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	<title>Law marketing-europe.com</title>
	<link>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com</link>
	<description>Law Marketing in Europe</description>
	<pubDate>Sat, 26 Apr 2008 15:46:57 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Young Lawyers: How can we be positively differentiate on the legal market?</title>
		<link>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/young-lawyers-how-can-we-be-positively-different-on-the-legal-market/</link>
		<comments>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/young-lawyers-how-can-we-be-positively-different-on-the-legal-market/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Aug 2007 14:59:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Francesc Dominguez</dc:creator>
		
		<category>Law Marketing</category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Question byÂ  Jennifer Losada, Chairwoman of the Group of Young Lawyers of the Bar Association of Barcelona
Â 
Â 
Experience
Talent does not distinguish between ages. Youth can be a fountain of opportunities. The main opportunity for young lawyers is that they do not usually have as many prejudices as some older ones. Preconceived opinions are a limitation in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Question byÂ  Jennifer Losada, Chairwoman of the <strong>Group of Young Lawyers of the Bar Association of Barcelona</strong><br />
Â </p>
<p>Â </p>
<p><strong>Experience<br />
</strong>Talent does not distinguish between ages. Youth can be a fountain of opportunities. The main opportunity for young lawyers is that they do not usually have as many prejudices as some older ones. Preconceived opinions are a limitation in the business world.<br />
Â </p>
<p>What is experience? It is the ability to learn from life, from each client case. This capacity depends on the actual person rather than on their age. Thinking that a veteran lawyer is an expert just because he is older is absurd, and mentally self-limits young lawyers.<br />
Â </p>
<p>Forget your fear, your other possible mental barrier. The ability to think big costs nothing and only those who think big find opportunities. Think big, calculating how to invest your time and money well. If you have good values, do not let anybody â€œstealâ€? your dreams.<br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>The first steps<br />
</strong>Imagine a young graduate that has been trained in the practice of law and decides to join the profession. Normally, the first thing they think about is to try to join a practice or else associate with other colleagues and open an office. It is not the most essential thing. Having your own market strategy is crucial; a strategy defined in writing, and then choose one of the preceding options.<br />
Â </p>
<p>Update your knowledge permanently and think, nevertheless, about the following. Knowledge, while essential, will not take you very far without a market strategy. As George Bernard Shaw once said: â€œThose who <strong>can</strong>, do; those who <strong>canâ€™t</strong>, teachâ€?.</p>
<p>Â </p>
<p><strong>The attitude<br />
</strong>Attitude is the cornerstone. To get new results you need to do different things. If you don&#8217;t, you are your own professional ceiling. Do not lay the blame on others.<br />
Â </p>
<p>Attitude is the cornerstone. To get new results you need to do different things. If you don&#8217;t, you are your own professional ceiling. Do not lay the blame on others.Â Learning to be mentally stronger and gaining self-esteem is essential in making a name for yourself in the profession. Improving your self-esteem, accepting yourself is basic to selling legal services better.<br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>Admire<br />
</strong>Admire, do not envy. For example, if you aspire to having a large legal service company, the best thing you can do is to admire the great law firms. And you will learn from them. If you envy them, you will waste energy uselessly.<br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>Values<br />
</strong>What makes the difference? Values and your style. You should know your values explicitly, define and communicate them.<br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>The vision<br />
</strong>What is your future vision? Do you want to be an alternative to law practices that support the internationalisation of the companies of your country? An example: for years I have created a broad international network of contacts, influential law practices based in the main international markets. These offices are ready to support European businesses associations and my clients in their international expansion. If I have done this, then so can you.<br />
Â </p>
<p>Having a path (vision) is transcendental. Your dreams (vision) will start to come true as soon as you get them in writing, define objectives, strategies, actions, responsible for their accomplishment and a timeframe.<br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>Your market study<br />
</strong>The world is full of conquerors that seek to change the rest, when the first thing we should do is change or improve ourselves. If you improve, you will begin to get new results. To this end, the epicentre of your market study is you and your practice. It is basic for you to know your strengths and the things that need to be improved. Ask your collaborators how they perceive you. Promote your personal brand on the basis of your virtues or strong points.<br />
Â <br />
<strong>The professional profile<br />
</strong>In a hypercompetitive world, The most highly valued profile is that of the lawyer-consultant, i.e., a lawyer geared towards helping the client and able to detect their client&#8217;s needs and even pre-empt them. A lawyer with a commercial profile, a professional that gives the client value.<br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>Image<br />
</strong>We are an image. Until people know us, we are but an image to them: pleasant, reliable, skilled, clever, unpleasant, etc. That is why first impressions are so important, as it is when perceptions are formed. Take care of your verbal and body language and the small details. <strong>Language creates perception, the gateway to business</strong>.<br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>Fees<br />
</strong>Anybody can compete by applying low fees. You should be able to provide a service that justifies fees in tune with professional skill. To do this, make sure you fully understand the needs of the client, increase your value, build up your brand and give clients a personalised service.Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â <br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>Partners<br />
</strong>Choose yourÂ  partners with professional criteria, not on the basis of friendship or interpersonal feeling. Associate with professionals that not only complement you in terms of skills (specialities) but also, and more particularly, in attitudes.<br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>Advisors or suppliers<br />
</strong>Select them according to their quality, not using price as the basic criterion. Treat them with respect, just as well as your best clients. A quality supplier will save you time, problems and will give your brand added value.<br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>Projects<br />
