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  Feature

Ten Tips For Making Your Bar Association Dues Work For You

December 2009
Bar associations are oftentimes an overlooked source for making personal connections; however, by taking advantage of what bar associations offer their members, there is no more cost effective tool for making connections and building your practice.

Before I started working at my bar association, I was not an active member. I was a member, off and on, but an indifferent one. Eventually, after several years of practice, I let my membership lapse. I was not making much use of my membership, and I frankly did not see what I was getting out of it.

Having now worked at the same association for a couple of years, I can say with all sincerity that if you take advantage of what your association has to offer, then there is no more cost effective tool for building connections and improving your career in the law. If I had known as a young lawyer what I now know about how to leverage bar association membership, I would have done things differently. I wish I could whisper to that younger me why I should to be involved with the bar association and just how easy it is to do.

Before I launch into the ten tips for getting more out of your bar association dues, I want to note that these tips are geared entirely toward helping you use your association to build relationships and in turn a more successful legal career -- maybe to you that means making more money or winning an election to become judge or making a lateral move into a more prestigious law firm. Whatever more successful means to you, my point is that these tips are about using your bar association to help you achieve the things you want in your career.

To be sure, there are lots of altruistic, noble reasons to get involved with your bar association: to improve the image of the profession, to increase access to justice, to take part in the community of a learned profession. However, those would be great topics for another author and another article. For this discussion, we will simply focus on ten things you can do to make your bar association dues work for you.

1. Join a Section
Most large bar associations are divided into sections representing the various practice areas or topics of interest for lawyers, such as law practice management. Your bar association staff will tell you, if you ask, the benefits of belonging to a section, like access to an email listserv or discussion board or a subscription to a section newsletter for example.

Here are three things they are unlikely to tell you, though, and they are among the most important benefits of section membership: 1) you can quickly build relationships with people who do the same kind of work you do, so you can build your referral source network; 2) you will make contacts who can act as sounding boards or mentors, which is particularly useful if you are a solo practitioner; and 3) it lays out a straight path into bar association leadership. Join a section, get on the section council, become chair, meet the volunteer lawyers who are running your association - the next thing you know you are on the leadership track. Having a leadership position in a bar association is impressive to clients and raises your reputation among colleagues, and it all starts with joining a section.

2. Write an Article for a Bar Publication
Whether your goal is a law practice whose client base is fueled by referrals or a judicial appointment or a successful electoral campaign, achievement of this order requires two things: 1) a lot of the right people need to know who you are and 2) those people need to think you are worthy of their referral, appointment, vote or job offer.

One great way to help with both of these requirements is to write an article for a publication. It could be a section newsletter or a bar-wide magazine or bar-based blog. All you need to do is decide who is the right audience for your article and then find which publication addresses that audience. Most bar-based publications are starved for decent articles, so take your time, write a great article and then offer it to whoever controls the publication. Before you know it, lawyers across the state are reading what you have to say on whatever topic you decided to say it.

3. Go to the Annual Meeting
There are lots of reasons not to go to your bar association’s annual meeting: it is expensive, it is far away, and it is time you can ill afford away from the office. There is, however, one really good reason to go to your bar's annual meeting: it is the time and place where you are going to find the highest concentration of heavy hitters in your state, all of whom are relaxing and socializing. You know who the heavy hitters are -- the lawyers with the deepest rolodexes, best clients, and most burnished reputations. They are the ones who have the time and money to invest in a networking event like the annual meeting.

Lawyers and judges you could never get to return your phone call will be freely available at cocktail receptions, dinners and golf outings. Law practice is a relationship-based business. How much would it be worth to your career or your firm to build a Rolodex of the most successful lawyers in your state? What kind of referrals and opportunities could those kinds of folks provide? Forget about just this year, how about over the next ten years?

Go to the annual meeting. Socialize. Make friends. Collect and hand out business cards. You may be playing a round of golf with a future senator, governor or chief justice.

