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Best of Law Marketing- July 10th, 2007

Marketing a Plaintiff's Personal Injury Practice

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What are some good tactics that plaintiff's personal injury lawyers can use to market their services? 
Clearly, a PI lawyer will benefit by having aggressive media relations -- getting on the 6 o'clock news will bring in new business. But beyond that -- what works?  One plaintiff lawyer describes marketing for plaintiff lawyers as "you need to be there when lighting strikes." Marketing that appeals to a business client doesn't fit because he's seeking consumer clients -- people who have catastrophic injuries.

Any ideas?

 


From:         Larry Bodine

Subject:      Plaintiff PI marketing

  • Sort the top 100 cases from the last few years into categories by injury or illness.
  • Identify the type of injuries that generate the highest settlements and verdicts.
  • Market the firm around those types of injuries and illnesses -- not the areas of practice the firm handles.
  • Consumer clients typically search the Internet for information about recovering from their specific type of injury or illness.  Don't bother with print or yellow pages directories, focus on the Web instead.  Your Website should feature detailed FAQ files about the cost of rehabilitation, surgery, medical devices, length of recovery (=lost wages), value of emotional distress, etc.
  • Give examples (real case histories) of how your firm obtained compensation for clients to make them whole.

    This web marketing approach will generate calls from the most desirable new clients.

     

    Larry Bodine

    Business Development Advisor

    Glen Ellyn, IL 60137

    Tel: 630.942.0977
    www.larrybodine.com

     


    From:         Nancy L. Myrland

    Subject:      Re: Plaintiff PI marketing

    Larry writes: He describes marketing for plaintiff lawyers as "you need to be there when lighting strikes."

    As you already know, as with any product or service, being at the right place when the consumer is ready to buy is the key.  Therefore, further defining who the customer is for each product or service being sold, then being where that customer lives, works, travels and plays on a continuous basis is the key. Your message can go unheard by your target until that exact moment ("when lightening strikes") when it is needed most. 

    Given that, an ongoing, unrelenting effort to be in the marketplace at all times is important for product and service-related businesses.  Do these people drive by billboards?  Yes.  Do they take the bus, or at least see buses?  Yes.  Do they read the local trader-type neighborhood papers, hoping to buy or sell merchandise?  Sometimes.  Do they open up the Carol Wright and other Advo-type envelopes of coupons which arrive regularly in our mailboxes?  Probably.  Do they watch TV?  Well, what channels do they watch, what programs do they watch?  Be there.  Do they listen to the radio?  Yes, we need to find out where and when and target.  Do they go to the movie theaters and watch the trailers?  Many do.

    ...and how could I forget?!  A great, noticeable Yellow Pages ad that matches the emotion they are feeling is critical.

    Nancy Myrland, President

    Nmyrland2@AOL.COM

    Myrland Marketing, Inc.


    From:         Josh Friedman

    Subject:      Re: Plaintiff PI marketing

    I think one of the best marketing tactics for a PI lawyer is an optimized, content-rich Web site in conjunction with an aggressive pay-per-click advertising campaign.  It's targeted, cost-effective, lends itself well to tracking and ROI analyses, and best of all, it really works.  Our clients have had great success with it.

    In these kinds of cases, clients spend (or should spend) a good deal of time seeking out the best lawyer for their injury.  They'll want someone with experience in the right areas of the law, a history of large verdicts, and an excellent reputation.  This is more information than you can convey in a typical television advertisement or yellow pages listing. 

    So, with a content rich site (containing detailed information on the law and medicine involved in the case, and a listing of verdicts in similar cases), you will not only rank higher on the search engines, the breadth of your knowledge will impress the potential client.  Then, you do pay per click advertising on the types of catastrophic injuries you want to handle to point these potential clients back to your Web site.  It's a great strategy.

    Josh Friedman

    New Legal Media

    Chicago, Ill 60647

    (773) 486-4419 (office)

    jf@newlegalmedia.com

    www.newlegalmedia.com

     



    From:         Stewart M. Hirsch

    Subject:      Re: Plaintiff PI marketing

    The PI lawyer you reference is right on--looking for other approaches. Marketing, such as good PR--getting on the 6 o'clock news, Yellow Pages and print ads, TV ads and other activities provide name recognition, will result in calls.  Also they probably know that joining the state bar's lawyer referral service (if they have one) can help.  Every so often a PI lawyer gets a large case from that source.

    But when there's a catastrophic injury, consumers are likely to also seek guidance from one or more of their trusted advisors--lawyers, primary care physicians and alternative therapy professionals, accountants, insurance brokers, friends and relatives.

    Creating a strong referral network of these advisors will help screen for the type of serious injuries the PI lawyers want to service.  Other lawyers, particularly those who have a lot of interaction with clients (estate planning, small business lawyers, real estate, etc.), but don't do PI work can be terrific referral sources.

    Lawyers in larger firms with strong relationships with their client contacts also could be good sources of referral.  One lawyer in a large firm who responds to the internal firm memo asking "Does anybody know a good..." could be an invaluable resource.