</strong>From the outset of your professional career, apart from doing tasks (case impulse) focus on projects, i.e. on being a reference point in some market. Concentrating on projects means choosing our clients and working to achieve them, fighting to live the professional life that we want to live.<br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>Business Plan<br />
</strong>Make sure you know who your potential customers are and draw up a plan to attract them (Marketing and business plan).<br />
Â </p>
<p>How to facilitate the commissioning of new services? Increase your list of contacts. Monitor the economic press, know what companies&#8217; needs are, personalise your offer of services to them and visit them, but never pressurise them. When he sees a personalised offer, our client will understand our message clearly: â€œthis practice has made an effort to know and understand my needsâ€?.<br />
Â </p>
<p>Participate actively at Trade Fairs and Congresses that enable you to meet more potential customers. Share out the work among your partners. Also participate actively in an association. This participation should be consistent with your personal strategy and that of your firm. Think. If for example you belong to an association of young lawyers, make the most of it: besides dedicating your time to your professional advancement, devote some time as well, for example, to creating an international network of contacts among practices of young lawyers.<br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>Contacts<br />
</strong>Contacts are essential in the business world. However, one word of warning: they must help you to transmit the image that you wish to transmit.<br />
Â </p>
<p>For example, one of my clients is lawyer to a newspaper. When she participated at business meetings with the medium and other entrepreneurs, she was presented by the medium as â€œthe newspaper&#8217;s lawyerâ€?. What was the problem? My client was failing to leverage possible business opportunities since the entrepreneurs could even think that she was actually an employee, i.e. on the newspaper&#8217;s payroll. I told my client to have them introduce her as follows: â€œpartner of X, a law practice with the capacity to help companies to go global. Moreover, she is our legal advisor.â€?<br />
Â </p>
<p>The message is very different and opens the door to new clients.<br />
Â <br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>The clients<br />
</strong>Don&#8217;t forget your clients. There are professional firms that only remember their clients when are they paid their fee or retainer. That is the best way to lost them. Monitor them: have at least one contact with clients every fortnight. Send them articles of interest, ask them if they are satisfied, send them birthday cards, invite them to events you know they will be interested in, hold exclusive seminars for clients and acquaintances, etc. Recruit a â€œcustomer managerâ€?. The objective should not be so much to sell legal services but rather to consolidate the relationship of trust with clients.<br />
Â </p>
<p>Your offer should be different to your competitors, but remember, by offer we do not mean the service offer (which can always be copied), but rather the concept and the image of the firm, the technical and relational quality of the lawyers and the services rendered to the clients, personalised.<br />
Â </p>
<p>Communicate low expectations to clients: if you give them more than they expected you will win their confidence.<br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>Manage your time well<br />
</strong>Be brave: avoid focusing on rather unprofitable topics from the outset of your professional career. <strong>If you take all kinds of commissions you will end up over-committed</strong>: you will work long hours for low profitability. Learn to say â€œnoâ€?. Focus on more profitable clients and cases. Fewer hours of work + more fees = quality of life.<br />
Â </p>
<p>Manage your time well: focus on the 20% of your clients who account for 80% of your sales. Give other clients a professional service as well, but spend less time on them.<br />
Â <br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>Final tip<br />
</strong>Sometimes opportunities are to be found where others think they do not exist. A few weeks ago a young European lawyer sent me the following query. â€œI am going to live in China. I have contacted some large law practices with branches in CHINA to offer my services. Nevertheless, it has not worked. I don&#8217;t know what to do.â€?</p>
<p>Sometimes opportunities are to be found where others think they do not exist. A few weeks ago a young European lawyer sent me the following query. â€œI am going to live in China. I have contacted some large law practices with branches in CHINA to offer my services. Nevertheless, it has not worked. I don&#8217;t know what to do.â€?Â </p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>Answer: â€œYou contacted some major practices without solid bargaining arguments. If you had said you were thinking about setting up in China, the negotiation would have been different.Â Modify the approach: You will be in a city of more than 7 million inhabitants, where there will be no practice from your country. Your opportunity lies in maintaining minimum services in your offices in Europe or else entering into an alliance with a practice from your country. Invest (low investment): Open up a micro-office in China. Publicise your availability to expatriates from your country in China, the mass media of your country andÂ  by extension the companies. Set up, with the utmost patience and respect, trust-based relationships with the Chinese business community in China and the resident community in your country. Position yourself as an alternative to other law firms.â€?<br />
Â </p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>Talent does not distinguish between ages. Only those who think big find opportunities.<br />
Â </p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>Â© 2007, Francesc Dominguez, marketing consultant, <a href="http://www.francescdominguez.com/">www.francescdominguez.com</a> . Query prepared for the Congress of Young Lawyers of Catalonia (June 2007).
</p>
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		<title>Advertising (ads): What benefits does advertising provide to the brand of a law practice?</title>
		<link>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/advertising-ads-what-benefits-does-advertising-provide-to-the-brand-of-a-law-practice/</link>
		<comments>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/advertising-ads-what-benefits-does-advertising-provide-to-the-brand-of-a-law-practice/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Aug 2007 14:52:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Francesc Dominguez</dc:creator>
		
		<category>Law Marketing</category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Question by Juan GÃ³nzalez-BlÃ¡zquez, lawyer, partner of GonzÃ¡lez-BlÃ¡zquez &#38; Barrenechea (Mexico City, Federal District)
Â 
The main benefit of advertising in the short term is brand awareness, which does not necessarily mean recall.
