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In a tsunami of Sarbanes-Oxley news alerts and swarms
of seminars, what really gets through to clients? What
is fad vs. fundamental in an economy that is forcing law
firms to take a hard look at what constitutes effective
marketing strategies and techniques? We asked a diverse
group to participate in a virtual discussion of these
topics during the last week of October 2003. Let me
introduce the panel:
Darryl
Cross is the Managing Principal of Darryl Cross
Consulting and former Chief Marketing Officer for Benesch
Friedlander Coplan & Aronoff, based in Cleveland
Ohio. Darryl has been widely recognized for his innovations
in developing a sales culture and system at Benesch.
Darryl received the 2003 “Marketing Initiative
of the Year Award” at this year’s Marketing
Partner Forum. www.more-rain.com
Bill
Feid, President and Chief Executive Officer,
RealLegal, LLC. Bill has been at the helm of technology
companies, including Law.com, EMS, and Firefly. Bill
wears two hats in the conversation, one as CEO and buyer
of legal services, and one who has insight into the
business of law as CEO of RealLegal. www.reallegal.com
Linda
O’Connell, Marketing Director of Robinson
& Cole, LLP. Linda is a legal marketing veteran,
with more than 14 years experience as the top marketing
professional for Robinson & Cole, the leading law
firm in Connecticut. Linda has served on the Legal Marketing
Association National Board in several capacities and
has led the marketing committee for the United States
Law Firm Group. www.rc.com
Laura
Owen, Director of Legal Affairs for Cisco Systems.
Laura leads Cisco’s legal affairs supporting Worldwide
Human Resources and Work Place Resources for this global
leader in technology. She joined Cisco from Women.com,
where she served as Vice President. www.cisco.com
Ed
Poll, President of LawBiz.com. Ed is a well-known
coach and consultant to the law practice management
sector. He has authored several ABA books on managing
a law firm. www.lawbiz.com
Norm
Rubenstein, Partner of the Zeughauser Group.
Norm is the nation’s top law firm marketing consultant.
Formerly Chief Marketing Officer with Orrick, Norm has
led the profession in the use of law firm branding and
marketing communications. He is former President of
LMA, and was recognized in 2002 with the “Marketing
Director of the Year” award. Norm speaks at many
conferences on marketing topics, including the Marketing
Directors Institute, Marketing Partner Forum and the
Legal Marketing Association National Conference. www.zeughausergroup.com
Harry
Trueheart, III, Managing Partner of Nixon Peabody,
LLP. Harry has led Nixon Peabody, one of the fastest
growing law firms, through several mergers throughout
the country. Nixon now has more than 600 attorneys in
14 cities. Harry is a Fellow of the College of Law Practice
Management. www.nixonpeabody.com
And
me, Mark Beese. I am the Marketing
Guy at Holland & Hart, LLP, a 285 -attorney firm
with 12 offices throughout the Rocky Mountain West and
Washington DC. www.hollandhart.com
Let’s get started:
Part 1: Branding
Mark Beese: Over the past few years, many
firms have invested in "branding", advertising,
additional marketing staff, professional salespeople,
even competitive intelligence experts. What do you see
law firms doing in the areas of "business development"
or marketing that is particularly successful, cutting-edge
or promising? What are some firms doing that are a complete
waste of time?
Linda O’Connell: As a means of positioning
a corporate law firm in the marketplace, basic techniques
are being used effectively by firms of all sizes, from
the mega national firms to boutiques and even 20 lawyer
operations. Ads, media spots, sponsorships, seminars
all help law firms, like the rest of the business community,
become known by potential purchasers of their products
and services. Depending on the prospective buyer, any
of these tools can help achieve a strategic agenda.
In my mind, the key to success in marketing is differentiating
one firm's capabilities from others. All of us say we
do quality work, provide great service, and have the
latest technological tools to enhance efficiency. This
provides a real challenge for most midsize American
law firms, precisely because most of us actually do
provide quality legal work and responsiveness. In fact,
I am struck by how many companies seem to truly appreciate
the value proposition their savvy firms provide.
