I received an email today from a guy asking a question about something that I think everyone would want to know about when
starting a law firm, so I'm going to post it here and then answer it. And, I think from now on I'll do the same, so that if anyone else has these questions they can all be answered here, and (gasp!) maybe a discussion will break out here that will provide even more insight for people.
David in Colorado wrote this to me today, bringing up a point I've been meaning to talk about:
Hi, Jim –
Love the blog.
I note your marketing cost line is $100 to $500 depending on which posting I view.
I am a partner in a small firm (2 partners and several contract attys).
Our marketing is insane compared to what you have listed (which I tend to think is closer to what is actually necessary). We just spent $13k last month on our ads, listings, everything marketing. About $2500 of that will go away in January when we cut the cord with Findlaw/Thompson West. But that still is a very bloated budget.
Other than a heart attack, any thoughts?
Thanks,
Dave in Colorado.
He brings up a question I've struggled with for a long time - how much to spend on
advertising for your new law firm. And more importantly, where to spend the money I would so love to keep in my pocket.
The sad news is, I don't have any clear answers, but I do have a philosophy on this, and I think it might be something that can be carried out and adopted by others, assuming it fits into the view of what your practice should be like.
First and foremost, I don't do any print advertising. Just don't do it. And I practice criminal defense, where people might be interested in finding a criminal defense attorney. Why don't I do any print advertising? A couple of reasons. First, I don't think people use print advertising any more (unless it's a billboard - that could have value). Even the poorest of people know how to get down to the public library and look for what they want. And second, the type of client I want (even for criminal defense, which honestly ends up being some of the most regular people you'll ever meet) has both a computer and an internet connection and is smart enough to use them to find me. Possessing those qualities as a client usually means they possess another quality I like - a stream of income that can be used to pay for my services.
Second, whenever I get a call from someone promising to feed me clients, I am immediately skeptical. First, not everyone can guarantee clients, so someone is lying to me. And second, I haven't yet seen enough evidence from anyone that is trying to sell me this stuff to convince me they can make it worth my time.
Except one. After doing no paid advertising for the first two to three months of
starting my law practice, and my organic google experiment moving a little slower than I liked, I decided to sign up with a company that creates ad campaigns for you on google (these are the ads you see on top of the search engines and to the right). The reason I chose these guys was they were relatively cheap, they had a cool/useful database system to work with, they targeted the specific keywords that I was looking for to get clients, and they allowed a three month contract. They are a company called
yodle.
To give you the details, I think I paid $99 for a set up, pay $57 a month in helper fees (they organize the campaign, update it, and modify it over time to more specifically target the ads and campaigns that work) and $1,000 a month in fees for google adsense (you pay an agreed to fee every time someone clicks on one of your ads). If the entire $1,000 isn't used, it is rolled over into the next month. If you aren't happy, you can get out.
Using this advertising, if I sign up one client a month through them, I've paid for the advertising and made some money on top of that. Assuming I sign up more than one client (the obvious goal), I'm immediately on my way to making decent money for my firm (I am about as streamlined as you can get - my overhead is stupid low). In the past two weeks, since this has started, I've had 53,000 ad views, 53 clicks, and one phone call for business (that I failed close). And the thing is, the calls should become more frequent and better suited to sign up with me as time goes by because I grade every phone call that comes in.
Third, and finally, I don't ever buy anything from anyone that promises to put me on the first page of google organically (i.e. without the ads and stuff like that). Why is this? Because they aren't charging me enough to be their only client, and they aren't the only company promising this, so pretty much all of them are lying to me in some way. What I will pay for is a link to my website with my keywords in it, because that is actually valuable for building your organic search rank (see my post on
law firm website backlinks for a refresher on this).
Instead I am working on that on my own, which will be information in another post (as this one is already getting pretty long). And, after about two months of nothing, I am now seeing the results I thought I'd see (see my post on the
law firm website sandbox for that).
And, I guess to finally answer David's question, since it seems like I only did it in a round about way. I try to keep my marketing budget as streamlined as possible, and I only want to turn on one form of marketing at a time so I can see what really works (I hate throwing good money away). So far I'm only signed on with Yodle. I'll give them the three months, at least, to see if they start bringing me enough business to justify the cost. If they can and they appear to be working, I may try to pick up another advertising mode, if they can convince me that they are truly offering me value for my dollar.
I also saw that you mentioned you pay for Thompson/West listings. Don't do it. They are the equivalent of a yellowpages.com (which I would never use anyway). Where, in the past, someone had to go to the yellow pages to find information on a business (think pre-internet), they would look to the yellow pages. Now, the yellow pages are set off into three areas - Google, Yahoo, and Bing. No one goes to a site within those sites, they just look for what they want right in the Google search engine. So, if I were you, I'd focus on getting onto Google in places where people will see you (for your extremely targeted keywords - think Seattle DUI attorney vs. Seattle attorney) and working toward building your organic ranking so you don't have to spend gobs and gobs of money on advertising.
Oh, and I forgot one last thing. I do have one other paid advertising string that I use. It is on a local news station website, and I paid for it for one reason - I get to insert as many keyword links as I want. So, what I did was put in all of the keywords I like (Seattle DUI attorney, Seattle DUI lawyer, etc.) and then once that site was up I've begun sending links to that site to make it more recognizable by Google, thus making my website more recognizable by Google. This is the type of stuff you should be paying for.
As always, I love comments, questions, and suggestions, and hope everyone is successful
opening their own law firm.
Update on Yodle Law Firm Marketing I have since written about using Yodle two more times.
Yodle for Law Firm Marketing - Part 2
Yodle for Law Firm Marketing - Part 3