If your practice decides to invest in advertising (ads) it should do so with professional rigour, defining first of all the concept of what the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Question by Juan GÃ³nzalez-BlÃ¡zquez, lawyer, partner of <strong>GonzÃ¡lez-BlÃ¡zquez &amp; Barrenechea (Mexico City, Federal District)</strong><br />
Â </p>
<p>The main benefit of advertising in the short term is brand awareness, which does not necessarily mean recall.</p>
<p>If your practice decides to invest in advertising (ads) it should do so with professional rigour, defining first of all the concept of what the practice is, framing the advertising campaign within a marketing and communication plan. I say this because the common practice among some firms is that the actual partners design an ad about their legal services, but it is not part of a global marketing and communication strategy. Doing this is tantamount to throwing money out of the window.</p>
<p>Several lawyers have told me that if a practice is investing in advertising it is â€œbecause business is badâ€?. That is absurd. The potential customers of a law practice view investment in advertising by a services company as normal. Sometimes the only people with this prejudice are the lawyers themselves. When all is said and done, it is you who decides how to invest your money. Money should be invested in activities that get the market to recognise the firm&#8217;s expertise and see it as a point of reference. Sometimes these activities are free, although they logically require an investment in time. Ads â€œassertâ€? or &#8220;claim&#8221;, they do not â€œproveâ€?. That is why they are secondary in legal marketing.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, if your law practice is the market leader, in its speciality or sector, it may periodically advertise to remind people of this mental edge or leadership over its competitors.</p>
<p>If above all you target specific clients, you have a law practice concept that makes you different, and investors that back your project and, by extension, your advertising campaigns, so you will also have reasons to think about investing in ads. Unfortunately, this is not so for many practices. The solution for most practices is to be imaginative, and invest in marketing activities that entail a smaller investment.</p>
<p>Perhaps you have sometimes wondered why, in a country such as the United States of America, law practices do so much advertising? (Advertising which other countries sometimes see as being ridiculous or aggressive, for example.) To my mind, the legal sector in the United States invests so heavily in ads because of:</p>
<p>â€”Â Â Â  the values of the practice of law in the United States and overcrowding in its legal market,<br />
Â </p>
<p>â€”Â Â Â  in some cases, firmsâ€™ ignorance in legal marketing,<br />
Â </p>
<p>â€”Â Â Â  the human tendency to do what the majority supposedly does,<br />
Â </p>
<p>â€”Â Â Â  the self-interest of communication consultants, often Agencies that are more concerned about collecting their by no means low fees in the short term than about explaining the role of advertising in legal marketing to their client, and achieving a return on investment.<br />
Â </p>
<p>Be imaginative. Invest in actions that help potential customers to acknowledge your professional competence and expertise. In my opinion, investing in advertising is a resource for the few, and one of the last resorts for the majority.</p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>Â© 2007, Francesc Dominguez, marketing consultant, co-author of the book <em>El marketing jurÃ­dico</em> [Law Marketing]. <a href="http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/">www.lawmarketing-europe.com</a>
</p>
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		<title>Printed press: How to develop your brand by appearing in the press</title>
		<link>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/printed-press-how-to-develop-your-brand-by-appearing-in-the-press/</link>
		<comments>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/printed-press-how-to-develop-your-brand-by-appearing-in-the-press/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 19 May 2007 14:31:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Francesc Dominguez</dc:creator>
		
		<category>Law Marketing</category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Question by Gunter Zimmer, lawyer, executive partner of ZIMMERs (London, United Kingdom; and Cologne, Germany)
Â 
A brand should have visibility. The printed press, and in general the mass media, are a platform for gaining awareness, brand prestige and attracting the type of clients and cases that a law practice wants to have.
Any law practice â€” from [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Question by Gunter Zimmer, lawyer, executive partner of <strong>ZIMMERs (London, United Kingdom; and Cologne, Germany)</strong><br />
Â </p>
<p><strong>A brand should have visibility</strong>. The printed press, and in general the mass media, are a platform for gaining awareness, brand prestige and attracting the type of clients and cases that a law practice wants to have.</p>
<p>Any law practice â€” from the one-man outfit to the large practice â€” should communicate their identity and skills to society: who they are and what they offer. They should back up their claims with information, data and proven arguments. The aim is to inform, not to â€œadvertise the companyâ€?. If you want to advertise, use ads.<br />
<strong><strong><br />
Criteria for a good relationship with the press</strong></strong></p>
<p><strong>1. Work professionally and rigorously</strong>: draw up a marketing plan and include a media plan in it.<strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>2. Ascertain the content needs</strong> of the media you are collaborating with and the readers&#8217;. Get a high-profile contact in the medium and win them over.</p>
<p><strong>3. Be selective</strong>: go for media with prestige. Thus, your brand will gain prestige. Give priority to collaboration in prestigious media that afford your company visibility. If you appear in a publication sharing space with several firms, the brand will lose projection, and will be perceived as just another company.Â </p>
<p><strong>4. Spokesperson and messages</strong>: the spokesperson, normally the president or managing partner, should be trained: have positive attitudes to the media, have training in communication skills and convey an image of credibility. On the other hand, the person that writes or checks the messages (press notes, articles, etc.) must be able to translate the company&#8217;s communicative needs into attractive headings, with a hook, and persuasive messages. And contents with personality, different to the competition&#8217;s, will be achieved.</p>
<p><strong>5. Credibility</strong>: keep your promises. For example, making a commitment to writing a legal column in the press is easier said than done. Telling a journalist â€œwe didn&#8217;t send the column on the day we arranged because we are snowed under with workâ€? may be interpreted by the journalist as somewhat unprofessional, and even as a lack of respect, leading the media to lose confidence in you.</p>
<p><strong>6. Idiosyncrasy</strong>: Journalists are a very idiosyncratic group. Avoid, for example, giving the impression of wishing to â€œbuy offâ€? a journalist by inviting them to a meal or by sending certain gifts. Also avoid reproaching them for publishing a piece of news or interview which, in your opinion, was not â€œproperly-publishedâ€?. You can only make demands if you are paying for advertising space. Moreover, what might seem as important news to you may not seem so to the press. Be positive: instead of reproaching or criticising, focus on thanking the journalist for the publication of a news item and on learning how to improve.</p>
<p><strong>7. Meetings and interviews</strong>: if you arrange a brief interview with a journalist (say 10 minutes), do not go over this time or do so only at the request of the journalist. If you are being interviewed, remember the photographer. Treat him like the journalist: your image in the media depends to a great extent on him.</p>
<p><strong>8. Diversification</strong>: collaborate with different media to reach more potential customers. Give certain media exclusive contents from time to time.</p>
<p><strong>9. Dissemination</strong>: distribute your appearances (in print) among your collaborators and clients. They will associate your appearance in the media with a dynamic and modern image of the company. Include your collaborations on the firm&#8217;s website as well.</p>
<p><strong>10. Proximity press</strong>: your brand&#8217;s positioning begins from its local market. The local, county and regional press may help your brand to be perceived as a local firm, deeply rooted in its territory. This is particularly suitable for practices that focus on a local or regional market.</p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>Be imaginative and generate quality contents for (printed) publications without paying, and without sharing space with other signatures. Avoid publications that seem more like professional directories. If you pay, make it look as though you are not paying. This will give you greater credibility.<br />
Â </p>
<p>Â© 2007, Francesc Dominguez, marketing consultant, co-author of <em>the book El marketing jurÃ­dico </em>[Law Marketing]. <a href="http://www.francescdominguez.com/">http://www.francescdominguez.com/</a>.
