50 Creative Content Ideas for Businesses and Consultants

When it comes to professional service firms and consultants, the challenge isn’t finding content ideas, it’s choosing the ones that will truly resonate with your audience. The goal is to fill your editorial calendar with posts that keep you visible, relevant and connected with the people who matter most, which include clients, potential hires and referral sources. It’s about creating content that offers real value and positions you as a trusted resource.

Building a Content Strategy That Resonates for Professional Service Firms and Consultants

For professional service firms and consultants, creating engaging content is about more than just filling up an editorial calendar, it’s about choosing ideas that connect with your audience on a deeper level. The real challenge lies in selecting topics that are not only relevant but also genuinely valuable to clients, potential hires and referral sources. Effective content keeps you visible, showcases your expertise and strengthens your reputation as a trusted resource in your field.

Here’s how to create impactful content for your blog, LinkedIn and other social channels. This approach will help you create content that resonates with the people who matter most to your business, driving engagement and helping you stay top-of-mind in a crowded market.

  1. Understand Your Audience’s Needs and Interests; Take time to research what topics are top-of-mind for your clients, prospective clients and industry connections. What questions are they asking? What challenges do they face? Tailoring content around these insights ensures that your posts provide practical answers and value.
  2. Prioritize Value-Driven Content: When brainstorming ideas, focus on content that educates, informs or provides actionable insights. Avoid self-promotional or overly technical topics that may not resonate. Content that genuinely helps your audience solve problems or understand industry trends will set you apart as a valuable resource.
  3. Use Varied Content Types for Engagement: Mix up your content to keep it fresh and engaging. Some ideas work well as blog posts or LinkedIn articles, while others might be better suited for quick LinkedIn posts, infographics or short videos. Diversifying your formats can attract different types of engagement and keep your audience coming back.
  4. Maintain Consistency: Building trust requires regular engagement. Schedule posts to maintain a steady presence, so your audience knows they can rely on you for frequent, quality insights. Aim to post consistently without overloading your audience, finding a rhythm that balances frequency with quality.
  5. Track What Resonates: Use analytics to monitor which topics receive the most engagement. Pay attention to comments, shares and direct messages to identify themes that resonate, and adapt your content plan accordingly.

50 Content Ideas to Get You Started

Here are 50 content ideas to help you build a strong, consistent presence on your blog, email newsletters, LinkedIn and other social platforms.

