I believe the
answer to that question is yes. In my experience it’s been that way. Social
media provides an inexpensive, highly visible way to provide useful information
with value to people. Notice how I didn’t say get clients as that is not
the objective. The objectives are to 1) provide useful information, 2) show who
you are, and 3) help someone in a meaningful way. And you don’t have to interact
with someone directly to do that. You can provide value just by discussing what
you know. It’s really that easy—and that difficult.
Social media applications
come and go, but it is safe to say that the following are the mainstays of social
media: 1) Facebook (part of Meta now), 2) Instagram (owned by Meta), 3) TikTok,
and 4) Twitter (now X).
Maybe it is my
age, but I want substance. I don’t want lawyers yelling at me (on television, or
on gawdy billboards where some male lawyers change hair colors like underwear,
or in popup windows that follow my cursor around the screen) about “justice for
you,” “I’ll get you justice,” and “I believe in justice.” My initial thought
usually is STFU you cheap, ambulance chaser. And of course you believe
in justice. Do you really need to say it?
It may sound harsh,
I know, but I am a lawyer. It’s my job to critique my own profession and do my
best to improve it. Those are cheap slogans when stated that way, and a lawyer
cannot promise those things. I’m sorry, but a few hundred dollars in a class
action lawsuit isn’t justice. Far from it. But that’s just one example. Neither
is a quick, lowball settlement where the lawyer folds like a cheap suit because
he or she is afraid to fight back.
While you cannot promise
justice, you can promise to fight hard for your clients and do the best you
can. But for people you may never meet or who may never become your clients,
you can provide them useful information.
This is called “awareness
marketing,” I believe it’s the most important kind. And what is it based
on? Providing value.
Isn’t social media
just a waste of time for lawyers and just another thing to keep up with? And it
yields no tangible results?
As most any lawyer
will tell you regarding an answer, “it depends.” What kind of work are you
putting into it? Do you post consistently on your chosen platform regularly? Is
your message consistent? What practice areas are you focusing on?
All these
questions must be contemplated and answered before you post. But don’t
overthink it. Practice it. Be yourself. All that stuff everyone tells you all
the time. It matters.
Consistency is the
most important part of it. By that I mean the routine of it. You do it over and
over. Eventually you start to build up a large body of substantive content. If
you discuss what you know and what you believe in, it will provide information that
helps people. Believe me. I’ve seen it. I get several messages each week in
Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok asking questions, thanking me for my
content, and making suggestions.
All of this sounds
great, but can you give me specifics?
While I cannot
divulge client information, I can say I have gotten two major litigation cases
in the last two years (one very recently). After twenty years as a lawyer, I do
not see cases as a “case of a lifetime” because that diminishes other cases. I
believe all cases are big cases. Every case is someone’s “case of a lifetime.” But
these have the potential to be very large settlements. We shall see as the law
is fickle.
Let me get more
specific: On TikTok alone I have brought in since March over 20 SSI/SSDI cases,
1 huge litigation case, and leads on several other potential cases. This is
from videos that are maybe 2-3 minutes recorded at my desk, in my car, in a
random room somewhere all done on-the-fly and unscripted. Now, I’m a talker. I’ve
done dozens of TV interviews over the years, so that helps. And I have done
this for so long that I can speak clearly and succinctly on my primary topics:
PI/WC, the nature of the legal profession, SSI/SSDI, medical malpractice, litigation
in general, and various political issues.
Can I just speak
my mind?
Yes, I think you
can. In fact, that’s preferable. You must remember that most people see lawyers
as canned, rehearsed, and boring. I say exactly what I want, and I make no
bones about my beliefs. It works for me because (I think) people know I care. Although
I have various viewpoints and beliefs, they know I care about my clients first
and foremost as people. And I have as my goal helping them. Quite frankly, it’s
a privilege to use my education, experience, and life advantages to help
people.
Lawyers are
interesting people contrary to what many people think. Social media can
showcase that and make the lawyer more “likable,” which, if done for long
enough consistently enough, will bring in clients—the kind of clients who you
want, who want you, and who need you.