</p>
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		<title>Mass media: How can we use the media ethically to develop a professional image?</title>
		<link>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/mass-media-how-can-we-use-the-media-ethically-to-develop-a-professional-image/</link>
		<comments>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/mass-media-how-can-we-use-the-media-ethically-to-develop-a-professional-image/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 30 Apr 2007 14:04:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Francesc Dominguez</dc:creator>
		
		<category>Law Marketing</category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Question by RubÃ©n Castillo, lawyer, founding partner of Mendoza, Arias, Valle &#38; Castillo (Panama City, Panama)

Publish if you wish to be an expert. Publishing in prestigious media (local, national or international) affords prestige and visibility. Publish if you wish to be perceived, as the case may be, as a lawyer and assessor of reference investments.
Naturally, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Question by RubÃ©n Castillo, lawyer, founding partner of <strong>Mendoza, Arias, Valle &amp; Castillo (Panama City, Panama)<br />
</strong><br />
Publish if you wish to be an expert. Publishing in prestigious media (local, national or international) affords prestige and visibility. Publish if you wish to be perceived, as the case may be, as a lawyer and assessor of reference investments.</p>
<p>Naturally, I am talking about publishing quality contents, targeting specific clients, communicated with efficacy. The mass media want quality contents. Such contents increase circulation, dissemination and gain advertisers, their main source of funding.</p>
<p>The mistake that some law practices make is approaching firms of lawyers with prejudices or with fear. They think, for example, that in certain dailies or sections in them, you only appear if you pay. The media need the forms as much as the firms need the media.</p>
<p>The Head of the Economy Section of one of the main European dailies told me, a few days ago: â€œWe are going for proximity contents increasingly more, those that <strong>small and medium-sized companies give us</strong>â€?Â  [We are referring to small- and medium-sized law practices] What do you think about this? It is an opportunity which small- and medium-sized practices do not seem to have realised.</p>
<p>What do the mass media seek? They want â€œstoriesâ€? to tell: practical, understandable and pleasant tips to prevent or solve problems, open offices abroad, bring in new partners, create an international alliance of firms, foreign investment opportunities, etc. Law practices should take into account that the â€œstories to be toldâ€?, the contents, must be consistent with the practice&#8217;s market strategy, and should be carefully drawn up and persuasively communicated. This is all compatible with professional codes of conduct. It helps bring the profession closer to society. Fortunately for the future of the profession, the legal profession has evolved in most countries. Professional boards and bar associations no longer â€œban advertising (or rather communication), barring exceptionsâ€?; and now permit it, barring exceptions.</p>
<p>Advertising (â€œadsâ€?) is a secondary professional Service marketing technique. The most important thing is not to pay to appear in the media, but rather use your imagination to gain space in them. By paying (for ads) you are <em>stating </em>Â that your company is the best; by gaining space, your company <em>demonstrates </em>Â its capacity to assess the potential client.</p>
<p>By gaining space in the press and communicating your identity, values and style, not just services, potential customers will be more likely to hire you.<br />
Â </p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>Â© 2007, Francesc Dominguez, marketing consultant, co-author of the book <em>El marketing jurÃ­dico</em> [Law Marketing]. <a href="http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/">www.lawmarketing-europe.com</a>
</p>
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		<title>Clients: What characteristics of a law practice do clients appreciate?</title>
		<link>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/clients-what-characteristics-of-a-law-practice-do-clients-appreciate/</link>
		<comments>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/clients-what-characteristics-of-a-law-practice-do-clients-appreciate/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Mar 2007 08:59:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Francesc Dominguez</dc:creator>
		
		<category>Law Marketing</category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Question by Petri Nevalainen, a Lawyer from Prudentum (Finland)
Â 
The client values the â€œwhat partâ€? of the service (i.e. the legal service), and â€œhowâ€? it is provided. Often, the service experience is just as important as the actual legal service. The way we deal with clients can make or break our relationship with them.
Characteristics appreciated by [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Question by Petri Nevalainen, a Lawyer from <strong>Prudentum (Finland)</strong></p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>The client values the â€œwhat partâ€? of the service (i.e. the legal service), and â€œhowâ€? it is provided. Often, the service experience is just as important as the actual legal service. The way we deal with clients can make or break our relationship with them.</p>
<p>Characteristics appreciated by clients:</p>
<p>1.Â <strong>Reassurance</strong>. Reassurance is the main characteristic that clients value in a company that provides professional services. If the company gives them reassurance, the client will continue to rely on it. This is why some law firms base their business strategy on the cornerstone of â€œclient reassuranceâ€?.</p>
<p>Think about things that reassure the client: the perception that he can trust the professionals employed by the practice, the lawyers&#8217; ability to pre-empt eventualities and provide creative solutions (with integrity, and legally), prudence (realistic expectations), reliability of performance (results), experience in similar cases and a well-known brand renowned for its quality. Honesty, modesty and discretion (professional secret) are other highly-valued characteristics.</p>
<p><strong>2.Â </strong><strong>Optimal and preferential treatment</strong>. To secure the client&#8217;s loyalty, build an individualised, personalised relationship with him. Treat each client the way they wish to be treated, ensuring that they is aware of and observe the firm&#8217;s policy of customer service (business hours, visits, etc.). In a few words, build a relationship on mutual respect.</p>
<p>Manage the client&#8217;s perception well: listen to him, get to know him, understand his needs, remember them. Treat him with interest and cordially. Get your client to feel comfortable dealing with your firm. Be accessible. Keep your promises. For example, call the client when you said you would; answer his e-mails as promptly as possible; if you are travelling, give the client service alternatives.</p>
<p>3. <strong>Quick service</strong>. Remember that it is not the director or the chairman of your firm who pays our wages. It is the client. Without clients there is no practice. Advise the client with interest and enthusiasm and give him a fast, albeit unhurried service, as quality takes time.</p>
