Make Your Blog Unique to Get Potential Clients to Read it

I am still thinking about blogging today.  Recently the Harvard Business Review posted a blog titled: The Moment Social Media Became Serious Business  I was fascinated reading what Harold Adams Innis  said about reduction in cost of communication in 1951, long before anyone was blogging. What he said applies to blogging today.

  • Redistributing knowledge and, in doing so, shifting power
  • Making it easier for "amateurs" to compete with "professionals," because access to knowledge substitutes for mastery of complexity
  • Allowing individuals and minorities to voice ideas
  • Reducing the advantages of speed that formerly accrued because some had knowledge before others
  • Reducing the advantages of size that are based on the ability to afford high costs. 

Because blogging costs so little, smaller law firms and younger lawyers have a chance to compete against bigger law firms and more senior lawyers. Borrowing a Seth Godin book title,  the problem is, the more lawyers and law firms blogging, the less blogging by lawyers is a Purple Cow. Just yesterday, LexBlog in its Best of Blogs post reported there were 123 posts (including mine) that day using the LexBlog platform. That number is growing almost every day.

So, if you are blogging, you better find a way to make your blog unique and valuable to your target market because your clients and potential clients are being inundated with indistinguishable client alerts and blogs written by lawyers.Valeria Maltoni has an e-book Why Blogging + 25 Tips to Make It Work that may give you some good ideas. 

What can you do to make your blog be unique and interesting? One way to stand out is to tell stories and use humor. Your readers will enjoy the humor and being entertained by a story. 

Cleve Clinton and Jamie Ribman, two Looper, Reed & McGraw lawyers I coached here in Dallas have a blog titled: Tilting the Scales. I love getting the email of a new post because it is entertaining and makes a point clients would value knowing. They use real legal issues and then make up names of characters. Just today, they wrote about the Ice Princess, the story of Olympic ice dancers Corrie O. Graff and Dan Saul Knight who lived together in Texas.

Brandon Mendelson shares seven ways to add humor in his blog How to Be 20% Funnier Than You Really Are. While you are at the copyblogger website, read other valuable suggestions for successful blogging.

Finally, my bet is that before long lawyers blogging will present their blog three ways:

  1. Video blog
  2. Audio blog
  3. Written blog

Will you be a "purple cow" and be one of the first to present your blog those ways?

Critical Mistake: Are You Blogging/Tweeting for You or Your Clients?

Just today, I read an interesting Copyblogger  blog post: The Critical Mistake that Keeps Bloggers Broke. I could have easily written it for lawyers. I would have titled it: "The Critical Mistake that Keeps Blogging/Tweeting Lawyers from Connecting with Clients."

I know many law firms that have blogging lawyers. I know many lawyers who are tweeting. Several of those firms and lawyers make one big mistake. Their blogs/tweets are focused on what the lawyer bloggers/tweeters do rather than what their clients do. In that way the blogs and tweets are more about the lawyer than about the client.

The dirty secret is your clients and potential clients do not care about what you do. They only care about how you can help them solve their problems and achieve their business goals.

I recently wrote about this in the context of websites. Your Firm Website: Is It for You or Your Clients? Are your firm’s blog posts for you or your clients? If I was the partner in charge of marketing in my old law firm and could choose the firm’s blogs they would be:

  • Financial Services Law Blog
  • Construction Law Blog
  • Real Estate Development Law Blog
  • Healthcare Law Blog
  • Hospitality Law Blog
  • Energy Law Blog
  • Manufacturer’s law blog
  • Franchise Law Blog
  • Information Technology Law Blog

Those were the main industries for our clients. I would want our litigators, corporate lawyers, environmental lawyers, IP lawyers, and labor and employment law lawyers to stay on top of what was happening in their legal field that was impacting any of our clients’ industries.

What are your clients’ industries? Are your blogs and tweets about what you do or about what your clients do?