Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Joe Kelly's "The 53 Runner’s Commandments" on the Pine Belt Racers Club website. Every runner knows that running is a philosophy, not an activity. Like being a lawyer. Today's post hammers that home. Read these 53 commandments, and ask yourself where you might be able to slip in "lawyer" or "client service" or maybe even "value" to make them relevant to you. Yeah, not all of them apply to lawyering, but if you read closely and think about how some of these commandments might help you be a better lawyer, they will.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Seth Godin's "The one who isn't easily replaced" from Seth Godin's Blog. If you're not reading Godin's blog, you should be. Practical, no-nonsense advice that will help you understanding marketing and how to get better at it.
"[E]ither you do something I can't do myself (or get from someone else), or I pay you less than you'd like.
"Why else would it be any other way?"

Friday, November 26, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Gary Mitchell's "Start Client Development Early On" (PDF), published in Lawyers Weekly. Intended for junior associates, this piece offers solid, practical advice on developing the business development practices that will help throughout their career. But don't let that keep you away: lawyers at all career stages will benefit from reading this back-to-basics overview.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Jim Hassett's "Building partnerships for alternative fees" from his Legal Business Development blog. Hassett's alternative fees survey of AmLaw 100 firms provides an interesting perspective on what Big Law thinks (and what they think their clients think) about the evolution of legal fees. In this post he pulls together some quotes that address the importance of client-firm partnerships. Whatever your position on alternative fees, the message is clear: successful billing arrangements are built around relationship and trust.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Steve Woodruff's "Social Media is not a Strategy" from his blog, Connection Agent. Lawyers, don't make the mistake of treating your social media presence (Twitter, Facebook, blog, etc.) as a strategy. It's a networking tool. Don't see the difference? Read this and you will.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Cordell Parvin's "How To Prepare A Business Plan That Will Make You More Successful" from The Practical Lawyer (pdf). It's a year old, but that doesn't take anything away from this article. It's full of practical advice, the kind that takes you from where you are to where you want to be. Whether you aren't sure you need a plan or you just don't know how to get started, this will point you the right direction and give you a little shove to get you on your way.

Friday, November 19, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Margaret (“Molly”) DiBianca's "Complex Ethical Issues of Social Media" from The Bencher, the flagship magazine of the American Inns of Court. This post provides an in-depth analysis of the ethical impact social media has on the practice of law (and not just as a marketing tool). Although it appears to be written primarily for lawyers not active in social media, all lawyers will benefit from DiBianca's thorough review of these issues.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Venkat Balasubramani's "A Topic That Refuses to Die - What Drives the Law Blogger?" from his blog, Spam Notes. A lot has already been written on the "why" of lawyer blogging (including from me), much of it simply re-hashing the same concepts over and over again. Not this post. Read it and see for yourself.

But don't take my word for it: Antonin Pribetic likes it too, and tells us why in "Why Bother Blogging" over at The Trial Warrior Blog.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Doug Jasinski's "Marketing Legal Services On The Deepening, Splintering Web" from his blog Jasinski on Legal Marketing. This is a great post reminding us that in the increasingly crowded and fragmented online legal marketing landscape, it's still the basics that count. Read this for a good discussion of why you should continue devoting the lion's share of your efforts to content, conversations, and search.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Michelle Golden's "Do You Make it Easy for People to Call You?" from her Golden Practices Blog. Sometimes it's good to get back to the basics. This is one of those times. Don't make it hard for people to get in touch with you. They might decide it's not worth the trouble.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Dan Hull's "The 12 Rules of Client Service" from What About Clients? 12 rules. 83 words. There's no fluff here, just practical, to-the-point principles for aligning "the interests of clients/customers and service providers to the fullest extent possible." Read them. Print them out and tape them to the wall above your computer screen. Make them part of your personal mission statement. You, and your clients, will be glad you did.

Every so often you come across a blog that feels like home. What About Clients? is that blog.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Scott Preston's "Technology is not your friend – your client is," from 3 Geeks and a Law Blog. Technology -- the kind that helps add value, like extranets and collaboration software and voice mail and email -- is good. But it's no substitute for interacting in real life with your client, for asking them questions and listening to the response, for knowing their business and helping them make it better. That's your job.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Debra Bruce's "Listening Means Business!" from her Lawyer Coach blog. Sometimes it's good to get back to the basics. And listening is one of the most important skills a lawyer can have. So spend some time getting better at it. This post will help you.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

"Lawyers must be culture vultures" from Lawyers Weekly, featuring Gerry Riskin on cultural issues, dealing with lawyers in other countries, and why lawyers must give regard to cultural differences while sitting in their own office. This is Globalization 101, and lawyers not heeding this advice are going to be left behind. Don't be one of them.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Jay Shepherd's "Two kinds of lawyers" from his blog The Client Revolution. Regular readers know that I like what Shepherd has to say. He's clever and funny and knows his stuff. More importantly, he practices what he preaches, and his perspective on billing and pricing comes from jumping off the cliff and completely eliminating the billable hour from his law practice. Like this: 
"You can go to all the two-day seminars on AFAs you want, but mostly you'll be learning about Not Pricing. Your time would be better spent learning about your client and how they value the solutions to their problems and whether you can make a profit solving their problems for that amount.
That's pricing."

Monday, November 8, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Janet Ellen Raasch's "Client satisfaction interviews help law firms keep clients close" from her blog Constant Content (part of a three-post series; see also parts two and three). It's written for those not convinced that interviews make sense, but the anecdotal information found in the full series provides a useful reminder to all lawyers that talking to clients about the work they're doing is a valuable and meaningful business development effort.

Friday, November 5, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Guy Kawasaki's "Why Websites Suck" on the American Express Open Forum. #1 reason? "Organization-centricity:"
"At the root of practically, every website failure I’ve come across is the organization wanting the customer to fit around how it’s organized, how it thinks, and the language that it uses. By contrast, great websites organize around the customer."
Does that describe your firm's website? How could your site be organized around your clients?

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Today's Law Marketing Resource

Tom Kane's "Legal Project Management as Marketing Tool" from his Legal Marketing Blog. Want to learn more? Check out "A Practical Approach to Legal Management" from Pam Woldow and Doug Richardson (registration required). And follow Pam's Twitterfeed, full of valuable resources and great insight (she's @pwoldow). 

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Today's law marketing resource

Michael Chang's essay on "Managing Change," from ACC Docket, in which Chang recounts what his life experience has taught him about being a better lawyer.