Legal Marketing Q and A

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Our session in San Diego last weekend yielded some good questions that are worth sharing here, with my answers:

When should I ask for testimonials?

  1. Right after the client is retained
  2. Anytime the client says thank you
  3. Anytime there is a “win” for the client
  4. After the case/matter is handled

Why do I need testimonials, can’t I just tell prospects that my clients love me?

You can do so, but it is far more compelling when someone else talks about their positive experience they had with you or the firm than if you simply say your clients are happy. Third party reviews are far more powerful than if you say it.

People are skeptical; they don’t always believe what individuals and companies say about themselves.

Lastly, people are deathly afraid of making mistakes, if they can see or read about others’ experiences with you or the firm they feel better about making the decision because others have had a positive experience with you and they believe they will have a similar experience!

What are a few major systems I should have in my law firm in regards to managing client experience?

1.     Intake system (what docs clients need to bring in, sign, initial, etc.). If the process is easy and systematized, the prospect will pick up on that and feel more comfortable about hiring you.

2.     Follow up system (If a prospect doesn’t hire you how frequently and persistently do you follow up? When you meet someone at a networking event that can refer you clients, how frequently and persistently do you follow up?) Improves the client experience because they see you follow up and care.

3.     Create a policy and procedure manual (so you are not held hostage by staff or find yourself totally crippled if someone leaves, gets sick or is no longer available). Improves client experience because each time they come in or call, the experience, language used etc. is consistent.

Why does it seem like my prospects only care about price?

If prospects only care about price, that means they believe you or your services are a commodity. And commodities are sold on price. You are most likely trying to be the shiniest apple in the barrel of apples…you must become the orange in the sea of apples so people understand why and how you are different and why paying a premium makes sense.

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Professional and Personal Aspects of Law Firm Social Media

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I’ve seen it far too many times: law firms are often concerned that any personal posts on their firm’s Social Media platforms may hinder their credibility as a professional legal practitioner.  That simply isn’t the case. In fact, if every post is of a professional nature, it may deter the average Facebook user from interacting with your content. You need a good balance of the two.

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If you keep your Social Media presence strictly business, you run the risk of scaring away followers – or at the very least losing their attention. We agree with Ken Hardison, Founder and President of the Personal Injury Lawyers Marketing and Management Association (PILMMA), who says that no more than 15 percent of your social content should be self-promotional. “People love to buy, but they don’t love to be sold to,” Hardison says.

More personal posts – such as employee birthdays and anniversaries, new hires, local news, a thoughtful quote, or even pictures that don’t directly relate to law – will show Social Media users a more approachable side of your firm. However, if you never post anything related to your law firm and practice areas, your Social Media platforms wouldn’t be much of a marketing effort.

So, what’s the perfect recipe for Social Media success?

The best way to promote your website, content and firm on Social Media is through your blog. Blogs often provide shareable information or news and thus lend themselves to Social Media sharing. Blogs bridge the gap between useful, shareable information and promoting your law firm. Combine a healthy flow of blog posts with a balanced blend of non-promotional posts and you just may see more users clicking your links and interacting with your Social Media posts.

Why Are Non-Business Posts Beneficial?

Posts that do not directly relate to law and your practice still serve a purpose. They’re not getting people onto your site. They’re not directly getting you cases. However, they are getting attention in the form of Likes, Shares, +1s and retweets – and therefore giving your brand attention. People are getting to know your firm through the content you share, some of which is business-oriented, some of which is more relatable to the average FacebookTwitter or Google+ user. The goal should be to appear knowledgeable, professional and approachable. This blend of posts does just that.

Both types of posts serve a purpose. Professional posts receive a few likes and drive traffic to the firm’s website, while more personal posts spread the brand to far more Social Media users, increasing brand recognition and page visibility.

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2013 Retail Law Conference – October 16-18

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming 2013 Retail Law Conference:

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The Retail Law Conference is the only law conference designed specifically for general counsel and their teams and is the perfect opportunity to network with fellow retail leaders and earn CLE credits.

Hosted by the Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA) and the Retail Litigation Center, the 2013 Retail Law Conference will be held October 16-18 at the Ritz-Carlton Phoenix in Phoenix, Arizona. General session, breakout, and retail-only roundtable topics include:

  • Social Media, Mobile Technology & Online Marketing
  • California Litigation Trends
  • Wage & Hour Strategies
  • EEOC & Background Checks
  • Navigating Consumer Product Regulations
  • Data Breach and more!

Register today and join other retail legal executives to discuss the latest and most pressing legal issues and what the retail industry is doing to address them.

Measuring the ROI of Business Development – Even if it’s Possible, Does Anyone Care?

