John F. Reed, BridgeTower Media Newswires
As 2016 comes to a close, there is no time like the present for lawyers to begin their 2017 business development efforts. Whether you commit to a formal personal marketing plan or not, there are a few activities you can do now to hit the ground running on Jan. 2.
Know and promote your brand
Though every attorney has a personal brand, few lawyers evaluate, reshape and strategically communicate them. Start by asking yourself, “What do I want to be known and valued for?” and “What do I want clients to trust me to do for them?” then write a one-sentence summary starting with the words “I help” followed by a brief description of your target audience and your particular skills, talents and style.
Next, take an inventory of your online and offline presence to ensure you are promoting yourself accurately and in ways that will attract new clients and referral sources. For example:
• Review your website bio, firm brochures and marketing pieces to not only confirm the narrative is correct but that it also differentiates you from the competition.
• Google yourself (and attorneys you consider to be leaders in your practice area or location) and take note of the page-one search results as well as descriptions on LinkedIn and Facebook, Martindale.com and Lawyers.com, Findlaw, Avvo, bar association directories, and other listings.
If your information is outdated or bland, you risk having your next best client pass you by. Research shows that regardless of whether a prospect is a consumer, business owner or general counsel, that person is almost certain to look at law firm websites and LinkedIn profiles to get an initial impression or vet a referral from a friend, family member or colleague.
Reconsider your business development goals
All too often, attorneys gauge the effectiveness of their business development efforts by origination, billables and financial yardsticks. Though these metrics are important (after all, dollars keep the law firm’s doors open), they shouldn’t be the only benchmarks. If existing and prospective clients and referral sources don’t think of you first or at all when a legal need arises, whatever revenue projections you attached to them become worthless.
Top-of-mind awareness is critical, so place relationship-building activities at the top of your business development goals:
• Establish a daily regimen of reaching out to a reasonable number of strategic connections every day, and don’t start working or leave the office until you do.
• Make it easy by creating a go-to list of options for how to touch those people (phone, email, LinkedIn invitations, etc.) and a specific reason for contacting them (discuss an issue, ask a question, share an article, offer a referral, etc.).
Rather than focusing on outcomes such as meetings, lunches, after-hour drinks, or golf outings, concentrate on daily activity and meaningful conversations. If you pay attention and listen for cues, you will find reasons for subsequent meetings and discussions, allowing you to uncover needs, convey your knowledge and generate work.
Take your client’s temperature
The old adage that it’s easier to keep a client than bring in a new one has never been more true. Doing good work may have been enough to earn client loyalty in the past, but attorneys today need to know more and do more for clients to keep them close.
If you rely on repeat business from a portfolio of clients, in-person, on-site reviews provide an excellent opportunity to talk to them about:
• The work you’ve done recently and over the course of the year.
• The client’s view of the service you provide, what they consider to be best practices (yours and other law firms they engage), and ways they feel you can enhance your value.
• What’s on the client’s horizon and their anticipated needs — legal, business, and personal — in 2017 and beyond.
The “review” part of the meeting — what you’ve done for the client lately — should be the shortest portion of the meeting. The other parts are more important because they demonstrate your interest in improving the relationship and forming a broader, more informed perspective of the client’s world.
Now is an opportune time to contact clients to schedule reviews. If they are available to meet before the end of the year, great, but if not, press to get a date on the calendar in January. And if the client is across the state or in another part of the country, hop on a plane or get in your car and go to them. You cannot establish the rapport you want over the phone.
Dust off — or tear up — your business development plan
Let’s look at a law firm that requires partners and associates to submit annual business plans. Using a pro forma MS Word document, attorneys are asked to list their top 10 clients and prospects and revenue forecasts for each, their “best” referral sources, and the bar and professional organizations to which they belong, their level of participation, and expected work that these memberships will generate.
Each January, the typical lawyer opens the file, changes some dollar figures, substitutes a few names on various lists, saves the file, and sends it on. The plan sits idle until a performance or compensation review in December and then the process is repeated a month later.
Sound familiar? If so, reconsider the content and worth of the plan:
• Business plans are only useful if regularly consulted, assessed and revised all year long, so print and place them front and center on your desk, pinned to your wall or taped to your computer. Coffee rings, handwritten notes and scribbles are encouraged!
• Like yes or no questions, fill-in-the-blank templates elicit short, less meaningful answers than open-ended questions that invite thoughtful, qualitative responses. How the plan is worded and formatted will drive the actions and behaviors you want.
• Find ways to make your plan live and breathe. If you’re an Excel expert, convert your plan into a spreadsheet and schedule time each week to review the file and keep it current. If you manage your daily life in Outlook, Gmail, and Apple Mail, manage your activities there as well. If you are addicted to sticky notes, tack as many to your wall as you need to stay on top of your business development efforts.
Too often, an attorney will say that he is too busy to do business development, or that her clients know to call if they need anything. Competition for legal services these days is cutthroat, and that kind of thinking and inactivity can have disastrous results. As 2016 moves from the windshield to the rearview mirror, now couldn’t be a better time to take a fresh look at your approach to personal marketing and the ways you will achieve business development success in 2017.
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John F. Reed, Esq. is the founder of Rain BDM, a business development and marketing consultancy that helps law firms of all sizes build client relationships. Working with clients across the country, he trains and coaches attorneys in client development and social media. Reed’s team provides firms with strategic planning, tactical support, content and comprehensive blog management, and outsourced marketing department services.