<p>4.Â <strong>Communication</strong>. Report and communicate to create a trust-based relationship. Communicate clearly. Surprise the client with details.</p>
<p>5. <strong>International operating capacity</strong>. The capacity to create an international network of contacts or bilateral alliances does not depend on a firm&#8217;s size. It depends on the will and the skill to have them. You might assume that your clients do not need this operating capacity. Secure it and tell your clients that you have it. You will be surprised at the results.</p>
<p>Clients attach increasingly greater value to the role of the lawyer not just as a legal expert but also as an <strong><strong>investment advisor</strong></strong>, a professional proposes and creates opportunities for them. The ability to provide assessment in investments attracts potential clients, both private parties and companies, if the company makes this ability known. For example, I advise American and Asian firms that attract European investments to their countries or from their countries to Europe. First of all they prepare a certain strategy. Subsequently, with or without the aid of European practices, they publicise themselves in employers&#8217; organisations or professional associations to which they have access through the relationship of confidence I maintain with them.</p>
<p>And the cost? The cost is also valued, naturally. It must be seen to be fair. Nevertheless, if you or your company have a brand (are <em>the</em> or <em>one </em>Â of the references on the market), you will avoid price wars, as this discourages and wears down any professional.</p>
<p>All the aforementioned characteristics have a direct impact on the human resources policy of law practices. We must recruit <strong><strong>professionals with capacity to create excellent relationships</strong></strong><strong> </strong>with clients and then train them to improve their knowledge and skills. In other words, do precisely the opposite of what most law firms do. The quality of the lawyer as a person is just as important as his professional quality.</p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>Â© 2007, Francesc Dominguez, marketing consultant, co-author of the book <em>El marketing jurÃ­dico. </em><a href="http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/">www.lawmarketing-europe.com</a>
</p>
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		<title>Alliances: How can we compete better internationally?</title>
		<link>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/alliances-how-can-we-compete-better-internationally/</link>
		<comments>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/alliances-how-can-we-compete-better-internationally/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 10 Feb 2007 11:41:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Francesc Dominguez</dc:creator>
		
		<category>Law Marketing</category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/alliances-how-can-we-compete-better-internationally/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Question by Bert Kerkman, lawyer, managing director of KerkmanLaw (Amsterdam, The Netherlands)Â 
Â 
A poor international presence may lead us to lose clients. If one of your clients knows, or supposes, that you cannot help him abroad, he may contact another firm and you may end up losing the client. You should avoid the â€œadvisor testâ€?.Â 
It is [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Question by Bert Kerkman, lawyer, managing director of <strong>KerkmanLaw (Amsterdam, The Netherlands)</strong>Â </p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>A poor international presence may lead us to lose clients. If one of your clients knows, or supposes, that you cannot help him abroad, he may contact another firm and you may end up losing the client. You should avoid the â€œadvisor testâ€?.Â </p>
<p>It is surprising how some small and medium-sized practices that are a reference at local, regional and even national level have few, or no, international connections in the world we live in. A world in which clients are expecting their legal advisors to operate at international level increasingly more. The reason I hear most is that â€œOur clients don&#8217;t need itâ€?. On the other hand, when the clients that â€œdo not need itâ€? know that their lawyers can help them in their investments or business in other continents, opportunities begin to blossom. This is a recurring phenomenon: the mistake of assuming that we know what clients need.Â </p>
<p>Traditional agents or innovative alliances may be of use to you depending on what you want. For example, I know a lawyer who works in a chamber of commerce. This professional&#8217;s practice provides support to companies from its country abroad by means of a network of agents. From the standpoint of potential clients, agents have at least one problem: they may be â€œinvisibleâ€? to the potential client. Thus, for example, in a recent legal publication, a law practice stated that it had an alliance in Turin. But the advertiser&#8217;s web site made no reference to the Italian city or to the name of the practice. Invisibility hardly helps a potential client to decide to hire a firm.Â </p>
<p>Unlike agencies, alliances or networks tend to be visible. They are brands: in some cases only a registered name (and not always); in others, a registered name with an investment in marketing.Â </p>
<p>The loss of independence tends to be a frequent criterion which leads certain law practices to decide not to become part of an alliance. This is absurd. It is absurd to assume that a practice loses part of its independence if it joins an alliance. Everything depends on the concept of alliance. There are alliances formed by independent practices.Â There are even alliances whose clients are not clients of the alliance, but rather of the member practices, who present estimates and fees directly to clients. There are also alliances in which if one member of the alliance does not trust another member enough, it is not obliged to refer cases to it, and may choose, for example, a non-alliance practice it trusts more.Â </p>
<p>Â </p>
<p><strong>Criteria for selecting lawyers-agents or an international alliance of practices</strong></p>
<p><strong> </strong>1. Define your business vision and objectives. Know what you need from your agent or from the alliance.</p>
<p>2. Know your agent or the alliance: Are the management teams in tune with each other, and is there mutual trust?Â </p>
<p>3. Compatibility with the objectives and with the way you work.Â </p>
<p>4. Similarity of practices: size, organisational structure, resources, skills, countries covered by the potential partner and passion for the common project.Â </p>
<p>5. Preparation of a collaboration protocol and common operating standards to guarantee the quality of service rendered by each one of the practices.Â </p>
<p>6. Flexible and creative values to leverage differences.Â </p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>If you think you have an original alliance concept, take the initiative, create it. If you choose to join an existing alliance, evaluate the practice you are going to be associated with.Â </p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>Â© 2007, Francesc Dominguez, marketing consultant. <a href="http://www.francescdominguez.com/">www.francescdominguez.com</a>.Â </p>
<p>Â 
</p>
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		<title>Personal brand: How to be the reference lawyer</title>