  1. Show your workspace: Give a tour of where you work, whether it’s your office, a co-working space or a virtual setup. This humanizes your firm and makes you more relatable.
  2. Introduce your team: Highlight key team members and their roles, showcasing their expertise and contributions to the success of the firm.
  3. Introduce yourself: Share your career path, your expertise and how you’ve helped clients achieve success.
  4. Showcase a service you provide: Explain a service in detail, focusing on its benefits and how it solves problems for your clients.
  5. Client testimonials: Share short video testimonials from clients explaining how you helped them and what impact your services had on their business.
  6. Tell a story: Share success stories of how you’ve helped clients overcome significant challenges in their industries.
  7. A day in the life: Take your audience through a typical day at your company to show what goes on behind the scenes.
  8. Behind the scenes: Show the preparation that goes into a major project, event or client engagement.
  9. Answer frequently asked questions: Provide insights and answers to common questions clients ask about your services and processes.
  10. Share industry trends: Offer commentary or analysis on current trends in your industry and how clients can take advantage of them.
  11. How it started vs. how it’s going: Share the evolution of your business or a significant project, demonstrating your growth and accomplishments.
  12. Repurpose blog posts or articles: Share snippets from articles or blogs you’ve written, summarizing key takeaways for your audience.
  13. How-to videos: Create short videos explaining complex concepts or offering professional tips and advice.
  14. Share client success stories: Highlight case studies or client success stories that show the value your services provide.
  15. Your regular work routine: Share the routines or habits that help you stay productive and successful in your field.
  16. Reality vs. expectations: Compare what clients typically expect versus the reality of working with your firm or consultancy, focusing on positive surprises.
  17. Before and after: Show the impact of your services through before-and-after case studies of client businesses.
  18. Quick tips: Share a few short, actionable tips related to your field, such as best practices in your area of expertise.
  19. Do what people ask for in comments: Engage directly with your audience by answering questions or addressing topics they raise in the comments.
  20. Positive reactions to industry news: Provide your take on relevant news in your field and why it matters to your clients.
  21. Share the tools you use: Talk about the tools and resources your firm or consultancy uses to stay efficient and deliver great results for clients.
  22. Celebrate business milestones: Highlight significant moments in your business, such as anniversaries, major achievements or new partnerships.
  23. Highlight a professional skill: Focus on showcasing a specific skill you offer, explaining how it benefits clients and what problems it solves.
  24. Client interviews: Record short interviews with clients about their experience working with your firm, showcasing their success stories.
  25. Encouraging messages: Share positive, motivational insights related to your industry or business practices.
  26. A sneak peek into a major project: Offer a behind-the-scenes look at an exciting new project you’re working on.
  27. Run a social media contest: Engage with your audience by running a contest related to your services (e.g., offer a free consultation or a business audit).
  28. Explain your core values: Share a story or insight about the core values that drive your business and how they impact your services.
  29. Show your thought process: Walk your audience through how you approach solving a client’s problem, emphasizing your expertise.
  30. Tips for Hiring in Your Field: Offer advice on hiring practices or skills to look for in your industry.
  31. Case study in your niche: Share a detailed case study about a particular challenge you solved for a client, emphasizing the results and impact.
  32. Checklist for the week: Offer a weekly checklist that helps clients stay on top of key tasks in their industry or business.
  33. 5 pros & cons of (your niche): Provide a balanced view on the benefits and challenges of working in your field, demonstrating your in-depth knowledge.
  34. Industry updates: Share the latest trends or changes in regulations that impact your clients, positioning yourself as a thought leader.
  35. Favorite tools you use: Discuss the tools or software you use to increase efficiency and improve results for clients.
  36. Quick hacks for getting results: Share a quick tip or hack that helps clients achieve better outcomes in their business.
  37. How clients got results: Highlight how clients benefited from working with your firm, with a focus on outcomes and results.
  38. Things I wish I knew before starting my business: Offer insights or lessons you’ve learned that can benefit other entrepreneurs or consultants.
  39. Highlight key lessons from industry events: Share top takeaways or insights from industry conferences, webinars or roundtables that your firm attended.
  40. Share Lessons Learned from a Recent Client Project: Highlight a recent client project and share key takeaways or lessons learned. This helps showcase your expertise while providing practical insights that could benefit your audience.
  41. Ask for followers’ suggestions: Engage your audience by asking them for content ideas or business topics they want to learn more about.
  42. Encourage followers to ask questions: Create a post inviting your audience to ask you questions about your services, industry trends or business advice.
  43. Create an “ask me anything” session: Host a session where your audience can ask you anything, whether it’s about business, personal growth or industry insights.
  44. Insights from Recent Conferences: Share takeaways from recent industry events or conferences (with photos!).
  45. Spotlight a client’s journey: Highlight the stages of a client’s experience, from the initial consultation to the final outcome. Break down how your firm guided them through each phase, offering valuable insights along the way.
  46. Share key takeaways from major projects: Highlight insights and lessons learned from significant client projects, showcasing how your firm’s expertise helped achieve successful outcomes. This provides value to your audience while reinforcing your industry knowledge.
  47. Show before and after results: For service-based businesses, showing the impact your consultancy or firm has made can build credibility.
  48. Showcase industry predictions and trends: Share your thoughts on the future of your industry. Highlight key changes you expect over the next 6-12 months and what businesses should do to prepare.
  49. Highlight women in leadership: Showcase women leaders in your firm or industry. Share their journeys, achievements and advice to inspire others and emphasize your firm’s commitment to diversity.
  50. Behind-the-scenes insight: Offer a glimpse into the process behind your firm’s latest project, case or transaction, giving clients a better understanding of how your firm operates.

These content ideas can help you stay consistent with your social media presence and maintain visibility within your industry. By using content that speaks directly to your audience and showcases your expertise, you’ll keep your firm connected and top of mind for potential clients.

How to Use Images and Blogs to Boost Your Google My Business Profile

Whether you are wondering if you should create a listing for your business or searching for the most effective ways to boost your local presence, Google My Business is a wise investment of time. Not convinced yet? Consider the following statistics:

  • 97 percent of people learn more about a local company online than through any other source
  • Over 90 percent of the search engine market share belongs to Google
  • According to Google, 46 percent of all searches have local intent
  • 64 percent of consumers have used Google My Business to find contact details for a local business

Listing your law firm on Google is a significant step towards a complete online presence, but it doesn’t stop there. For instance, you should update your Google My Business Profile every month or so. While this profile isn’t a social media profile, it still requires the same amount of cultivation.

The Benefit of Adding Pictures

There are a few more ways you can leverage your profile to your advantage.  One of these ways is to use images to help boost your profile. For example, using photos on your Google Business Profile is beneficial not just for aesthetics but also to provide your law firm with an SEO advantage.

