“Where Do I Start?” – GLM Summit 2015

How to Turn the Firehose of Ideas Into Real, Live, Working Marketing in the Next 90 Days

The 2015 Great Legal Marketing Summit was a mighty success. Because we work with so many new and seasoned GLM members, we understand the challenges of converting all the ideas and strategies into real marketing that gets out the door and gets results. That’s why we took the opportunity to present at one of the breakout sessions and show you how you can do that.

In this repeat presentation, prepare to experience many “ah-ha” moments when you finally start connecting the dots between GLM strategies and executable ideas and real actions for your law firm. In this session, you will get an overview of the must-have marketing items every law firm should have with plenty of real-life examples of how good marketing is done by other law firms. You will also give you an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the marketing behind Ben Glass’s law firm. You’ll see the good, the bad, and the ugly. You’ll hear the marketing successes and failures. You’ll end with a to-do list and a confident vision for what needs to happen at your law firm and how exactly it needs to be done.

Remember…the advertising samples you see here are solely for instructional and educational purposes. Please don’t rip them off verbatim. Be inspired, but don’t outright copy. Some of the items may be licensed to for use  if you are a GLM member. Contact me or GLM to find out.

Watch now…

 

 

Resources:

Download To-Do List

Zine Survey-Fax Back Form

The Use of Graphics and Layout in Your Marketing

Design AwardsI’m a designer, and I love creating beautiful things. The only thing I love more is designing things that actually make money for my clients.

Marketing that produces results will rarely win awards and accolades in design competitions. Although this may sound unfortunate for me, thankfully I have no interest in winning design awards.

My definition of a winning design is one that brings attention to the marketing message, commands the reader’s attention, and delivers a response.

An effective design will not bring attention to itself. Who wants people “ooohing and ahhhing” at your clever design, only to walk away and never recall your message, your product, or your company?

However, this doesn’t mean that your marketing must be devoid of any aesthetics or visual appeal. In fact, countless studies prove how vulnerable our perceptions are to visual stimuli. In other words, the way something looks greatly influences our judgment of it (and in many cases, how we experience it).

When we talk about graphics and layout we’re not just referring to what color something is or how beautiful, balanced, or organized it appears (which are all subjective anyway). We want to know the effect that design elements have on buyer perception, and how to influence those perceptions. 

In any marketing, your message is the most important element. A great design can communicate your message in a great way. But, if your message is weak, then a great design is only going to make things worse by communicating a bad message really well.

With that in mind, let’s first quickly look at your marketing message and how it should be presented. Then I’ll share my favorite tips and strategies for using graphics and layout to give your message some more POW!

Headlines

Whether you’re using a postcard, a print ad, a sales letter, or a website page, you MUST have a strong headline. The headline is the MOST important element in your message. It is the thing that tells the reader whether to stay and read the rest of the message, or to move on.

Learn what makes a great headline and you will increase the readership of your ads by as much as 50% (source Ogilvy, Confessions of an Advertising Man). It’s not some mystical formula. There are tons of great resources available. One of my favorites is Great Headlines Instantly 2.1 by Robert Boduch.

Irresistible Offer

Your marketing should always be offering something for your client and customers to buy now or request for free. Your offer should be very specific and, preferably, very targeted to your ideal customer. Look at most ads and prepare to be shocked at how many have NO specific offer. They’re merely an announcement that the company exists and dry listing of their services. Sometimes, they’ll tell you their favorite slogan. Slogans don’t sell.

Call to Action

Make sure it is painfully clear what they need to do to respond to you. Do not make it complicated or be timid about it. Be loud with very clear instructions. Also, responses to your ad should be trackable to the ad. How else are you going to know if the ad is working?

Relevant Copy

Volumes exist on how to write good copy for ads. If you’re writing your own ads, you will do yourself a disservice if you don’t, at minimum, learn what constitutes good sales copy. You can always hire a copywriter. But you should be able to judge whether the copy is good or not. The only other thing I’ll say about copy is that long copy (lots of words) has repeatedly and unequivocally been proven to pull more responses and produce more results than graphic-heavy ads with bullet points. If you’re still on the fence about that, it’s time you stop fighting it, and just accept it.

Deadline

Ads with a deadline will outperform ads without a deadline. You can do this via an expiration date for the offer, limited supply, or a bonus gift, book or report if they respond by a certain date. Extra-long deadlines reduce response since people will put it off thinking they have time, and then forget. There needs to be a sense of urgency.

Graphics and Layout

Just like you don’t need to be a copywriter to recognize good sales copy, you don’t need to be a designer to recognize good design. However, you do need to be aware of principles of design that make for a great overall marketing piece.

The Environment of the Ad

If you are making a print ad for an outside publication (like a newspaper or a magazine) consider the entire look and feel of the publication, and how your ad looks placed in the publication. If possible, send your designer the publication or a scan of the publication, and ask them to place the ad in one of the pages. It’s generally a good idea to match the graphic climate of the publication. The reader will subconsciously think it’s part of the publication and not an ad. This applies for online banner ads, too.

