Developing a Successful Social Media Strategy for Law Firms: Part 3 Good2bSocial Digital Academy

Last week, we covered Good2bSocial’s content marketing strategy for law firms module, going over how law firms can use thought leadership to align their business goals with those of their clients. Good2bSocial’s Digital Academy includes eight modules that provide legal marketers with essential knowledge of digital marketing concepts. Good2bSocial’s Digital Marketing Certification offers a module on Law Firm Social Media Strategy, complete with videos, articles, assignments and webinars that break down how firms can put together a valuable social media strategy. Key concepts covered in the module include how to define a law firm brand, extend the reach and engagement of a law firm’s social media posts and how to build and maintain a following. The module also includes lessons on how law firms can best utilize various social media platforms, including Instagram and LinkedIn.

Effective social media marketing strategies that drive engagement and generate leads are an essential part to any law firm’s business development plan. Despite this, some law firms have trouble implementing a successful strategy. This is a missed opportunity for lawyers to build connections with prospective clients and to further connect the dots between the practice areas and legal matters associated with lawyers’ messaging and the law firm’s brand goals.

There’s a great deal of information out there on how businesses can use social media to define and heighten their brand. The unique value proposition of Good2bSocial’s Digital Marketing Academy is that it distils and refines social media, content marketing and SEO best practices and applies them to the legal services industry. Ryan King of Ogletree Deakins shared his thoughts on the course, saying:

“This course was excellent. It covered all the major areas of digital marketing and was hyper specifically designed for those in a law firm environment. The number of sessions were just right. The homework assigned for each session was impactful, memorable, digestible, and always underscored the importance of the week’s lesson.”

The Law Firm Social Media Strategy module begins with a social media checklist for law firms, breaking down key concepts that are needed to get started, with defining the target audience being the first step.

How to Define Your Target Audience and How to Choose Effective Social Media Platforms for your Law Firm

The most important step in the process of crafting a social media strategy for law firms is to define the audience your attorneys are trying to target. These steps include determining the following:

  1. What Age is Your Target Audience?
  2. What Does your Audience Do for a Living?
  3. What is the Marital or Family Status of Your Audience?

This process includes going beyond targeting people who just “need a lawyer.” Defining key characteristics of an ideal law firm buyer persona helps the firm understand how to reach the audience they want through targeting marketing collateral directly to them. Tweaking law firm thought leadership and social media to address the needs of where the potential buyer is in the sales cycle.

Once an audience is defined, law firms can then determine which platform to choose to best target them. For example, if the target audience is a professional one, LinkedIn is a good place to start. If firms are on LinkedIn, they should ensure their company profile includes information on company culture, the firm’s business areas, job openings and links to thought leadership.

An active Twitter account is also a must-have for law firms looking to improve their social media marketing efforts. Twitter is a great place to share thought leadership articles, as well as information on attorney speaking engagements, client events and well-being initiatives. Including news from the firm itself humanizes the brand, giving the law firm’s Twitter feed personality. Firms can also use multimedia such as photos, videos and podcasts to make tweets more visually appealing, which can drive engagement.

While LinkedIn and Twitter are useful tools, they’re not the only platforms that can be utilized by law firms for social media marketing. Good2bSocial’s Social Law Firm Index found that 42 percent of the Am Law 200 firms are active on Instagram, using the platform for both recruitment efforts and to reach new clients. Law firms can use Instagram in innovative ways such as highlighting the employee experience at the firm, promoting company culture and sharing firm accomplishments. Through using Instagram effectively, firms can show why attorneys should come work for them, and why clients should hire them.

How to Refine your Law Firm’s Social Media Bios for a B2B Buyer

Talia Schwartz, Good2bSocial’s Director of Marketing, details the strategy behind and the importance of perfecting an attorney’s and law firm’s social media bio and why it is key in helping lurkers actually engage with your firm or your attorneys. Per Fishman:

“If someone is looking at your professional profile, it’s because they think you might be able to help them with some kind of problem…they are more interested in what you can do than who you are. Accordingly, your firm or your lawyers should take advantage of the available space to highlight events or skills that make you stand out as a lawyer in your area of practice”.

Creating Curated Content While Setting & Measuring Goals

The next step is to frame your law firm’s content around the challenges faced by your audience. The key to doing this successfully is to both promote your own content, as well as articles from outside sources. This decreases the appearance of being too promotional and also brings the ‘social’ into social media versus a bullhorn for your message and provides opportunities to interact with potential buyers and /or brand advocates. Generally, content should also be educational and curated to help solve the problems faced by your audience. Module 1 of Good2bSocial’s Digital Marketing Academy details the how and why of analyzing and constructing a law firm or practice group buyer persona which helps contextualize the buyer’s journey and focuses your firm’s thought leadership to match the concerns of potential buyers.

If law firms are going to take the time to create content, then the return on investment for promoting it on social should also be high. This can be achieved by setting realistic goals for engagement and growth. Some key metrics to track include increased brand awareness, higher traffic volume, new leads for newsletters, as well as retweets, shares, views and comments. Establishing a benchmark can help establish a measurable metric that firms can track over time.

Having the right tools for social media management is essential to streamlining processes and saving time. Common social media planning applications include Hootsuite, HubSpot, SEMRush and Sprout Social. These applications make it easier to schedule posts in advance. It will take some trial and error to find the right tool for your team, so feel free to try a few programs and figure out what works best. One of the most helpful features of the social media module is the analysis of top-performing law firm Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn accounts.

Achieving Business Results Through Employee Training

One of the last pieces of the puzzle includes creating an employee advocacy strategy, investing time and effort to train lawyers and other professionals on how to properly use social media. This empowers employees to share more on social media platforms, increasing brand awareness, exposure and reach for the firm.

