Legal Marketing Articles

Posts Tagged ‘SEO’

How to Convert Legal Assistance Calls to Loyal Paying Customers

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

Legal marketing budget can run into several thousand dollars a month. This may include everything from tv ads, direct mail, email marketing, PPC, SEO, advertisements in local publications, seminars, yellow pages, directories or other kinds of online and offline media. When your firm’s phone starts ringing as a result of your marketing efforts, you are ecstatic and consider your marketing investment to be money well spent.

But is it really?

Not until you master the art of turning those phone calls into money in your pocket. Unfortunately, many of you are losing a whole lot of coin because you are investing in marketing without making the same investment in conversion.

Fortunately, converting leads into clients won’t cost you much more money than you are already spending to attract those leads, but it does require an upfront investment of your time and energy. Best yet, once you get it down, your lead to client conversion process can run without your involvement. The place to start is to get a crystal clear understanding of where you are right now. Here’s what you’ll want to do:

1. Over the next month, make a commitment to collect the metrics data you would need to track your numbers.
2. Have whoever answers your phones log every phone call.
3. Require that all inquiries be recorded on a prospect intake form, which captures how the person heard of you, all of their contact information, specifics about their situation and whether they made an appointment.
4. Use a spreadsheet to track how many actually made it in for their appointment and finally how many of those callers became paying clients after meeting with you or the other attorneys of your firm.

Each week, sit down with your team and review your lead to prospect conversion number (this is the number of phone calls you received that turned into appointments) and your prospect to client conversion number (this is the number of appointments made that turned into clients). If these numbers are not both at least 75%, don’t spend any more marketing dollars until you fix your client engagement problem because otherwise you are pouring money down the drain. There is NO POINT in spending money on marketing if you are not doing as well as you can to convert your prospects into paying clients once they pick up the phone to call your office.

Here are a few diagnostic clues to find the “leak” where your prospects may be getting away during the client engagement process:

  • Your phone is not being answered in the correct way
  • There is no system to follow up with prospects who want more information
  • There is no system to follow up with prospects in the time period between when they make an appointment and come in to your office for their appointment
  • You are not following a script during your client engagement meeting

Well begun is half done! Make a good start by collecting hard numbers on what’s actually happening in your office so you’ll be ready for the fixes as they are presented and understand which fix you need to focus on. You may be quite surprised by what you discover once you begin collecting your numbers.

We can take for example the NJ criminal defense lawyers of Benedict & Altman who have started focusing on optimizing their website to convert more leads into customers. With a site that includes several calls to action for visitors to  email and phone the firm, they are set-up to win in terms of gathering leads. Now, they just need to follow the steps above to convert those leads into customers.

Writing Good Content for your Legal Website

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009
Portrait of a young woman posing for the camera using a laptop in her living room

Good Content

A website is only as good as its content. You may hire an SEO expert to write page titles, keywords, and meta tag descriptions which target your location and area of practice, but without valuable content all the SEO work you do will be for nothing. The benefit of good content incorporated with SEO guidelines will improve your rankings in search engines.

What do I write about?

Of course you can’t jam your whole entire law practice into one website. However, you can map out the important areas and what you want your readers to know about you. You can start with about ten pages, and then add articles and newsletters at a later time.

Types of Content Pages

Most lawyer websites have standard pages, which are:

Home Page
About our Law Firm or Mission Statement
Attorney Profiles
Areas of Practice
Contact Us
Directions

Areas of Practice Pages

If your law office handles multiple areas of practice such as real estate, wills and probate, and business, separate pages should be written for these topics. Then, these areas of practice can be further broken down into additional pages such as residential real estate, commercial real estate, wills, probate a will, forming a business, and bankruptcy. In this scenario, nine pages of content were added. They are:

• Real Estate
o Residential Real Estate
o Commercial Real Estate
• Wills and Probate
o Wills
o Probate a Will
• Business
o Forming a Business
o Bankruptcy

Elements of Good Content

Content should be unique and not duplicated from another internet site or another page on the website. The writer needs to be aware of writing for search engine optimization and use headings which include target location and area of practice. There are tools provided by Google which would show the value of certain keywords for a certain area of practice. Valuable links can be incorporated into the content from reputable government or educational websites, which would give your content more value to a search engine. Pages should be at least 300 words and include a paragraph with the law firm’s contact information.

After the content is written, a good practice would be to check it for spelling, grammar errors, and plagiarism. You certainly wouldn’t want to seem unprofessional if a reader read a slew of typographical errors, and you wouldn’t want to be sued for duplicating another website’s content.