		<link>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/personal-brand-how-to-be-the-reference-lawyer/</link>
		<comments>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/personal-brand-how-to-be-the-reference-lawyer/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jan 2007 12:20:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Francesc Dominguez</dc:creator>
		
		<category>Law Marketing</category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/?p=10</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Question by David Schwaninger, lawyer of BLUM Attorneys at Law (Zurich, Switzerland)
Â 
What distinguishes an excellent lawyer from the rest? His image in the marketplace. Talent alone is not enough. Perception decides. It attracts new clients to you or drives them away. You probably know cases of qualified lawyers who do not have access to specific [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Question by David Schwaninger, lawyer of <strong>BLUM Attorneys at Law (Zurich, Switzerland)</strong></p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>What distinguishes an excellent lawyer from the rest? His image in the marketplace. Talent alone is not enough. Perception decides. It attracts new clients to you or drives them away. You probably know cases of qualified lawyers who do not have access to specific business, even their own clientsâ€™â€¦ Seek the motive in the clientâ€™s perception of you.</p>
<p>If you want to leverage opportunities, manage your personal brand, your image in the marketplace, with care.</p>
<p><strong>Keys to successful personal brand</strong></p>
<p>1. <strong>Be specialized</strong>. Increasingly more clients are seeking specialists. Specialisation will be a way for you to be more efficient, gain calm and be likelier to be the reference in your target market. Focus on knowing what clients consider is valuable. Make sure they realize that you understand and worry about their problem. It is the best way to gain their confidence. Choose your clients and find out how to attract them. If you wait for them to come to your office, you will let your clients define your professional life. You will lose opportunities.</p>
<p>2. <strong>Know yourself</strong>. Be honest: define your identity on the basis of what you are, not on what you believe clients expect of you. Know and take advantage of your virtues. Identify your main values. They will carry you to success if they are compatible with those of your clients and office partners. Be flexible and creative with them. Brands communicate and sell values, personalities that clients can relate to. Harmonize your brand with your values. Do not be afraid to find out what image your partners have of you. Ask them for feedback on your work (virtues and aspects to improve). Ask them to describe you in two words. Define yourself in two words also. You will know the best selling points of your brand. Then work on them and they will make you stand out in the crowd.</p>
<p>3. <strong>Improve</strong>. Gain self-esteem. Be aware that you are the best option for your clients. Give and you will eventually receive. Make promises that you can keep. Ask the key question: â€œWhat do I want?â€? This question will guide you to obtain results. Find answers to other questions as well, such as: â€œWhat do I do better than other lawyers? â€œHow do I stand out?â€?, â€œDo clients value it?â€?, â€œWhy should clients hire me rather than other lawyers?â€? Take care of details with clients. They are essential. In my case, for example, I see or call each client at least once a week.</p>
<p>4. <strong>Strategy</strong>. Plan an easy, but systematic and consistent, personal brand strategy. Know what direction you want for your professional life and define positive objectives to reach it.</p>
<p>5. <strong>Projects</strong>. Get focussed on projects. Delegate or outsource tasks as much as you can. Make the most of your time: concentrate on two or three exciting projects per year. You will gain knowledge and market value. A project could be a legal practice from a small city that also specialises and stands out from all the other practices that do not specialise. Another project could be the opening of a permanent office in a foreign country.</p>
<p>6. <strong>Visibility</strong>. Carry out very selective activities in order to promote your credibility and prestige. It is a type of activity you can do regardless of the geographical location or the size of your law firm. For example:</p>
<p>â€” Publish a brief book with a prestigious publisher for potential clients. For example, I got a book published for a client who had the smallest office, a solo lawyer who knows how to work with alliances. It is an innovative book, published with one of the most prestigious publishing houses in his country, targeting potential clients of the lawyer. At first, the client doubted that a prestigious publishing house could publish a book by him, an individual office. This is why he had never published books or articles with a major publishing house.</p>
<p>â€” Chat on prestigious forums, if possible without sharing space (competence) with other professionals.</p>
<p>â€” Take an important position with communication potential in an organization where you can further develop your communication skills.</p>
<p>â€” Establish effective alliances with other professionals or law offices.</p>
<p>â€” Take advantage of contacts. There is an evident difference between client cards that merely occupy space in a card case and client cards that actually create business opportunities.</p>
<p>7. <strong>Communicate well</strong>. When communicating, try to concentrate on a single idea. Explain yourself concisely: five seconds will suffice to tell the client the benefits he can receive from you. My brand promise, for example, is &#8220;competitiveness for professional services&#8221;. Support your brand promise with different arguments.</p>
<p>8. <strong>Coherence</strong>. Make sure that your objectives, strategy, actions and conduct are consistent with each other and with your own values.</p>
<p>9. <strong>Persistence</strong>. To obtain a powerful personal brand you will need to have clear ideas, determination and perseverance.</p>
<p>10. <strong>Act</strong>. Move from thought to action.</p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>Â© 2006, Francesc Dominguez, Marketing Consultant, co-Author of the book El marketing jurÃ­dico [Law Marketing}. www.francescdominguez.com. Advice page published in Economist &amp; Jurist (December 2006-January 2007).
</p>
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		<title>Selling: How to sell legal services without putting pressure on the client</title>
		<link>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/selling-how-to-sell-legal-services-without-putting-pressure-on-the-client/</link>
		<comments>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/selling-how-to-sell-legal-services-without-putting-pressure-on-the-client/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jan 2007 12:18:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Francesc Dominguez</dc:creator>
		
		<category>Law Marketing</category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/?p=9</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Question by Mr. Suman J. Khaitan, lawyer, managing partner of Suman Khaitan &#038;Â Partners (New Delhi, India)
Â 
If you understand how your potential client thinks and makes decisions, you will be on the way to obtaining his preference. I am not speaking about what he thinks, but rather about how he thinks.