Law firms can generate business results from social media by finding their audience online, choosing a platform, setting goals and choosing the right tools. By adhering to this roadmap, law firms can keep track of their goals and achieve results. Good2bSocial’s module on Law Firm Social Media Strategy gives law firms a strong foundation to create a strong social media presence across multiple platforms through conducting audience research, defining a law firm brand, choosing the right platform, creating content that is effective, training employees, and harnessing the right tools to measure progress toward goals.

To learn more about the Good2bSocial Academy and the law firm-focused topics covered please click here.

To Read Part 1 Good2bSocial Digital Academy for Law Firms – Inbound Marketing and Client Journey Mapping, click here.

To read Part 2 Good2bSocial Digital Academy – Content Marketing Strategy for Law Firms, click here.

Stay tuned for more details on the topics and key takeaways included in the other six modules of the Good2bSocial Academy.

Copyright ©2020 National Law Forum, LLC


For more, visit the NLR Law Office Management section.

Inbound Marketing and Client Journey Mapping– Part 1 Good2bSocial Digital Academy for Law Firms

In late January Good2bSocial launched the Good2bSocial Academy.  Designed to be an easily accessible way to enhance understanding of digital technologies in a law firm/legal marketing context for marketing, business development and communication professionals in a law firm environment, the course features webinars, articles and videos on an easy to navigate dashboard which can be completed at the attendees own pace.  On the course’s design, Guy Alvarez, Founder and CEO of Good2bSocial and the course instructor, says, “We wanted to design a course that would provide legal marketers with a verifiable base line of knowledge of digital marketing concepts in the legal marketing realm—with the idea that this course could serve as a benchmark for legal marketing departments vetting potential hires, and make it easier for CMOs to get approval for team training.”

Good2bSocial’s popular Digital Marketing Certification is available on the Good2bSocial dashboard.  The course is divided into eight sections, outlined below, with assignments and feedback from Alvarez along the way.  After completing the eight sessions, course participants will create a final digital marketing project to earn the digital marketing certificate and upon completion of the course, students will gain access to a private Linkedin Group to network with other alumni.

The eight sessions are:

Session 1: Introduction to Digital Marketing

Session 2: Content Marketing

Session 3: Social Media Marketing

Session 4: Social Media Advertising

Session 5: Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

Session 6: Search Advertising

Session 7: Email Marketing

Session 8: Measurement & Analytics

The Introduction to Digital Marketing for Law Firms section includes webinars, articles and videos providing a foundation and shared language for participants.  Concepts discussed include Inbound marketing for law firms, the buyer’s journey, and client journey mapping, all with a legal marketing focus.

Inbound Marketing for Law Firms

Inbound Marketing for law firms is introduced through a conversation with Anna Norregaard the Principal Channel Executive for Hubspot, and other articles and resources are also included.  Norregaard draws a distinction between inbound marketing and content marketing and how content marketing enhances visibility across channels, while inbound marketing uses the increased visibility to convert that additional visibility into leads and opportunities.

Norregaard breaks inbound marketing down into four phases:

  1. Attract: through strategic content creation, blogging and social media, bring new visitors to your firm’s website so they can get to know you.
  2. Convert.  Once the visitors have arrived at your site, you convert them into a lead by enticing them to fill out a form so you can capture their information, encouraging them to do so by providing valuable content like webinars or case studies.
  3. Close.  In this stage, you turn the leads into business development opportunities through segmentation–by providing regular and appropriate follow-ups, you can nurture the lead to closing.
  4. Delight.  In this phase, consider how you communicate with your clients and how the relationship provides them with value aside from the services purchased–how can you keep clients appraised of what you offer that they might find useful?

The Buyer’s Journey

In order to effectively understand what content will be effective for inbound marketing, analyzing and constructing a buyer’s persona can help contextualize the buyer’s journey for your firm’s clients and develop content that matches the concerns of potential buyers.  Broadly speaking, the Buyer’s Journey includes the Awareness Stage, the Consideration Stage and the Decision stage.  By identifying common characteristics of your buyer at each stage, you can create content that addresses the concerns and positions your firm as the solution.

Client Journey Mapping for Law Firms

One way to develop the Buyer Persona and conceptualize the Buyer’s journey is to go through a client journey mapping process.  Client Journey mapping has been a hot topic in law firms, as traditional buyers of legal services have become more concerned with pricing and consistency. Client Journey Mapping provides an overview of the client experience, and what those interactions look like at each touchpoint.  Looking at this process from an external perspective can drive the focus outward, to the client, and encourage the firm to be more receptive to feedback from clients.  Additionally, this shift in focus can help identify which touchpoints are critical to clients when making a buying decision and can encourage the firm to be more empathetic.  By placing perspective on the client’s experience, the firm can create experiences tailored to the client and extend the relationship, perhaps even broadening the relationship to include more facets of work.

By curating a variety resources in a variety of formats, Alvarez has used his expertise to find assets on the topics under discussion and putting them in a user-friendly, easily accessible dashboard.  Alvarez says, “Good2bSocial has been providing training to individual law firms for over 10 years, and through this experience we’ve learned what elements are most useful for marketers in the legal industry.  We’ve taken that firsthand knowledge and we’ve packaged it in this course designed to meet the demand—only enhanced by the tight job market and the COVID-19 pandemic– for digital marketing training in an online, on-demand format.”

To learn more about the Good2bSocial Academy and the law firm focused topics covered please click here.

Stay tuned for more details on the topics and key takeaways included in the next seven parts of the Good2bSocial Academy.

Copyright ©2020 National Law Forum, LLC


For more, visit the NLR Law Office Management section.