 

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ROI serves as calculation of the capital, time and other resources invested in a service that yields a profitable outcome, and should be measured systematically and deliberately by law firms. While math isn’t necessarily the forte of attorneys and legal marketers alike, times are changing with the legal market shifting from a demand to a supply economy. No longer does the generation of unending call for legal services exist—rather, the landscape of the legal market today is in a downflow with lay-offs and hiring freezes. This compels law firms to change tactics and rid themselves of self-constraints in order to stand out among the pack. There are many well-trained attorneys with legal expertise so how can law departments distinguish themselves? Clients are looking for more in an attorney than just an understanding of the law and a lower billing rate. Other major considerations are client focus, predictability, communication and management of expectations and efficiency, all qualities that remain measurable and can be raised through the use of statistical analysis tools.

Measures of ROI as Relative and Over Time

In its simplest terms, ROI is measured as the (gain from investment – cost of investment) / cost of investment. ROI is a relative, not absolute, measure of performance and serves as a function of the resources available to law firms. A firm can invest x or y to obtain the same results so x and y remain variable opportunities in competition with each other and one firm’s successful outcome is another firm’s failure. In order to determine which is most fruitful, each variable’s ROI must be measured against alternative investments. Moreover, each alternative must be measured over time as a mere snapshot in time remains insufficient to determine the full impact on revenue down the line. For example, a firm that issues a newsletter every month may as a result eventually gain a new client and this time span and the client’s reads should be tracked.

Measure and Report Metrics that Matter

ROI matters and should be measured for such law management and marketing strategies as attorney memberships and legal events for resource allocation and departmental reporting purposes. By measuring internal and external data through statistical analysis, law firms can narrow their scope of vision to the successes and misses.

Memberships and Associations Value Chain

One way law firms can save on resources and stay within the constraints of business development budgets while still maintaining a proactive presence in the legal community is to conduct an audit of its attorneys’ enrollment in bar associations to determine ROI. At the top of the chain in descending importance are attorneys who lead their associations as leading experts and engage in such activities as serving on board committees. Next are attorneys who take advantage of bar memberships to demonstrate their expertise, such as speaking at conferences. At the bottom of the chain are attorneys who are enrolled in associations for the purposes of networking and education and may attend to earn CLE credits. The lower down the chain attorneys go, the more minimal the ROI and while attorneys who use their memberships for updates on the law are certainly benefiting—these expenses should be drawn from education costs as opposed to business development budgets. Moreover, law firms can set goals for attorneys who use firm expenses to attend association meeting, such as targeting particular people and obtaining a certain number of business cards. Thus, law firms can quantify the benefits of paying for bar memberships and make the most of their budgets.

Legal Events and Sponsorships

For educational law events such as seminars and conferences that draw clients, there remains a window in which law firms can count retaining new clients as a result of holding the event. While sponsoring a legal event may not serve as a direct causation of retaining a new client, law firms can determine if such events increase the rate of landing a new client. By tracking the costs of investment in holding the event as well as the number of days it took to close on a client, the probability rate of an event’s influence in generating clientele can be estimated. In turn, a best practice checklist can be created from such data that can target different factors to create the most lead-generating event and invitees who have the most potential to become future clients. If certain factors are found to lead to a higher probability of generating clientele, then honing in on these factors and measuring them can lead to maximum profit.

Measuring Productivity Takes Time

In solving for the highest number of wins at the lowest costs, it is not necessary to be a statistical analyst but it remains imperative to have a methodology in place. Remember to use the following procedures:

1.       Plot all activities

2.       Plot all practices

3.       Track marketer time against all practices

4.       Compare to strategy plan

5.       Review resource allocation with firm management

The information in this article was derived from a presentation by Timothy B. Corcoran, Principal of Corcoran Consulting Group, LLC.

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Twitter Best Practices Guide for Attorneys

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With more than 200 million active users, Twitter is a major social media network attorneys should not ignore. Twitter can be a highly useful marketing tool for attorneys to promote their blogs and other thought leadership content.

Here is a best practices guide for attorneys using Twitter:

Tweet 4x/day or less

Use fewer than 100 characters per Tweet

Add links to Tweets to get higher Retweet rates – Tweets containing links get 86% higher Retweet rates

Make sure the links are clickable by including a space before the URL

Tweet on the weekends – engagement rates are 17% higher then

Engage with followers during “busy hours” of 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Include hashtags in your Tweets, but no more than 2 per Tweet – Tweets with hashtags get twice the engagement

Add links to images to increase engagement – Tweets with image links enjoy twice the engagement rate than those without.

Use the word “Retweet” as a call-to-action to prompt your followers to share – Tweets that ask followers to Retweet receive 12x higher Retweet rates

Since Twitter is essentially a micro-blogging site, the same rules apply: create unique, original content that adds value, and your audience will respond.

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Women, Influence and Power in Law Conference – October 2-4, 2013

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming Women, Influence & Power in Law Conference:

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When:

Where:

The Only National Forum Facilitating Women-to-Women Exchange on Current Legal Issues

Women, Influence & Power in Law Conference is presented by Summit Business Media’s Legal Suite – InsideCounsel magazine, InsideCounsel.com (website), producers of the 13th annual IC SuperConference, the prestigious Transformative Leadership Awards, and creators of Project 5/165.