The Use of Color

The decision to use color is often a budgetary one. Although the cost of color printing has dropped significantly in the past decade, black and white printing can still be much cheaper in most cases. It’s a known fact that color draws more attention, so use it when you can. But, there are strategic uses for black and white only printing as well. Remember, the aesthetics of your marketing is not about how beautiful it looks, it is about the response that is elicited. In the lawyer marketing world “response” means they picked up the phone or filled out a form requesting either an appointment or more information.

The Use of Images

An excellent technique to make your material more persuasive is to add compelling images and photos that support your message. Visual imagery is the most direct path to perception. Pictures of people, faces, and the human form are the most attractive to people. This includes pictures of yourself. As a general rule, you should avoid (or keep to a minimum) stock photos of happy models predictably posed in artificial settings. It’s boring and so far from reality that most people just tune it out. Images that are reality, or look like reality, are more interesting. Here’s a big tip: every image should have a caption. Image captions are one of the most read parts of any ad!

The Use of Subheadings

Include a subheading, two to three lines, below the heading. And continue to add subheadings throughout the copy. Can you imagine reading a 4-page sales letter with no subheadings to break up the text? Good subheadings are like road signs along a road. They help guide the reader and prevent him from getting lost or give up on the task of reading your materials. It also affords “glancers” the opportunity to get your message without reading the entire advertisement.

The Use of Branding

A consistent branded look is generally good, but branding should not overpower or distract from the message. The purpose of ANY advertisement is to give the reader as much compelling and interesting information as needed for them to come to the conclusion that YOU are the perfect fit for them. No one ever decided to do business with a company because they admired the company’s logo.

Don’t waste valuable real estate by making your logo the biggest image on your ad. “But I want them to remember us” you cry out! The best way for them to remember you is for them to have your marketing—your books, newsletter, and other educational information—in front of them on a regular basis. They will remember you as the expert and the guy/gal who wrote the book on it.  It’s fine to use your logo, but don’t make it the focus.

The Use of Arrows, Asterisks, and Margin Notes

Making “hand drawn” arrows and notes in the margins is surefire technique for drawing attention and directing the reader to specific parts of the ad. Notes like this add a very personal touch, which is attractive and in many cases, sets your ad apart. They also afford you the opportunity to add text that would otherwise not fit cleanly in the body.

The Use of Reverse Text

Reverse text refers to using light colored text (such as white) on a dark background (such as black). Please do not ever do this for body copy! It’s tiresome to read and hard to focus on. Always set body copy in dark color on a light background. If it’s not black and white, make sure there is a lot of contrast! For example, don’t put gray text on a yellow background. Using reverse text for titles or short headlines is OK and helpful for drawing attention.

The Use of Coupons

Remember those mail-order advertisements that filled magazines before the days of internet? Well, studies have shown that they are still effective in drawing attention and getting response.

People don’t necessarily cut out the mail-in coupon to fill out and mail. But the look of it alerts the reader that there is something to be requested, ordered, fulfilled, and shipped directly into their hot little hands. It sparks curiosity and promises fun, wisdom, knowledge or all of the above. Even using a graphic of a coupon with dotted lines and an offer can be irresistible. Use it when you can. 

These are just a few, easy techniques that you can use to graphically enhance and improve the readership and effectiveness of your marketing and print advertisements. For more techniques and tons of examples on effective marketing pieces, you should check out my book, Five Ways Your Design Is Sabotaging the Sales of Your Products and Publications.

Beyond your print ads, you should remember that everything visual associated with your services sends a powerful clue about your service. The influence of the visual clues is not superficial; they go to the very heart of your service and your relationship with your clients.

Take an inventory of what clues you are sending.  Does your marketing say “struggling attorney” who can barely make ends meet and can’t afford nice stuff? Or does it say you believe in your success, and you prove it by investing in it and give others confidence to invest in you as well?

Do you show that you pay attention to details? That you are trustworthy? Reliable? Or do your marketing materials say your service is haphazard and not carefully put together?

Does your presentation to your client say you care about their experience with you, or you just want to take their money?

These are, admittedly, issues that a designer would enjoy pondering over. You’re a business owner, not a designer. Depending on how involved you are in the design decisions, this information should help you make more strategic decisions and recognize good layout from great layout.

The Un-Glamourous Life

indiana-jones-and-the-last-crusade-billboard-holy-grailDo you remember the second Indiana Jones movie “Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade”? Indy is in a race against the evil Nazi’s to find the cup of Christ, the Holy Grail, which is said to give eternal life to whoever drinks from it. When both Indy and the Nazi’s are in the cave that is full of “false” cups, with the single real one among them, the evil guy picks the flashiest, most bejeweled cup “fit for a King”. Drinking from it triumphantly, he shrivels up and dies. Oops.

