Legal Blog Watch |
Marketing Advice for Firms That Want to Be Something to Everyone Larry Bodine of Professional Services Marketing Blog has a summer-reading recommendation for law firms: Chris Anderson's book, The Long Tail, which Bodine argues applies to law firm marketing. As Bodine writes:
So what's a ginormous firm to do in a boutique world? Bodine has this advice:
In other words, a large firm is better off presenting itself as a collection of experts rather than a conglomerate of lawyers. Is your firm taking this approach? Posted by Carolyn Elefant on August 9, 2006 at 02:57 PM | Permalink Do As We Say, Not As We Do ... Others in the blogosphere have chimed in as well. Ted Frank at Overlawyered found entertainment in the firm's defense: that it fired the lawyer for violating the firm's vacation-leave policy by taking a trip to attend his father-in-law's memorial service. And Mike Fox at Employers' Lawyer remarks here that lawyers are typically not sympathetic plaintiffs -- unless they're suing their law firm. I'm sure the $1.1 million judgment isn't going to hurt the firm's bottom line (the plaintiff was willing to settle for $450,000). But I'm guessing that this kind of publicity about a firm that handles employment work will cost it far more than $1.1 million in business going forward. Which leads to a second point. Used to be that suing your law firm for discrimination or wrongful termination was a reputation-killer in the legal community that would render a lawyer virtually unemployable. (After all, why would a risk-averse law firm hire a lawyer who was suing his or her former firm?) But as this case bears out, the Internet gives new leverage to a lawyer with a suit against a former firm. Maybe filing a lawsuit against a large firm will end a lawyer's big firm career, but what law firms must now realize is that when a wrongfully terminated lawyer files suit, he can take the firm down with him. Posted by Carolyn Elefant on August 9, 2006 at 02:54 PM | Permalink A Handful of Ways for Law Firms to Compete on Price
Morrison continue s:
Another way that firms can offer lower costs is through competitive bid programs, where law firms commit to billing rates for each level of attorney that are 5 percent lower than those proposed by the next-highest bidder. And Morrison even suggests a way that firms can make that offer without losing revenue: by funnelling work to lawyers in branch of fices in lower-cost cities, with lower billing rates. Plenty of ideas here, but will law firms bite? Posted by Carolyn Elefant on August 9, 2006 at 02:50 PM | Permalink Serve Your Legal Career With Client Service
And what's the feedback for lawyers who take this advice to heart? Plenty, suggests Michelle Golden, since service types are viewed as the real stars in law firms. Put another way, serving others will serve you well in your career. Ron Friedmann at Prism Legal takes a different approach to improving client service with this post on Client or Mystery Shopper? Friedmann recognizes the difficulty with using "mystery clients" to test lawyers' effectiveness in delivering service, but recommends that firms use client surveys to see whether they're meeting their clients needs. As a solo, I've always recognized the value of client service; personal experience is what we solos have long touted as our advantage over larger, less personal law firms. At the same time, as I wrote here in the Paradox of Client Service, we can never equate service with being a "hired gun" or allowing our clients to become our masters. Foremost, if we don't retain our independent judgment, we may serve our short-term interest of keeping the client (think Vinson and Elkins and Enron!), but we harm both our client and our own reputation in the long run. Posted by Carolyn Elefant on August 9, 2006 at 02:46 PM | Permalink |
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