So, how does a firm differentiate itself? Innovative
use of technology for e-communications, Extranets for
sharing work product, websites that offer valuable information,
and use of efficient trial preparation techniques are
a few examples. But there is more. Helping a firm stand
apart means filtering all marketing activity through
the lens of clients' perspectives to determine how they
look at issues, to discover what will help them resolve
challenges. Effective ways to reach this goal are intake
discussions that help manage expectations, regular how
are we doing" meetings with major clients, a clear
understanding of business challenges and industry issues.
Another response is using strategic, high profile topic
or industry initiatives. Transform practices into support
of, say, the food and beverage industry OR a Sarbanes
practice OR a petroleum group. Be innovative yet responsive
to marketplace issues.
Bill Feid: Over the past year I have seen
several firms do some very interesting and attention
getting activities. Most firms issue electronic newsletters,
which if done well, are an excellent tool to grab someone’s
attention. The most effective newsletters are those
that are limited to a single subject, such as the attention
given to SOX or the recent 401k guidelines for plan
compliance. Conversely, marketing pieces that try to
communicate too much will not engage the reader or leave
a positive impression. In fact, if there is no strong
message, they often are discarded immediately. Well
written marketing newsletters accomplish three objectives:
- They provide relevant and timely information
- They allow a firm to demonstrate its expertise
on the related subject matter
- They are extremely cost effective
From a business development perspective, the impact
of such e-mail newsletters is two-fold. Specifically,
they are an effective tool to attract new clients and
to inform current clients to the additional services
and expertise that is available to them. The latter
is often overlooked as the easiest way to grow billable
services.
Norm Rubenstein: Like Bill, I am intrigued
by the ways in which technology is redefining the marketing
process. And, I, too, have noticed how many law firms
now are using email as a timely and more cost-effective
distribution channel for their external communication
materials. However, more unusual today is the way that
a handful of truly marketing-savvy firms are designing
the content and navigation of their second- or third-generation
Web sites. Instead of the old product-push mentality
that characterized all law firm marketing from the first
firm brochures through the first legal Web sites, market
leaders finally are crafting Web sites that organize
content from the client's--and not the law firm's--perspective.
In some cases, that includes a navigational system that
organizes content by industry sectors instead of simply
by areas of legal practice. Such an approach allows
a visitor to "self-identify" and transport
immediately to Web content responsive to their interests
and needs. Any time a law firm can demonstrate that
it thinks like its clients and appreciates their concerns;
the message sent is exponentially richer.
Laura Owen: Regarding what firms are doing
that is innovative and cutting edge - from my viewpoint,
firms must embrace technology to even get a chance for
a seat at the table. Email, blackberries, instant messaging
are all fine, and to be honest, I'm always very happy
when I visit a law firm's office and find Cisco IP telephony
on their desks. But it's really much more than that.
IP phones are just one indicia that the firm recognized
the value of technology and the productivity gains and
cost savings associated with making that investment.
I'm using the internet to drive productivity increases,
reduce costs and improve the quality of legal services,
so I need a law firm that understands the value of collaborative
work rooms on a secure extranet, that can help suggest
additional productivity gains by making changes in processes
that involve internet tools (such as feeding FAQ's back
to an internal website so that legal knowledge is reused
as much as possible), and find ways for its own extranet
or data base to work in concert with ours. It may very
well be a mutual journey with outside counsel developing
the right process, the right use of technology, or the
right internet tool, but I have to make that journey
and I only have time to work with firms who are willing
to go that extra mile and commit to the value of the
internet.