Of course, Indy picks the right one. When they asked him how he knew, he said, “Jesus worked as a carpenter. He wouldn’t have owned a glamorously bejeweled cup. He would’ve owned a simple, humble cup.”

Smart guy, that Indy.

In the 10+ years that I’ve been a business owner, I’ve learned that the keys to success aren’t the flashiest, latest, most glamorous or magical this-and-that’s. It’s not winning the lotto or having a rich uncle. It’s not winning American Idol, nor is it going to a fancy school, or having fancy things.

The keys to success are often are the most basic, humble, and frankly, simplest of principles.

In a study reported in the January/February 2010 issue of the The Atlantic (www.theatlantic.com), this principle unexpectedly came to light. The study was done to find out what makes a great teacher, with great defined as having a high percentage of students move up grade levels in learning.

They debunked the typical things you would think: prior teaching experience, educational background, and even school and student demographics. They even claimed it has nothing to do with having a dynamic personality or dramatic performance.

Among the four or five characteristics of effective (and successful) teachers, the one that they found as the most consistent predictor of teacher effectiveness is (ready for this?)…Persistence. Yep. It is how much grit, relentlessness, and stubbornness they have to hang on and not give up in the face of adversity until they reach their goals.

In Napolean Hill’s popular book “Think and Grow Rich”, Persistence is number 8 on the list of the 13 essential characteristics of what creates success. Hill states “if one does not possess persistence, one does not achieve noteworthy success in any calling.”

Dan Kennedy, marketing guru and millionaire consultant to businesses, has observed how highly successful entrepreneurs aren’t markedly superior in talent, intelligence, education or resources. What they seem to have in common is a very profound sort of stubbornnness. It is this stubbornness and persistence that is needed to pick yourself up after every failure and keep at it until you achieve success.

There may be no heroic connotation to the word “persistence”. It’s not sexy and glamorous, and it’s no magic bullet for anything. It’s a day-in, day-out, no make-up, fall down, get up, dust yourself off, and keep-on-trucking connotation. So the dusty old cliché is true: winners never quit, and quitters never win.

Perhaps the Bible says it best, when it says “tribulation produces perseverance; and perseverance, character; and character, hope.”

So, go ahead, bring on the day-to-day drudge, the challenges, the failures, and the obstacles. It’ll help develop the grit and stubbornness which brings long-term, lasting success.

And I’ll take that over short-lived glory any day.

“Should I Go To Law School”

 

My friend and attorney, Ben Glass, recently responded to a comment from Virginia Supreme Court Chief Justice Donald W. Lemons regarding a question about going to law school. I thought his response was brilliant and worth sharing here. Ben is passionate about field of law and felt compelled to respond. Below is his letter to the editor of a major Virginia newspaper.

 

To the Editor:

I read with interest the comments of Chief Justice Donald W. Lemons regarding the advice he has for prospective and current law students. These are questions that many of us hear, some from our own children: “Should I go to law school?” “If I am in law school, what is my future?”

Let me share the answer that I give: Thinking about going to law school? Good for you. The law needs smart people who can solve problems. There is a never-ending supply of consumers, rich and poor, whom you can help lead through an ever-more-regulated society. As times change, we need people who can protect individual liberty, protect the flow of good ideas, help people make practical decisions about their legal situations, and become heroes to their communities.

You will have to think “outside the box.” Forget about going to the fanciest, “highest rated,” and most expensive law school you can find. It’s not worth it. Most of the people you will come across in your career don’t care what law school you went to. The debt you incur going to an expensive law school may enslave you later and prevent you from living a fulfilling, productive life.

You will have to think outside the box in other ways, too, as most law schools are good at preparing you for a world that no longer exists. Instead of Law Review, you should sign up for those classes that tell you how to run a business, how to read a spreadsheet, how to get clients, and how to become influential to your community. Sure, your law school probably doesn’t have those classes. Mine didn’t. You may have to enroll in some business classes at your local community college. Go ahead. Do it. Hour for hour, it is far more valuable than Law Review.

I want you to know something else about your decision to be a lawyer. Lawyers can be heroes. It’s cool to be a hero. There are many ways for lawyers to be heroes today. Sure, you help clients, and when they survive whatever challenge they face with you at their side, they will see you as heroic, but there’s more. When you run a profitable practice that doesn’t drive you crazy and allows you to get home in time for dinner and soccer and ballet and “date night,” you become a hero to your family.

Finally, when you not only survive but thrive as a small business owner, you become a hero to your community – employing people, paying taxes, and being an inspiration for all the other small business owners in your community who are, after all, the economic engine of America.

I want to thank you for considering becoming a lawyer. We need people who can make a real difference in someone’s life. You just have to think a little differently than I did when I started.

Benjamin W. Glass, III

3915 Old Lee Highway, 22B

Fairfax, VA 22030

703-591-9829