Thursday, November 28, 2013

Getting Work as a Lawyer

A recently admitted lawyer in Ohio had gone on the Bar Association's Solo and Small Firm list serv and posted a request for tips on how to get work.  This was my response, for what it's worth:
 
"Dear Amy:
 
While marketing your services as a lawyer is a process hampered by ethical land mines and a tradition of waiting to be called, there are some easy, inexpensive ways to get work.  First though, decide what broad kind of work you can do.  You can't take on work that you aren't able to do or aren't reasonably able to get prepared to do.

If you want criminal work, get on the court's appointment list.  It's low paid but filled with opportunities for experience and exposure.

For civil work, the biggest bang for your buck may be the local bar association's lawyer referral service.  Dayton's is 175 a year plus 10% of fees earned.  It is so worth the cost. Hundreds of times over.

Go to bar association events.  Go to the national ABA section events if you can afford it.  If you go, and you introduce yourself and make connections, then you quickly become a nationally known attorney.  Have a quick response to "what do you do?"  Be friendly with other lawyers.  Refer work to them.  Volunteer in a group or groups that do something you like. Speak up and take some leadership.  It isn't always quick, but exposure + competence = work.  Always be grateful for referrals. Call or send thank you cards to your referral sources. Refer back and speak well of them.

Write a blog, get a website that links to your blog, and then use a twitter account and a linkedin profile to mention your blog or website.  Write often and be real.  Read blogs by James Altucher.  Read his book "Choose Yourself".  It's five bucks on Amazon and it may change your life.  

Do good work, bill fairly, and deliver more than you promise.  Always, always do what you say you will.  Don't lie or cheat.  Lawyers and judges will know, and it will kill your career.  Don't chase low profit work or clients.  Analyze your practice areas for the highest profit for the least amount of time and effort, and then do that work most of the time.  Develop an expertise. Love it. For me that is FLSA litigation. For you it will likely be something different.

Charge a fee for consultations too. Make yourself valuable from the very first meeting.  If a potential client balks at 50-100-150 for your initial time, then you don't need them.  Exceptions of course, but charge as a rule.  

Finally, go to Dave Lorenzo's website and follow him on Twitter @TheDaveLorenzo, He is undoubtedly the best legal marketing mind.  Read all that he writes and do just part of it. You will get work and clients.

I do these things.  I believe in them and I have been successfully self employed, with luck and gratitude, since 2001.  

Good luck Amy.  Contact me if you'd like any more info. Although I think that is all that I have."

No comments:

Post a Comment