According to Google, businesses that use pictures on their Business Profiles see 42 percent more direction requests on Google Maps and 35 percent more clicks through to their websites than those who don’t use them. In fact, after a 2020 experiment, DigitalMaas came to the same conclusions. There’s no denying that law firms and attorneys who regularly upload photos on their listings will get more clicks and appear more on search results than their competitors who don’t.

When adding pictures, ensure you:

  • Add photos promptly. Without pictures, Google will default to showing street views which can make potential clients doubt if you are still in business.
  • Add photos regularly, including different shots and angles, taken at various times of the day.
  • Use quality photos without over-editing them. You want them to be clear but not filtered.
  • Use categories when adding pictures. Having a minimum of three relevant photos for each category is recommended.
  • Stay relevant to your location—avoid using screenshots, stock photos, GIFs, and other manually created images.

The Benefit of Blogs

Blogs are an essential piece of SEO marketing. If your firm doesn’t already publish one, now is the time. In addition to publishing your blog on your website, make sure you take its URL along with the picture and create a post from your Google My Business Account. Google will recognize your blog under your profile, and you will start to rank higher in SEO. When you add your blog to your Google Business Profile, you essentially double the benefit of having a blog without doubling the work. Linking a blog to your profile shows your authority in the legal realm and that you remain active online.

Don’t Forget Reviews!

Another key piece of optimizing your Google My Business profile is adding reviews. Google knows that reviews are the primary influence on consumer behavior, so they are a crucial ranking factor in the algorithm. However, you can’t add reviews if you don’t have any. Getting more reviews can be simple if you follow these tips:

  • Start with your long-time, loyal clients.
  • Make leaving a review as simple as possible by creating a review shortcut link or using a shortcut link generator.
  • Add a “Reviews” page on your website with a call to action to leave one.
  • Don’t forget to ask for reviews by email, text, social media, and in-person conversations.
  • Let clients know that reviews help others in similar situations to find a solution and make informed decisions.
  • Respond to reviews as this will incentivize clients to leave theirs and improves your local SEO.
© 2022 Denver Legal Marketing LLC

How to Write Better Client Alerts and Blog Posts

One of the most effective marketing strategies for lawyers is writing client alerts and blog posts on a regular basis. Publishing content like this establishes you as a thought leader and helps to keep you top of mind with your clients, referrals, prospects and the media and bolsters your SEO results too.

So, what makes a good client alert or blog post? It’s not about writing the longest alert or publishing it before your competitors or including every detail about the court decision.

I see many law firms publish client alerts with good intentions – the whole idea is to get helpful information to your clients and prospects as quickly as possible with interesting insights.

A lot of law firms sometimes miss the mark because their client alerts are either just regurgitating facts, don’t have a lot of insight in them, are too long, are written in legalese and they’re not client-centric meaning they don’t put the client first and aren’t written for them and their needs, which completely defeats the point.

I also see alerts that are too cute or clever – with headlines based on movies, TV shows or music lyrics . What you really want to do is deliver a clear promise in the headline and provide value while engaging your reader.

A strong headline is often the determining factor on whether someone actually opens the content or not. You also must actually deliver on what you say you’re going to provide in the alert.

So if the alert says it is going to be on X topic and the first few sentences lead you to believe that, but then it goes down another path, that’s clickbait and frustrates the reader.

Almost as important as what you write is how you structure the alert. Dense, long paragraphs are not going to capture your reader’s attention today. Try using shorter paragraphs with subheadings. Make it easy for someone to follow along and find points of engagement. Bulleted or numbered lists also work well to engage your reader.

In addition, make sure your alert has a vantage point. Just regurgitating information that somebody can find on a public website about a major decision or case or update in the law is not very poignant, memorable, relevant or helpful.

What is helpful and useful is explaining what the decision or update means for your client’s business.  And of course, the hidden underlying message is “we can help you with this, we care about you and our insights can help solve your thorniest legal and business needs.” Just make sure that your content supports that too.

Writing client alerts and blog posts is one of the best ways to get back in touch with your clients, referrals and prospects in a way that showcases your subject-matter authority. Plus you’re not even thinking about all of the silent viewers and readers of your content and how that can actually lead to new business, greater visibility and brand recognition.

If writing a client alert or blog post seems too overwhelming to do alone, buddy up with a colleague or even better – a client. The summer is a great time to focus on drafting and publishing a piece of content like this, so what are you waiting for?

Watch this video for more tips on writing a better client alert or blog post.

Copyright © 2022, Stefanie M. Marrone. All Rights Reserved.