What’s better than getting your law blog noticed?
October 17, 2009
Seth Godin blogs the mantra of the new Web is ‘Notice me.’
No question that’s the mission of many lawyers and law firms who are blogging for client development.
- When do we send out the press release release announcing our blog?
- When do I start getting lots of followers?
- When does our blog start appearing at the top of the search engines?
- When does our blog become a leading community forum for discussion in our niche?
- When do we start seeing lots unique visitors and page views in our Web stats?
As Seth points out, you then start doing things that don’t benefit you, just because you’re hooked on attention.
Far better than being noticed, Per Seth, with some added commentary for law firms.
- Trusted. Nothing is better for you as a lawyer than being viewed as a trusted and reliable authority in your area of practice or locale. This is especially true with the public’s lack of trust on our profession.
- Engaged with. Maintaining, building, and nurturing relationships is the heart of client development. Lawyers get hired by people they have relationships with. Engaging your target audience by listening to them and adding value to the conversation is how you build relationships.
- Purchased from. Getting work is the bottom line.
- Discussed. Word of mouth is how the best lawyers get their work.
- Echoed. Having your blog content amplified by your readers in blogs, on Twitter, on social networking websites, by email, and by being shared offline is at the heart of establishing a reputation as a trusted authority.
- Teaching us. If you are providing value to your target audience, you’ll get noticed, your reputation will grow, and you’ll be hired.
- Leading. Leading discussion online and being recognized as a thought leader is not only a lot of fun, but brings with it all of the above.
Measure ROI for your law blog by looking at these seven factors. Ask yourself our we accomplishing these things via our blog?
Don’t get sucked into measuring blog success by attention and Web stats. Don’t call out for immediate attention through press releases and the like. You’ll be taking your eye off of the ball.
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