Journal talking about this lawyer who sent out surveys to each of his clients after their case was completed.

Brilliant! I thought to myself.  But what would this survey look like?  What would it ask for?  And would my clients take the time to send it back?

So I got in touch with Jed – now one of my closest friends and an excellent lawyer on many levels.  Asked him for the survey.  He gave it up willingly.

This was, sadly the first step in a long number of them.  For months the file sat on my hard drive unused.  I was too busy to do anything with it, didn’t want to waste my time sending it out.

Then one day I had a few hours, and dropped 50 of them in the mail to clients who had finished their bankruptcy cases.  Just a test, no expectations.  I sent along a self-addressed, stamped envelope for good measure and figured it was a waste of a few bucks and some spare time.

Uh oh.  I should have put on my hard hat.

At the time, I’d been practicing for about five years at the time (this was in 2000, mind you) so I was definitely not a newbie.  I knew my stuff, practiced ethically, and was well-organized.  My staff was friendly, I was thoughtful in my approach to client matters.  In sum, I was a good lawyer.

My clients, on the other hand, had other bones to pick with me.  A skeleton’s worth, in fact.

I didn’t return calls immediately.

I was often unavailable.

My staff wasn’t as helpful as they could be.

My office hours were inconvenient.

My fees were too high.

The list went on and on.  I was so bloody and bruised after reading about a dozen that I had to take a walk around the block.  Four times.

I could have dismissed the criticisms as the gripes of crabby clients.  I could have kept on keepin’ on.  I could have stopped sending the surveys.

I did none of those things.  Instead I asked myself what would have resolved those problems and made the clients happy.  And over time, I tinkered with my practice and my staffers until those complaints went away.  I let clients know when I would be available to take calls, and set down a policy for returning messages.  I published those items to my clients and let them know when they met with me for the first time.  I changed my sales practices, emphasizing what I would and would not do for them.  I added value in a million little ways.

And I still got some bad reviews.  So I changed a few more things.

The bad reviews are the ones you want, not the good ones.  You need those to make you a GREAT lawyer in the eyes of your clients.  You need them so you can constantly ask yourself what you could do better – and to force you to do those things.

Because YOU are not the arbiter of whether you are a great lawyer – your clients are.  YOU do not create good buzz about you practice and get friends and family members to refer people to you – your clients do.  And YOU do not determine whether a good review of your law firm shows up on Avvo, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, a blog or any other online resource – your clients do.

Using Twitter For Professional Purposes

I previously posted about Twitter, a terrific little micro-blogging platform that allows people to interact in real time with others. It’s addictive (and not in a Facebook time-suck sort of way) and useful for business development, marketing and general professional purposes.

Over at DuctTape Marketing, John Jantsch has created his Guide to Using Twitter. It’s a good read for those who have been thinking about Twitter and may not have already made the leap.Another terrific piece on Twitter was written by Grant Griffiths, and it’s called, “Twitter – the Rules of Engagement”.

What’s nice about John Jantsch’s guide is he addresses a very common statement, ‘it’s just another time-waster. How is it going to get me business?”

Twitter is a neat little tool. Now John can teach you how to use it.

If you use Twitter, follow me at http://twitter.com/JayFleischman. See you there.

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What Is Twitter, And Why Do You Care?

If you follow social media you know about Twitter – but many of my readers don’t follow social media and don’t really care to do so. Hence, this post.

Twitter is like e-mail, only more immediate and closed. It gives you a way to follow someone around and find out all the cool stuff they’re doing (and the mundane stuff as well). What are they finding out online, what new cases have they uncovered, what tips and tricks are in their toolboxes . . . it’s all there for you.

All you need to do sign up for a Twitter account (it’s free) and tell the system who you want to follow. From then on, every time that person sends a message it gets broadcast to you (as well as to all the other people following him or her).

I’m on Twitter, sending out updates that don’t make it onto this site. Tips, tools, and a few special offers that I run across on a daily basis as I sit in front of my keyboard. Just go to Twitter.com and sign up, then search for me (my username is JayFleischman) and follow me.

For a video that shows how easy it is, click below.

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