Attorneys use internet to grow business
June 29, 2000
Investments in an online presence are starting to pay off for
attorneys, according to participants in the Law Practice Symposium
Breakfast held June 29 in conjunction with the State Bar Annual
Convention in Madison.
About one-third of the 20 symposium attendees who said they have Web
sites also said they'd received business as a direct result.
"When we started our Web site, we didn't have specific marketing
goals in mind but rather just a feeling it was necessary to have a
presence on the Web," recalled panelist Tom P. Solheim, Solheim, Billing
& Grimmer, Madison. "We did little more than reproduce our brochure
online with a few links and additional background about the firm.
"We didn't really expect any results, but in just the past month,
we've gotten two good new pieces of business from far away - one from
out of the country and another from the East Coast. Both involved
business disputes with Wisconsin connections. I believe more people will
use the Web to look for attorneys, especially for out-of-town
referrals."
Another attorney, in practice one year with a large Madison firm,
cited three cold calls in two months from potential clients who had seen
her photo and credentials on her firm's Web site. "One client was
specifically looking for a female attorney, and the photo was a factor,"
she noted.
Although conflicts prevented the attorney from taking on these
clients, she plans to make her Web area more focused and accessible to
the lay person, with less "legalese" and a clearer explanation of the
services she provides.
Most of the calls participants received as a result of Internet
exposure were from out-of-state clients seeking local representation.
Attorneys who tracked these contacts said the potential clients had
found their sites using standard search engines.
In recognition of the growing use of the Internet to locate
attorneys, the State Bar has incorporated an online adjunct of its
Lawyer Referral & Information Service (LRIS) on its new consumer Web
site, LegalExplorer, which is set to launch in mid-July. Convention
attendees previewed LRIS online and LegalExplorer in a multimedia
convention presentation.