It is easier to outsource the content writing unless you have a professional writer on staff that can use the SEO practices to create good content.

Remember, gaining in rankings will not take overnight.

The Power of a Good Domain Name

Monday, August 3rd, 2009
Internet address of a website over keys

The Power of a Good Domain Name

URLs and domain names – these aren’t terms you typically run into during the daily operation of your legal practice, but they are important in terms of branding and marketing for your firm to generate new client leads and help your existing and potential clients find you more easily on the web.

A domain name, or simply “domain,” is, in a sense, your online identity. It is the main part of your website’s URL (uniform resource locator – the links that people follow to arrive at your site’s pages) and appears like this in browsers: http://www.yourpractice.com.

Branding with Your Domain

If you want to build your practice’s name as a brand, use that as your domain name. The fictitious law firm of Smith & Doe might choose the domain “www.smithanddoe.com,” for example. You can then focus your marketing efforts on your firm’s name as a brand, and clients will be able to find you by searching for “Smith and Doe” or simply typing “smithanddoe.com” into their browser’s address bar.

More clients and web users in general than ever before are navigating directly to the sites they want to visit by typing a brand name into their address bar rather than searching for a company or name in a search engine, so this is a very good practice to incorporate.

SEO and Domain Names

Some practices choose to utilize SEO keywords in their domain. This involves choosing your target keyword and working it into your domain name. Suppose the Smith & Doe firm is the premier personal injury firm in Dallas; they may choose a domain name like “www.dallaspersonalinjurylawyers.com.”

You can combine both of the above approaches as well, by taking keywords into consideration when naming individual page files. In the Smith & Doe law firm example, they do want to target Dallas area clients looking for personal injury lawyers, but also want to claim their firm’s name online and use it for branding purposes. They could name their Area of Practice page like so: “http://www.smithanddoe.com/dallas-personal-injury-lawyers.” This ensures that both their keywords and their brand name will show up in organic search results via their URL and give them the dual visibility they’re looking for.

Vanity URLs

Another way to incorporate the concept of branding into your online marketing efforts is to utilize the concept of vanity URLs and social networking URLs. These URLs are easier for potential clients to remember and can be provided with other marketing materials to help drive traffic to your site for specific promotions or target offers. The Smith and Doe firm could use a vanity URL as part of an “Ask a Dallas Lawyer” mailing, instructing clients to visit “askadallaslawyer.com.”

Internet Marketing 101

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

 

computer animation

Internet Marketing 101

Although there are numerous options available to marketers and firms who choose to take the internet-based route, the basic philosophy and techniques behind traditional marketing practices still apply and are very useful in the web-sphere; and you can continue to pursue your offline marketing efforts as well with success.

When your firm is targeting relevant keywords, you’re essentially targeting particular audiences and demographics, just via search engine results rather than print and other media methods.  Some argue that these two practices are dissimilar, because SEO involves a very specific user (potential client) searching for a very specific type of content.  While the SEO approach is much more targeted and gets more track-able results, you can still apply the basic ideas behind traditional strategies to your internet campaigns with a little tweaking.

Some hail internet marketing as the end of conventional marketing as we know it, but this is a bit of a sensationalist angle to take – all the groundwork is still there, there are just faster, more cost-effective, and more targeted ways of getting the results you’re looking for in your legal practice campaigns. 

Your potential law clients are using a variety of ways to find you and your firm, from print advertisements to phone directories to the internet, so it’s really best practice for now and the foreseeable future to approach your marketing needs with both an online and offline focus – you can cover all of your bases and not miss out on potentially rewarding client relationships with people who maybe don’t own a computer or aren’t net savvy, but you can also provide solid resources and information to the intermediate and advanced internet-browsing crowd and take advantage of advanced lead-tracking tools.

The Basics of Marketing Still Apply

Know your audience, approach potential clients with relevant, timely, persuasive and useful information that is easy to understand and remember; keep an eye on your competitors; carve out a niche for yourself; be a resource; monitor response to your efforts – these are all marketing best practices that have been utilized for decades, and the fundamental approach is no different in social media and internet marketing.

The details of your strategies may take a different turn, but with a solid backbone based on the tenets of effective print and media marketing, you can go far on the web. Learning about how to effectively use search engine optimization, pay-per-click campaigns, and social media (or hiring a marketing professional to do so) can help keep you in the game and greatly enhance your lead generation.