Let us talk about how to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Question by Mr. Suman J. Khaitan, lawyer, managing partner of <strong>Suman Khaitan &#038;Â Partners (New Delhi, India)</strong></p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>If you understand <strong>how your potential client thinks</strong> and makes decisions, you will be on the way to obtaining his preference. I am not speaking about what he thinks, but rather about how he thinks.</p>
<p>Let us talk about how to sell better, and with integrity. Effective selling means creating and continuing a relationship with clients. Selling means influencing and allowing yourself to be influenced. In order to sell, we should know ourselves and overcome our common fears and limitations instead of trying to change others.</p>
<p>The client is in charge. No matter how good your services are. Selling should be centred on the clientâ€™s needs. Clients buy profits, not services. Discover what your client or prospect values, how he wants to be treated.</p>
<p><strong>Establish a friendly relationship with the client</strong>. Friendliness is the first step in gaining his confidence. Look at the client without prejudices. Do not label him for his appearance. Your prospect will realise this and you could lose an opportunity to advise him. If you can, choose a suitable time and place to meet or talk to your potential client. The right moment is when you are in a positive state of mind.</p>
<p>Be careful with your language. Sometimes we speak ambiguously, in a roundabout way or using technical terms that make it difficult for others to understand what we are trying to convey. The fact that we understand ourselves does not mean that other people will understand us. Be aware of the differences between male and female verbal and body language. If a man, for example, says â€œyesâ€¦rightâ€?, it means that he is merely following your conversation. If a woman says that, it means that she actually agrees with you!</p>
<p>People want to do business or be advised by professionals who understand them and treat them with respect. For this reason we should respect the clientâ€™s values, even when we do not necessarily share them. Professional relationships based on mutual respect really work. A lawyer should make an effort to make the relationship work. He should establish a friendly relationship. If there is friendliness between you and your prospect, there will be mutual trust, which is the first step towards cooperation. Smile. As someone said, a smile is the shortest distance between people. It lays the foundations for a good relationship. Only those who can smile naturally and show a sincere interest in people can sell well.</p>
<p>In order to create a friendly relationship with your speaker, adjust your behaviour to his. Imitate the tone and the rhythm of his voice, position and movements slightly. This will create a more propitious situation for a harmonious relationship. If, for example, your prospect speaks in short, sharp bursts, adapt to his way of speaking. If he gesticulates with his hands, imitate him discreetly. We feel better with people who are like us. It is unconscious.</p>
<p>When you speak to someone for the first time, let him set the interpersonal distance. Observe if during the interaction he approaches you or moves away. This will help you to understand his communication channel.</p>
<p>Regarding communicative channels, people can be visual, auditory or kinesthetic. Each person has a dominant channel. Around 50% of the business population is visual, 25% auditory and the other 25% kinesthetic. Discover your dominant channel. If, for example, you are visual and speak with an auditory person, you will probably not speak the same language. An auditory person will listen to what you say, but possibly he might not understand what you mean. Learn to adapt to your speakerâ€™s channel.</p>
<p>Visual people remember and think through images. For them, seeing is essential. They keep a prudent distance from the speaker and usually speak rapidly and in a high tone. When they imagine, they look up and to their right; when they recall, they look up and toward their left. As they think in images, they can blink &#8220;more than normal&#8221;. They show impatience if interrupted. When speaking, they use words and expressions referring to vision, such as &#8220;observe&#8221;, &#8220;look at&#8221;, &#8220;see&#8221;, &#8220;show me&#8221;, &#8220;letâ€™s have a look&#8221;.</p>
<p>I was intrigued by a client. He looked up very frequently when he was thinking during conversations and blinked more than normal. I advised him to look more into the speakerâ€™s eyes in order to show confidence and interest. However, I thought that there was some reason that would explain my clientâ€™s conduct. Now we both know that he is a very visual person.</p>
<p>Auditory people perceive reality through sounds. At times they think aloud. They are good conversationalists. They will thank people for asking them questions. They speak more slowly than visual people and are usually sensitive to intonation. They appreciate speakers who share the pace of their speech and who speak tersely. When they imagine, they look horizontally and towards their right; when they recall they look left. When they think about what they are going to communicate, they look down and to their left. They use monitoring expressions (&#8221;ah&#8221;, &#8220;umm&#8221;, &#8220;yes, yes&#8221;) and words referring to speech and sounds: &#8220;Do I explain myself?&#8221;, &#8220;listen&#8221;, &#8220;hear&#8221;, &#8220;it sounds to me&#8221;, &#8220;I understand&#8221;, etc.</p>
<p>For kinesthetic people, sensations and emotions are very important. They often ask &#8220;How are you?â€? They communicate by means of sensations. Very slow speakers, they tend to accompany their speech with movements. They need proximity with the speaker. They are used to taking peopleâ€™s hands, patting their shoulder or even caressing the otherâ€™s face, which comes as a surprise to someone who uses another channel. It is important to avoid hurting their feelings. They use expressions such as &#8220;I feel good&#8221;, &#8220;it seems OK to me&#8221;, &#8220;This smells funny &#8220;, &#8220;I like this&#8221;.</p>
<p>Knowing ourselves better, and showing interest in understanding others, with tact and respect, will allow us to influence more and be influenced. In short, we will sell better.</p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>Â© 2006, Francesc Dominguez, marketing consultant, co-author of the book <em>El marketing jurÃ­dico</em> [Law Marketing]. www.francescdominguez.com. Advice page published in <em>Economist &#038; Jurist</em> (November 2006).
</p>
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		<title>Training: How to invest your time</title>
		<link>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/training-how-to-invest-your-time/</link>
		<comments>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/training-how-to-invest-your-time/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jan 2007 12:16:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Francesc Dominguez</dc:creator>
		
		<category>Law Marketing</category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/?p=8</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Question by Mr. Miguel Montoro, lawyer, managing director of Samon (Yokohama, Japan)
Â 
We are what we study. Because of this, it is fundamental that you clearly know what to invest your time in and how to feed your mind.
Know a little about multiple topics and above all have your own opinion. Being too specialised can be [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Question by Mr. Miguel Montoro, lawyer, managing director of <strong>Samon (Yokohama, Japan)</strong></p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>We are what we study. Because of this, it is fundamental that you clearly know what to invest your time in and how to feed your mind.</p>
<p>Know a little about multiple topics and above all have your own opinion. Being too specialised can be a limitation in the long term.</p>
<p>Apart from continuing to learn Law, in my opinion knowing about finances and marketing (communication and sales) is essential. Talent in Law is not enough. The aforementioned paralegal skills and each oneâ€™s character make the difference.</p>
<p><strong>Finances</strong>: The key is to know how to manage money, how money works. Therefore &#8220;working a lot to earn money&#8221; is wrong. The appropriate thing is &#8220;to have ideas to make money work for you&#8221;. Study financial planning and think. Those who think find opportunities.</p>
<p><strong>Marketing</strong> (communication and sales): A lawyer should improve his skills in order to understand the marketplace and detect business opportunities. Communicate efficiently to get your clients and prospects to perceive your capacity and to regard your firm as being able to give them efficient solutions. Besides, understanding human behaviour will lead people to hire your services. Learn how to sell better, without putting pressure on your potential client.</p>
<p>Wrong beliefs and prejudices make us lose opportunities. Open your mind. Avoid fear, prejudices and mental laziness. Ask the right questions and get answers.</p>
<p>Incorporate new ideas on a base of good values. Refresh your intelligence. Enjoy yourself by working and training.</p>
<p>Think big and question things. Have your own opinion. Make firm decisions and act.</p>
<p>Â </p>
<p>Â© 2006, Francesc Dominguez, marketing consultant, co-author of the book <em>El marketing jurÃ­dico</em> [Law Marketing]. www.francescdominguez.com. Advice page published in <em>Economist &amp; Jurist</em> (October 2006).
