Use the intel from the latest Firesign survey to make the most of small business referrals.
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When small businesses need a lawyer, a new study shows the conventional wisdom is true: If confronting a new legal problem, 63% of small business owners will ask colleagues or friends for a referral, and another 31% will ask another lawyer.
Itโs what happens next that merits attention.
According to a new survey by marketing agency Firesign, referrals may be the go-to way to find a lawyer, but a considerable amount of research happens afterward:
- More than half of small business owners and leaders (54%) will search the lawyerโs name on Google or Bing; 44% will search the lawyerโs firm.
- Nearly one-third will look for reviews of the lawyer on platforms like Avvo.
- Social hygiene counts too: A not-insignificant amount, 18%, review the lawyerโs social media profiles.
Are you ready for this scrutiny?
Small Business Referrals, Big Opportunity
First, a quick primer on the legal needs of small business โ a demographic that tends to be overlooked between consumers and corporate behemoths. These companies incur an average of 13 legal problems annually, according to research from Kingston University. Given that there are 33 million small businesses in the U.S., that yields 429 million potential legal matters every year.
According to the Kingston University report, common problems include:
- Contracts โ 37.5%
- Tax โ 22%
- Employment โ14.5 %
- Intellectual property โ 8.8%
- Real estate โ 7.5%
- Regulation โ 4.5%
Within these companies โ whether startups, family businesses or generally closely held enterprises โ legal issues have a more personal effect: 16% percent of respondents in the Kingston University survey said that legal problems led to stress-related illness. Another 5% said they felt ill physically, 4% had a mental health issue, and 20% felt any combination thereof.
Given these heightened personal stakes, itโs not surprising these clients donโt make moves on referrals alone; they seek confirmation of their prospective lawyersโ credibility and capability.
Getting Ready for Referrals
Again, referrals are the primary tool your small business clients will use to find you. In the Firesign survey, the next-highest response, โsearching for the relevant subject matter,โ was used by just 9%.
In post-referral due diligence, small business clients place the most trust in the lawyer biography (92%), followed by online reviews (83%) and law firm content (72%).
With this survey intel in mind, take these four steps to ensure you are positioned to make the most of your small business referrals.
1. Update Your Website Biography
This is your most trusted marketing piece and likely the most-frequented section of your website. This is where your prospects will turn to validate a referral: to see your experience, to see your style, to see if you can be trusted to handle an issue that threatens their livelihood and legacy. Is your biography current, authentic, relevant and focused?
2. Review Your Search Results
Your small business referrals are searching for you specifically, not โemployment lawyer,โ so this isnโt about competing for keywords. Your goal is to ensure that you make the right first impression on the first page of Google or Bing.
Start by searching for your name. Most likely, two of the top hits will be your lawyer biography and your LinkedIn page. The good news: This is high-ranking real estate that is completely within your control. If youโve already updated your bio, turn your attention to LinkedIn, checking to make sure it too is current, authentic and relevant โ and offers simple, prominent ways to get in touch with you.
Other frequent โpage oneโ items can include rankings with organizations like Super Lawyers, reviews on Avvo and the like, and press coverage. If your top 10 results donโt paint a picture of professionalism and competence, consider a long-term online reputation management strategy.
3. Assess Your Reviews
If youโre new to ratings, focus your firepower on Avvo since it is purpose-built for the legal profession. Claim your profile, provide your photo and biography, and confirm your areas of practice. From there, start to build out your positive reviews; this Attorney at Work article provides helpful tips.
4. Consider Your Online Content
The Firesign survey showed that for small business prospects, the role of content shifts throughout their buying journey. Before a legal incident occurs, less than half, 37%, will browse law firm content. After, law firm content is cited as helpful by nearly double that amount.
This is such an important takeaway. Small business clients are not looking to law firm content to keep them updated on legal issues generally; they donโt have time for that. Instead, they are looking to it to help them with lawyer selection. To make the most of your referrals, start writing content meant to convert, not broadly educate โ content that shows youโve handled exactly this kind of problem before. While certainly every matter is different, this could include frequently asked questions, case studies, a breakdown of key steps, or โwhat to expectโ articles.
For more information on how small business clients scout, select and engage with their lawyers and law firms, download Firesignโs report, “From Referrals to Recon: How Small Businesses Hire Lawyers,” here.
Image ยฉ iStockPhoto.com.
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