4. Get Active on a Listserv
Now that you have joined a section, it is time to get active. One of the easiest ways to do that is to subscribe to the listserv (or discussion board) and get actively involved. This is the place where the lawyers who do what you do are talking about the pressing issues of the day.

Not only will you likely learn a lot you did not know from some very smart lawyers, but your participation will serve to remind them that you exist so when they have a referral your name is at the top of mind. It costs almost nothing, can be done in off hours from a smart phone, and the potential return on investment is enormous, so sign up and start posting.

5. Volunteer for a Pro Bono Project
I know, I promised all ten tips were going to be about helping you to be more successful, and now I am writing about pro bono. This is not a bait and switch -- your participation in a pro bono project can really boost your practice. (I am using pro bono broadly here to refer to any publicly beneficial project from building houses to answering a legal hotline.)

Here is what is great about a pro bono project: it operates like a team building exercise for the bar association. It takes people from very different practices, locations, and experience levels and throws them into a shared exercise where most of the normal rules do not apply.

You may find yourself helping the managing partner of a 1,000-lawyer firm with something that is simple to you, but brand new and difficult to her. Those kinds of interactions foster strong and lasting relationships. Building strong relationships is why companies spend so much money doing team building.

6. Use Your Free Research Tool
Many bar associations offer their members access to a free legal research tool. In my bar, we use Casemaker, and it consistently ranks as one of the benefits our members really appreciate. Using a free research tool can dramatically cut the costs incurred in your legal research. Ask the membership department at your bar association if you have a free research tool available to you and take the time to get to know and use it.

7. Work the Discount on CLE
A lot of bar associations offer members a discounted rate on CLE. If you take all of your required credit hours through your bar's CLE program, this discount alone can pay for your membership dues. Aside from the cost savings, CLE programs are an under-utilized networking opportunity. Take advantage of the breaks and lunch to meet somebody new, exchange cards and broaden your network.

If you met one new person for each credit hour of CLE you take, at the end of the year you will have added approximately twelve new people to your network. At the end of the decade it will be 120 just from CLE programs. Best of all, all of the other attendees need to broaden their networks too, so it is a win-win.

8. Sign Up for the Lawyer Referral Service
If your bar has a lawyer referral service, do yourself a favor and sign up. It is a cost-effective way to generate potential clients, and if you have been stuck in the habit of offering free initial consultations, having a steady stream of new, paying consults will help break you of the habit.

If you are having trouble getting business in the door, this is a worthwhile expenditure of time and money. The goal, of course, is to have a practice that runs on referrals alone, but until you get there, take advantage of the help that is available.

9. Leverage Your Affinity Partnerships
Chances are that your bar association has special relationships set up with several different companies to provide discounts to members. It might be for office supplies or online backup or credit card processing. In my bar, we call these relationships "affinity partnerships."

If you are not currently taking advantage of the full suite of affinity partnerships available, call your membership department to find out what you are missing. If you would like to see affinity partnerships that your bar does not currently support, make the suggestion to the membership department. Your bar is the business of helping you to succeed in your business. Tell them what you need.

10. Utilize Your Practice Management Advisor
Many bars have a professional on staff called a practice management advisor or PMA. Typically, a PMA is a former practicing attorney or law firm staff member who now works full time for the members of his or her bar association, helping them with issues of law practice management.

This is my job, and I frequently describe it to people by saying I am a free management consultant for the members of my bar association. If your association has a PMA on staff, take the time to meet that person and find out how they can help you in your practice. That is what they are there for.

Conclusion
Making the most out of the connections you can create through your bar association is an excellent way to build your practice. You are already paying the membership dues, so why not reach out and utilize the methods your bar provides for making connections with other attorneys as well as for making connections within the bar association’s staff.

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About the Author

Erik Mazzone is the Director of the Center for Practice Management at the North Carolina Bar Association. When he is not expounding on the virtues of bar association membership, he can most likely be found hunched over his computer yelling at his fantasy football team. He can be reached through his blog www.lawpracticematters.com.

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