March 26, 2008
Information-Driven Business Development For Law Firms
The Harvard Business Review is rapidly becoming my other magazine I read cover-to-cover (the other being The Economist). In the March, 2008 issue there is a short article related to Web Retailing that I believe is a good example of why attorneys need to be spending more time blogging. Andreas B. Eisingerich and Tobias Kretschmer surveyed online customers on what drives them to purchase from a retailer. What they found is that online customers do more research and are more likely to purchase from a retailer that engages them than one who simply tries to sell product. They found that "exploiting consumers' desire for engagement is the single dominant driver of superior shareholder value for e-commerce companies."
". . .[Providing informational content] helps customers search for solutions, invites them to think of all the ways the core products might add value to their lives, wins their loyalty, and entices them to buy."
How does this translate into an endorsement of blogging? It is no different than creating a brochure or newsletter - it helps clients understand the law of their particular interest or need. It drives them to seek you when they need someone to represent them regarding related subject matter. Blogging is a continual dialogue, with very little in the way of up front cost (other than the pain involved in updating content regularly). Not only does blogging display the expertise of your firms and lawyers, it is a mechanism to drive business development.
To determine how blogging increases revenue (ie, to measure performance), you must track how clients come to you. Make sure your business software can track source of business. With a blog, you can provide downloadable content and require registration to download. This also helps in determining source of business. You can determine a lot from who visits your site as well. You can capture location, frequency of visits, what pages they visit, what they download, etc. All of this is valuable information for business development purposes. For example, if your area of expertise is Estate Planning and you write a post related to a new law that fundamentally changes how investment vehicles are treated that increases hits in a specific geographic location by 30%, then you can surmise that the public in that location is interested in this topic; thus, you can focus advertising or public speaking opportunities to get your firm's name out as an expert in the area - not only for those reading the blog, but also those who aren't online.
As clients become more web-savvy, it will be the law firms with a strong web presence that will dictate the standards by which other firms compare. Providing information for your clients is good - providing updated analytical content written by attorneys in their specialty places your firm in a position to engage current and potential clients and drive superior shareholder value.
Comments on Information-Driven Business Development For Law Firms »
Stark County Law Library Blog @ 9:41 am
"Information-Driven Business Development for Law Firms"…
Posted by Brian J. Ritchey: the March, 2008 issue [of the The Harvard Business Review contains] a short article related…
Rafael Ramos @ 5:03 am
Saludos:
Soy estudiante paralegal y desewo saber el rol de un paralegal en estos dias en una oficna legal.
Muchas gracias.
(Greetings:
I am a student and paralegal - what is the role of a paralegal these days in a legal office?
Thank you very much.)