 Wisconsin 
  Lawyer
Wisconsin 
  Lawyer
  Vol. 81, No. 6, June 
2008
What Keeps You Awake at Night? 
What Is the Best Way to Spend My Limited 
Marketing Dollars?
I have no marketing expertise, 
limited money and even less time, but I know I should bedoing something 
to generate new business for my small firm. Should I put my money in 
building a Web site, taking out ads in yellow pages or community papers, 
joining local community groups, or doing something else entirely? 
Sidebars:
Marketing Plans Vary by Firm
 
There is no "one size fits all" approach to effectively 
market legal 
services. As a small firm, consider the following practices:  
     1) Tailor your marketing efforts to support your firm's overall 
growth strategy.  Firms often neglect to develop a strategic plan and to 
implement marketing initiatives to support the plan; instead they become 
involved 
in marketing opportunities as they arise. A plan will help the firm by 
driving 
the appropriate marketing and business development activities and 
aligning 
the employees so that attorneys and staff are striving for the same 
goal. 
     2) Determine how the firm's current matters came in the door. 
Most 
firms will find the majority of new work comes from existing clients 
with whom 
the attorneys have strong relationships. So, such firms should use 
marketing 
initiatives that further enhance relationships with existing clients, 
such as 
survey programs, visits, entertainment, in-house seminars, and others. 
For many 
small law firms, referrals are the primary source of new business. An 
effective 
marketing program would target those referral sources and track the 
referrals. 
     3) Define the firm's target client. Target clients vary from 
firm to 
firm. For example, when marketing an employment law practice, you might 
target 
marketing initiatives to the vice president or the director of human 
resources. 
An intellectual property boutique may target a company's chief patent 
counsel. There also are variations based on the demographics of the 
target 
individual. When targeting owners of high tech companies, try employing 
more 
technology-oriented, cutting-edge marketing tactics, such as blogs, 
podcasts, 
and webinars. When marketing estate planning services to a more senior 
target 
audience, you might use more traditional forms of marketing, such as 
newsletters and in-person seminars. 
     4) Develop an integrated marketing approach; no single marketing 
effort will guarantee new work. It is important to keep your firm front 
and center 
in clients' minds so that your firm is thought of first when a legal 
need 
arises. One way is to develop an integrated plan allowing for consistent 
communication over time. Employing a combination of activities targeting 
the same 
audience will increase the effectiveness of your marketing efforts. For 
example, 
a firm's plan for a year's worth of marketing may include a combination 
of 
the following initiatives: client plant tours, newsletters, development 
of a 
targeted Web page, speaking engagements, and trade association 
participation.
     5) Always follow up. Long-term planning provides a roadmap for 
your 
firm's future, and often, the fruits of marketing labors are realized 
years after 
an initiative took place. Track the development of new relationships 
that 
come about as a result of a marketing program. The benefit of one single 
marketing initiative may not be realized monetarily or immediately, but 
the contact 
may prove critical to the development of business in the future. 
     - Jennifer Rupkey, Marketing Director, Michael Best & 
Friedrich, Milwaukee
Practice Area Should Determine Marketing Strategy 
 
Today, a law firm must have a Web site. While the Web site might not 
funnel a career-sustaining amount of work to a firm, its absence can 
reflect 
negatively on a firm's attorneys. Expect that everyone (prospective 
clients, 
opposing counsel, or the government) will search for you online. A Web 
site is a 
good way to make a positive first impression. Fortunately, a Web site 
can be 
built to fit any budget. 
     Use of other marketing techniques depends largely on your 
practice 
area. Does your practice rely more on reputation or on relationships? To 
build 
your reputation, write articles, give speeches, or teach a class. Even a 
print ad 
in the phone book or an industry journal, if run long enough, will work 
to 
build your reputation. If relationships are key to building your 
practice, get 
involved in organizations and attend events that will put you in contact 
with people (or their advisors) who need your services. Leadership 
positions 
are preferable because they can demonstrate your commitment to a 
project. If 
time constraints limit your leadership involvement, regular attendance 
at an 
organization's events can act as a good substitute.
     In most situations, an attorney will need a combination of 
strategies. Time and money will dictate how much you can do, and so you 
should rely more 
on those methods with which you are comfortable. In all circumstances, 
make 
sure you enjoy the marketing that you do. 
     - Robert B. Teuber, Weiss Berzowski Brady LLP, Milwaukee
Build Your Expertise and Name Recognition to Generate Referrals
 
Put your limited marketing dollars in the bank for something else, 
like groceries or gas. The best way to generate new business is through 
referrals from 1) satisfied clients and 2) other professionals. 
So, instead of 
frittering your time away thinking about Web sites, put in an extra 
call to your 
clients just to keep them up-to-date, and send a bill that shows you 
didn't charge 
them for the call. Join a State Bar section and get on the 
program committee, 
where you will volunteer to give a presentation or write an article on a 
topic 
you know lots about or would like to learn lots about. When 
something happens 
in your community that is relevant to the issues in your practice, 
contact 
the local newspaper and talk to a reporter about the situation, offering 
to 
give insight. Tell the reporter that if he or she ever has questions on 
that 
issue, you'd be happy to discuss them. These activities cost only your 
time, and in 
my experience the ratio of successful referrals for new business is 
significantly greater from these sources than from Web sites, newspaper 
ads, or yellow 
pages. 
     - Carol J. Wessels, Nelson, Irvings & Waeffler S.C., 
Wauwatosa 
Repeat a Coherent Message Over Many Communications Channels
 
Success depends on having a coherent message repeated over every 
possible channel. For example, "Lakelaw represents people in 
financial matters 
from Milwaukee to Chicago and in the 7 Rivers Region" says a lot. 
It tells 
people our markets are southeast Wisconsin and the area around La 
Crosse. It 
tells people we are interstate. It tells people that we deal with 
finances, but 
not just bankruptcy, which happens to be our core competence. 
     We built a Web site, www.lakelaw.com, that showcases 
our people, areas 
of expertise, and practice areas. It has testimonials from satisfied 
clients. 
It provides resources. However, it is not enough. We also built a 
specialty 
Web site, www.krmbankruptcy.com. You can 
find us on any search engine. We've 
also built bridges to other attorneys in areas where we practice and 
serve as 
resources for them in their practices. They in turn have kindly referred 
many 
of their clients who can use our help in our areas of expertise. 
     We believe that public service is very important. For example, 
work we 
do in foreclosure defense through WHEDA and U.W. Extension pays big 
dividends 
for us in public relations. While public service is an end in itself, 
providing this service helps build our reputation and good name. The 
same can be said 
for volunteer work my partner Jim McNeilly and I do in consumer 
education. So 
everything we do and say is designed to reinforce the message that 
"Lakelaw 
represents people in financial matters from Milwaukee to Chicago and in 
the 
7 Rivers Region." 
     Develop your own unique message based on your own unique 
attributes, 
repeat it everywhere you go, and reflect it in everything you do. 
Demonstrate value. Demonstrate why you are distinct from your 
competitors. You will 
gain your own position in the marketplace and the respect of your peers 
as well.
     - David P. Leibowitz, Lakelaw/Kenosha, Kenosha 
Wisconsin Lawyer