Attorneys Online
Advertising is a relatively recent development in the legal
profession, and not all law firms engage in it today.
Nonetheless, it is advisable for every law firm to take note of
the important resource the internet has become to consumers
seeking products and services. Computers are a household
standard, and the internet provides information on every
profession, in formats from simple 'yellow page' listings to
proprietary web pages with audio and video presentations. Even
among lawyers and firms that chose not to advertise, the
importance of the internet as a consumer resource should not be
overlooked.
There is a large assortment of online listing vehicles for
attorneys. A lawyer seeking to be included in commercial online
attorney listings could pay to have his or her name inserted in
such sites as findlaw.com, lawinfo.com, lawyers.com, or the many
'yellow pages' services now online. There are at least four
national listing services for personal injury attorneys, and
others for family law, criminal law and so forth. Association
membership is a vehicle for specialty listings: the Consumer
Attorneys Association, the National Association of Consumer
Bankruptcy Attorneys, The Council of Parent Attorneys, etc.
Then there are the localized ecommerce service listings for
regions that are just as aggressive in seeking exposure on the
search engines. In short, an attorney could make a significant
investment in listing services alone. However, a simple listing
is a hit-and-miss proposition: there is nothing in a mere
listing that invites interest from the shopper. A personalized
web site for an attorney or a law firm is the highest and best
use of the internet.
A law firm with its own hosted website can accomplish a number
of things. Most people who are conducting a random search for an
attorney are probably somewhat frightened, not certain of the
law regarding their problem, and concerned about cost. Moreover,
there exists today a widespread skepticism about attorneys,
especially among the uninitiated. A hosted website can ease some
of those uncertainties, and thus invite contact from the
potential client.
The website can describe the firm's areas of legal focus. It can
act as an educational tool, explaining the basics of selected
areas of law and suggesting some initial steps for the potential
client. Eventually the client will end up in a lawyer's office
somewhere, so providing some initial online education will give
the law firm a benign and positive first impression.
A hosted website can provide and email template for an initial
inquiry or invite a telephone call, 'no strings attached'. The
website can suggest a few online sources that provide detailed
explanations of various legal specialties. Finally, the law
firm's web site can address the issue of payment and explain any
options that might be available in that area.
As with other forms of media, defense and personal injury
attorneys are the most likely to be found using the web as an
advertising service. Most law firms with other sorts of
specialties that use hosted websites tend to be a little more
subtle, stressing the firm's longevity or stability, its
successes and perhaps providing biographies of the firm's
principal members.
A hosted web site can be an effective introductory tool for an
attorney or a law firm. It can provide an initial level of
comfort with the firm before any personal inquiries need be
made. It can establish the firm's credentials in its chosen
areas of legal specialization and it can make the process of
initial contact a comfortable one by explaining how and when fee
structures are applied.
Connecting a potential client with a hosted web site can, in
part, be a function of the site through the use of keyword
optimization. But it is probably more practical to assume that
the initial reference will come from some other, more common
source such as a former client or the local bar association. At
that point, the hosted attorney's website becomes an effective
outreach tool, minimizing the intimidating effect of a simple
telephone number and a downtown address.