If the legal marketing strategy for your law firm depends on online marketing, niche marketing to particular industries, traditional advertising, or just retaining and growing a share of a solid growth of clients, you will need to generate content.
Content is an essential dynamic of legal marketing, without it you might just as well not bother with a law firm marketing plan. But producing content is hard work, and you want to make the best of the writing that you can produce. Following are just a few suggestions to help you use two of the most reliably produced types of legal marketing content as effectively as you can.
Law Firm Marketing – Written material (blogs, email alerts, brochures, guides, information sheets)
If you have written some quality, interesting material of any of the formats mentioned, don’t just send it off once or print it and leave it to stagnate in your reception area. Distribute the content as much as is possible. For each piece of written material you produce, consider:
- Have I sent it to as many, relevant, clients as I can?
- Is it loaded to my website?
- Have I emailed it direct to people who have referred me, associates and other professionals?
- Have I linked to it with a post on Facebook and a tweet on Twitter?
- Has it been sent to media contacts?
- Are others in the firm aware of it and can they explain it further if a client questions them about it?
- Can I transform it into a different style of content and distribute in a different form?
Law Firm Marketing – Presentations
Presentations are generally written with a particular audience in mind, or because of a particular request. Therefore they tend to be presented only once and then left to become stale. All of that effort and time required to prepare it gets only a one time showing. If you want to get more benefit from your presentation consider:
- Who else may I show it to?
- How can I let the greatest number of people know about it?
- Have I mentioned it on our website, Facebook, Twitter, and suggested that I present it to others?
- Can I send the presentation in hard copy to those who couldn’t attend the seminar?
- Can I record an audio or video of the presentation and distribute it electronically online or directly?
- Is it viable to write an article or blog to discuss questions that arose during the presentation?
- Have I sent additional content to all the people who attended the presentation?
Although some of these ideas might seem like additional work at a time when you’ve probably created a dent in your monthly billings with the amount of time you spent preparing the first lot of material, it is necessary to consider that it’s much easier to use a small amount of time at the end to really maximise on what you’ve already produced than it is to produced a whole new piece of legal marketing material.
Maximise the benefits of all the time and effort you put into law firm marketing and you’ll discover that the next time you need to create some content you will feel more confident about how effective the results will be.
John Gray is a practising lawyer and the Senior Marketer at John Gray Marketing, an Australian specialist law firm and legal marketing consultancy. If you are interested in law marketing, legal marketing and marketing for lawyers, contact John Gray today.