Darryl Cross: One thing I see that is very
encouraging is integration of marketing efforts, and
I do mean beyond a simple consistency of message and
corporate ID. Firms are beginning to focus their efforts
on specific industries or business issues and then trying
to form beachheads by focusing a multitude of marketing
resources (seminars, press releases, vertical Web sites,
etc.) on key points in the market. Some examples of
this are multi-disciplinary practices formed around
homeland security issues, competing globally (especially
how companies take on China), or the polymer industry.
The willingness to have multiple practice areas combining
efforts to solve not only legal issues, but also the
underlying business problem, makes for a much more efficient,
and focused, method of business development. Still,
much work still needs to be done in helping increase
the "intensity of user" which I define as
a measure of total wallet share from EXISTING clients.
Structured business development is new to many firms,
and some firms are tending to lean towards capturing
new clients in new markets, which is extremely expensive
and time consuming.
Another key area is that more firms are coming to the
realization that ROI calculation for some of these efforts
does not neatly fall within a calendar year. In the
past, I have seen many examples of firms whose approach
one year is a total focus on PR, the next year on seminars,
the next year on electronic newsletters, and so on.
Integrated marketing and business development occurs
over periods of years and does not end based on budget
cycles. Savvy firms are becoming more holistic in their
approaches and resisting the "bandwagon" approach
of adopting the latest legal marketing fad.
Overall, attractive brands and name awareness does not
generate new business from clients and prospects. No
matter how cutting edge it might be, any marketing effort
that does not have a formalized pipeline or funnel approach
of how to turn those efforts into specific face-to-face
encounters with specific buyers can be a waste of time
and money.
Norm Rubenstein: I also am impressed by the
level and degree of competitive intelligence gathering
I see going on in law firms today. The strategic marketer
appreciates that the more one knows about a client or
prospect, the more likely one is to anticipate and respond
to the client's needs. Now that Lexis-Nexis/Martindale/CourtLink,
West, and a host of other information packing providers
have made data readily available, no lawyer should have
to pitch new business or respond to an RFP
Harry Trueheart: I hear repeatedly from GC's
that fancy general brochures are a waste of time and
money. We should listen. Institutional advertising has
limited usefulness, except perhaps for firm internal
morale. I do think that focused and professional "selling"
is a developing trend -- by this I mean identifying
client needs (not firm capabilities), identifying prospects
with needs that match firm skills, and presenting those
skills, or solutions to prospective clients. I believe
"deal lists" and “case lists" and
other sharply focused ways of describing competencies
are useful to buyer and seller. I also believe that
tracking developments in an industry or with a specific
client or prospect, as a means of understanding and
anticipating client or prospect needs, is a useful approach.
Bill Feid: I absolutely agree about the brochures
-- I don't read them! Brochures should not be expected
to generate new business, but they can be helpful for
leaving another positive impression on the prospect.
As Harry mentioned in his response, the key is listening
and, I think, developing relationships. Excellent and
right on.
Laura Owen: I like newsletters -- but in electronic
form only -- don't ever send me anything on paper if
you can avoid it. Even then, I'd really like firms to
create newsletters that aren't generic. If a firm could
tailor its news to its client’s needs rather than
sending the same letter to all clients in a particular
area, that firm would have a real edge. It would mean
that the firm knows that client's issues and priorities
and only pushes news to clients with an interest in
that area. An easy example, I don't work with unions
in this role, so don't send me cutting edge NLRB decision
summaries. And then if the firm could push the specific
news to a company's intranet on the right page rather
than clutter up my email -- that's perfect. No one I
know does this yet.
Seminars are helpful -- always should be free to clients
and include MCLE credit. I like them as training for
non-lawyers in particular on specific subjects.
Then as part of any fixed fee agreement, I require
the firm to provide at least 3 in person on site sessions,
which could be up to 1/2 day or just a over a brown
bag lunch. Again, this is training mostly for my internal
clients to help them make better business decisions
and when to (and not to) call outside counsel or me
re an issue.
Next month we will continue this roundtable as it addresses
Client Service.
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