    In-house lawyers have tremendous access.  When I practiced in in-house legal departments doing corporate and real estate work, I was asked more than a few times for referrals to outside attorneys for PI work for employees or their family members who were injured (and other services too)--people assumed I knew who to go to, and they didn't have anyone else to ask.

    Of course, in states that permit it, there's a additional incentive for lawyers to refer PI work to other lawyers--a referral fee.  Regardless of whether there's a referral fee offered or accepted, people who refer work to a PI lawyer want to be sure that the victim and his/her family is well-cared for--those referring want to do the right thing.  That means that the source of referrals, whether lawyer, doctor, or others, need to know, by both reputation, and often by meeting the PI lawyer or someone in his/her firm, that the PI lawyer is the right person to help their client, relative, co-worker or friend.

    So, while the PI lawyer can't always be there 'when lightning strikes', if a trusted source of referral knows the victim or his/her family is 'there', there's a higher likelihood that that the PI lawyer will be connected with the injury victim.

    Stewart M. Hirsch, Esq.

    Strategic Relationships

    Sharon, MA  02067

    Phone:  781-784-5280

    s.hirsch@strategicrelationships.com

    www.strategicrelationships.com


    From:         Bob Weiss

    Subject:      Re: Plaintiff PI marketing

    We have a client in North Carolina who not only is on talk radio weekly with his own show, but also has a 30-minute TV program--and they do bring on clients as guests to explain how it feels to encounter and deal with the legal system and injuries.  They get cases, significant cases, from both shows.

    These practices tend to be driven by referrals from other lawyers.  The key is establishing relationships with business lawyers and other PI attorneys who get these cases but cannot handle them.  We represent a number of these practices around the country.  Videos/DVDs sent to major accident victims also work well for these practices.

    Robert A. Weiss

    President

    Alyn-Weiss Public Relations/Marketing, Inc.

    Denver CO 80202

    303-298-1676

    weiss@PRDENVER.COM

    www.prdenver.com

    From:    Elizabeth Graham

    Subject:    Re: Plaintiff PI marketing


    Nancy has hit all of the venues that I have seen used. However, I have long thought that eventually some very bright, aggressive PI lawyer is going to spend the money to develop an infomercial where previous clients are interviewed to tell their story and how their law firm/lawyer helped them. An hour long program of this type placed in off-peak time slots (say when you cannot sleep because of the pain from your workplace injury...) would be very effective and captivating. While I am sure this idea is fraught with ethical issues, based on how far PI attorneys have pushed the envelope thus far, infomercials cannot be far behind.

    Elizabeth Graham

    Chief Marketing/Operating Officer

    Riggs Asset Management Company, Inc.

    Wilkes-Barre, PA

    (570)823-3383

    egraham@riggsadvisors.com

    www.riggsadvisors.com  


    From:         Tim A. David

    Subject:      Plaintiff/PI marketing

    As the former CMO of Jacoby & Meyers and Finkelstein & PARTNERS, two of the biggest and most successful consumer PI law firms in the U.S., I learned that one must first succeed in ones primary media before making expenditures in alternative media. To determine the primary PI media consider a few questions and answers.

    Q. First, who calls a PI lawyer from an ad in any media?

    A. Someone who doesn't already know a lawyer. By definition, someone who doesn't know a lawyer is: most likely to have a very low income, has never inherited money, has never purchased a home and did not attend college. All these circumstance cause one to meet lawyers. If you know a lawyer, you will call him first, before responding to an ad--even if he's not a PI lawyer (many civilians in lower socio-economic classes don't even know what a personal injury lawyer or a plaintiff is). Also, it's highly probable that they are Hispanic, Black or recent immigrants. These are the demos--with few exceptions.

    Q. What media works?

    A. Accidents by their nature are random occurring events. You cannot target per se, except to be sure you are in front of the folks most likely to call a PI lawyer (as described above). In the media, always trade Reach for Frequency due to the random nature of accidents. You must reach as many individuals who are the most likely to call as you can.

    Potential PI clients don't watch the stock market reports, golf or the Westminster Kennel Club dog show on TV. These folks are, for the most part, still not surfing the web. They do still watch a lot of TV. They are not big on reading. I found after studying tens of thousands of cases, that after referrals from satisfied clients (birds of a feather flock together),the lowest cost per case was TV, followed by Yellow Pages. The Web and PR were never low-cost-per-case producers. Success takes discipline and strict adherence to direct marketing and direct response basics.

    Tim A. David

    845-425-8702

    timadavid60@earthlink.net

    http://timadavid.com  

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    COMMENTS:
    In my experience a well optimized web site is critical to gaining new clients. I mean you have to be on the first page for keywords related to your practice and the geographical area of your practice. this should be supplemented by education video you create and distribute through various channel ala youtube. http:www.castellilaw.com cincinnati personal injury attorney anthony Castelli





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