</p>
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		<title>The positioning of law practices</title>
		<link>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/the-positioning-of-law-practices/</link>
		<comments>http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/the-positioning-of-law-practices/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jan 2007 12:14:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Francesc Dominguez</dc:creator>
		
		<category>Law Marketing</category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.lawmarketing-europe.com/?p=7</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Â 
You may have sometimes wondered why, while an extremely prestigious client hires yours firmâ€™s services, he only does so for minor cases, and commissions other more profitable cases to other legal practices. Your law firm may very probably be prepared to render the services that clients commission to other firms, but the clients do not [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Â </p>
<p>You may have sometimes wondered why, while an extremely prestigious client hires yours firmâ€™s services, he only does so for minor cases, and commissions other more profitable cases to other legal practices. Your law firm may very probably be prepared to render the services that clients commission to other firms, but the clients do not consider your firm for these cases.</p>
<p>This is a problem of positioning, which is significant for potential clients. Clients do not recruit your services for these cases because they perceive that there are other more suitable firms to commission them to.</p>
<p>As someone once said, in life, and this also goes for professional activity, <strong>â€œthe most essential thing is that which is intangibleâ€?</strong>. Friendship, prestige, reputation, credibility, confidence, etc. are all intangibles. This essential thing cannot be bought with money. You must know how to manage it throughout your professional life.</p>
<p>Good management of perception leads legal practices to have the type of clients and cases they want to have, the most profitable ones, avoiding price competition, or in other words the lack of appreciation of professional services. By the way, do you manage your firmâ€™s perception? If so, congratulations. However, are you sure that you are managing it properly? Have you created a concept of a unique firm and are you transmitting this concept to (potential) clients with the right messages, consistently and coherently, and at the right time?</p>
<p>From the marketing, i.e. client, point of view, legal markets in the world are undifferentiated. There is a great deal of competition in every speciality (for example in advice to small and medium-sized companies, urban development and real estate law, in penal and civil law derived from traffic and occupational accidents), although no firm, or practically no firm, is a reference, or even the reference company, in its category, be it at regional and national level, and in many cases even at local level.</p>
<p>Although they do not normally know this, most firms, including networks of law firms, have a problem of positioning, perception, meaning in the market. Thus, for example, there are lawyers who say that their firms belong to prestigious networks, groups or alliances. In most cases, potential clients (companies, basically) have never even heard of networks of lawyers, to say nothing of specific names. With these foreseeable precedents, what meaning can the network in question have to potential clients? Will the network be in a position to compete for client preferences?</p>
<p>There is a need to create concepts of networks that allow their members to compete at national or international level with a chance of being successful. As the potential clients do not perceive significant differences, in perceived value, among the legal practices or their networks, they use price to apply pressure. This behaviour is only to be expected.</p>
<p>As a result of the general lack of dedication and imagination to create distinctive and recognised concepts of firms or networks, imitating the large ones is common practice. By doing so we are doing a huge favour to the big legal advice concerns, and they logically take advantage of this. As we have commented before, the main competitive edge of large firms is the lack of branded strategy of the small- and medium-sized ones. If there is something that small and medium-sized law firms should leverage, it is precisely promoting their brands, their main assets, together with their professionals. Paradoxically, the brand is an intangible thing, a perception.</p>
<p>The point of departure to create a recognised brand are the legal quality of the firmâ€™s professionals. A brand cannot be consolidated without legal quality. Having a brand does not depend on the size of the firm or its geographical location. And a brand is â€œsimplyâ€? a name with a meaning, a meaning which clients attach value to in their mind, which is where the hiring of lawyers is decided.</p>
<p>Small- or medium-sized firms, when they grow, tend to launch a whole ensemble of multidisciplinary services, imitating the large firm models and gradually losing what could make them a point of reference in their market category. By imitating the medium-sized offices they will always be behind the large ones, those that set the rules of the game. It is not necessary to master strategic art to understand it, but we must reflect upon the consequences of our acts.</p>
<p>Most offices â€œsellâ€? services; very few are positioned, recognized, as (the) reference point in one or some specialties. By way of example: many offices accept a case of compensation for traffic accidents if it comes up due to the substantial fees which they may expect to charge. However, from the clientâ€™s point of view, which offices are the reference point in this discipline? If the potential clients or those who may impact their decisions do not know this then they are hardly likely to choose you.</p>
<p>In a market flooded by supply, one of the keys consists of winning the battle through client preferences. This can be obtained by means of specialisation, quality in law, the creation of a brand, the partnersâ€™ ability to secure the commitment of associates and collaborators, the capacity to create brand loyalty in clients and via the messages the brand transmits, which should translate into associations to which potential clients attach great value.</p>
<p>Have no fear: being successful in markets requires selection. Your firm can continue to render services in multiple specialities. However, the client must perceive what your firmâ€™s speciality or specialities are. Choose the most profitable ones, those which have a potentially good future, and above choose the specialities your firm is best prepared to address. The fewer specialities the better. The client needs references to decide who to hire. Help him.</p>
<p>Until your firm really knows what the clientâ€™s thought process is when deciding to hire a legal practice, your brand will be underperforming. On one occasion, a lawyer whose office is small and is located in a provincial capital of 160,000 inhabitants, told us: â€œin our city law practices are generally speaking unspecialised. We take all casesâ€?. The lawyer wondered what he would have to do to begin to be a cut above his competitors.</p>
<p>We want you to be very clear about what you should do in similar and very frequent cases. Knowing how to do it is a different matter altogether.</p>
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<p>Â© Francesc Dominguez, marketing consultant, www.francescdominguez.com.
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