19 Steps To Building A Nationwide Law Practice Part 2
Step #8: Educate your audience with written information and
advice. Write your marketing message in a form that you can send
to anyone who calls your office. Then, by offering to send
copies without charge, you attract calls from genuine prospects.
When prospects call, they give you their names and addresses (or
e-mail addresses). Then you add these prospective clients to
your in-house mailing list.
Important Note: The longer your materials, the better. The
longer you keep your prospect's attention -- and the more facts
you provide -- the more likely your prospect is to hire your
services. Fortunately, prospects will read long materials,
provided they are well written and relevant to their problem.
The fact kit I used for 15 years varied from 40 to 50 pages in
length. And many lawyers (my prospective clients) told me they
read every word. I have now included all this information on my
web site and in the article packet I send by e-mail, so I no
longer use a printed fact kit.
Step #9: Define the geographical area from which you want to
draw clients. Geographics identify individual prospects by where
they live, where they work, and where you can find the
prospective clients you want. Geographics identify companies by
where they are based, where they have facilities and where they
do business.
Step #10: Compile a media list of newspapers, magazines,
newsletters and other media you want to receive your news
releases and query letters. Your articles will appear in
national, regional and local publications in all the states
where you hope to serve clients. You can usually find current
media lists online and at the library reference desk.
Step #11: Launch an aggressive publicity campaign by sending
news releases, feature articles and query letters to your entire
media list. If you send articles 4 or 5 times each year, you
could have an ongoing flow of articles appearing in various
parts of the country.
Step #12: Contact high-profile publications and interview shows
on an individual and exclusive basis to gain the highest level
of nationwide publicity. Offer to write ongoing columns for
publications, and appear as a periodic guest on interview shows.
You might offer to host your own legal, news-talk or interview
show.
Step #13: Compile a list of trade associations that serve the
prospects you want to attract. Keep these trade groups on your
mailing list. Offer to present seminars that are sponsored or
co-sponsored by these trade associations, in hopes that they
will mail seminar invitations to all of their members.
Step #14: Compile a list of referral sources in the states you
serve. Send them your packet of information so they understand
what you do. Invite their referrals and offer referral fees, if
appropriate. Keep these referral sources on your mailing list.
Step #15: Compile a list of past clients. Send them a letter
announcing your regional or national practice and a copy of your
information packet. Most people have friends and colleagues in
other states. Keep these past clients on your mailing list.
Step #16: In all of your marketing materials, make sure you tell
prospects the geographical area from which you accept clients.
You might say something like: "Serving clients in the United
States and Canada". Or, "I welcome inquiries from clients in
(name the states)." If you don't mention the area you serve,
prospects could easily conclude that you limit your services to
your city or county. So be sure to tell prospects where you
practice and put this information throughout your marketing
materials.
Step #17: Establish a web site. The easiest way to reach
prospects in different states is to establish an Internet site.
This puts your materials at everyone's fingertips 24 hours a
day, whenever they want it. The more information you provide,
the more likely you are to win a new client. So be generous with
the information you post.
Step #18: Market your seminars and speaking engagements
nationwide. Make sure everyone on your mailing list knows you
offer seminars. While they might not be the contact person, they
can make your seminar known to the right people, who may get in
touch with you. This is the most common way I receive
invitations to speak to lawyers. Also, thanks to technology, now
you can offer seminars over the telephone, by video
conferencing, and over the internet.
Step #19: If you can collect e-mail addresses from people on
your mailing list, send an e-mail alert or briefing every week
or two. The more often you stay in touch with everyone your
mailing list (prospects, clients, past clients and referral
sources), the more new clients you'll attract.
After your law firm marketing efforts take root, and your
publicity starts to appear, you'll get inquiries from
prospective clients. Trade and professional associations will
invite you to speak. And, one by one, you'll start getting
clients from throughout the geographical area you wish to serve.
Soon, you'll have a profitable, prestigious nationwide law
practice, thanks to the energy you've invested in attorney
marketing.