Presented by InsideCounsel Magazine, the pioneering monthly magazine exclusively serving general counsel and other top in-house legal professionals, the first annual Women, Influence & Power in Law Conference offers an opportunity for unprecedented exchange with women outside counsel. This unique event was created with the assistance of an unheralded advisory board comprised of highly placed women attorneys who are all direct reports to the general counsel and were drawn from across the country. These attorneys have the highest levels of expertise and experience in key practice areas.

The Women, Influence & Power in Law Conference is not a forum for lawyers to discuss so-called “women’s issues.” It is a conference for women in-house and outside counsel to discuss current legal topics, bringing their individual experience and perspectives on issues of:

  • Governance & Compliance
  • Litigation & Investigations
  • Intellectual Property
  • Government Relations & Public Policy
  • Global Litigation & Transactions
  • Labor & Employment
  • Executive Leadership Skills Development

Consumer Financial Services Basics 2013 – September 30 – October 01, 2013

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming  Consumer Financial Services Basics 2013.

CFSB Sept 30 2013

When

September 30 – October 01, 2013

Where

  • University of Maryland
  • Francis King Carey School of Law
  • 500 W Baltimore St
  • Baltimore, MD 21201-1701
  • United States of America

Facing the most comprehensive revision of federal consumer financial services (CFS) law in 75 years, even experienced consumer finance lawyers might feel it is time to get back in the classroom. This live meeting is designed to expose practitioners to key areas of consumer financial services law, whether you need a primer or a refresher.

It is time to take a step back and think through some of these complex issues with a faculty that combines decades of practical experience with law school analysis. The classroom approach is used to review the background, assess the current policy factors, step into the shoes of regulators, and develop an approach that can be used to interpret and evaluate the scores of laws and regulations that affect your clients.

Best Practices in Business to Business (B2B) Content Marketing [INFOGRAPHIC]

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Content provider ContentCrossroads.com recently developed an infographic about best practices for B2B marketers, including the most popular, most profitable and easiest content to develop for B2B marketers looking to gain the attention of prospects:

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Using Google Alerts to Get Topical News Quickly and Improve Your Content

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Time is of the essence when taking someone from prospect to client.

Obtaining quick notice about local accidents and injuries and/or defective products can provide a competitive advantage.

When an accident has just occurred and a victim is deciding whether or not to hire an attorney, you want to be easy to find. If you are aware of accidents or defective products and pharmaceuticals early, you may have the opportunity to get the inside track on a case.

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Posting alerts and information on your website, blog and Social Media may help your firm be more easily found and give you increased opportunities to get cases.

One tool to identify possible newsworthy topics to post on your site and Social Media platforms is Google Alerts. Every time something new is indexed by Google on your chosen topic, you will receive an e-mail. You can also set Google Alerts to email you a daily or weekly digest that includes either only the best topical matches or everything associated with your selected topic.

There are multiple ways to utilize Google Alerts. You can sign up for your target city/town names, state, etc. for local news. For practice area-targeted news, you can sign up to be alerted for variations of car accidents (and injuries), truck accidents (and injuries, major highways, etc.), train accidents (as well as major train names), hospitals (and hospital injuries, negligence) and drug or product names you wish to target, for example. There are endless possibilities; your usage will depend on what works best for your law firm and schedule. You can even sign up for Alerts on competitors’ names to follow what they are doing. You should set Alerts for your firm and attorneys. Doing this will help you manage your firm’s reputation by alerting you to good and bad news and give you time to respond appropriately.

To develop a list for your Google Alerts entries, ask your attorneys (or have a trusted attorney decide) which topics and locations each person will follow for news or blog information, then sign up for Google Alerts on those topics at http://www.google.com/alerts. When you spread keywords among different people, the time investment is less significant, especially if you schedule a fifteen-minute block each day to read through your alerts.

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Consumer Financial Services Basics 2013 – September 30 – October 01, 2013

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming  Consumer Financial Services Basics 2013.

CFSB Sept 30 2013

When

September 30 – October 01, 2013

Where

  • University of Maryland
  • Francis King Carey School of Law
  • 500 W Baltimore St
  • Baltimore, MD 21201-1701
  • United States of America

Facing the most comprehensive revision of federal consumer financial services (CFS) law in 75 years, even experienced consumer finance lawyers might feel it is time to get back in the classroom. This live meeting is designed to expose practitioners to key areas of consumer financial services law, whether you need a primer or a refresher.

It is time to take a step back and think through some of these complex issues with a faculty that combines decades of practical experience with law school analysis. The classroom approach is used to review the background, assess the current policy factors, step into the shoes of regulators, and develop an approach that can be used to interpret and evaluate the scores of laws and regulations that affect your clients.