Web marketing and Social websites Advertising and marketing For Lawyers

Google site ?visit us just one marketing and advertising & social media marketing marketing and advertising for attorneys. You better get on board, because your competitor just did.

Perhaps you are a veteran in your field, or perhaps you just got your ticket a few years ago. It really doesn't matter! To the internet, everyone is created equal....love it or hate it. When I speak to my dad, a former litigator, I constantly have to re-explain what "Internet Marketing" can truly do, and what "Social Media" really is. Bless his heart, I still don't think he gets it. I grew up with the law and I worked in my father's firm for several years. For the last ten years however, I have devoted my life to building great internet sites and I love it. I have many friends in the legal industry and have built countless sites for all sorts of legal verticals, and it never fails.....the web continues to be an enigma for most of you. I was recently asked by my good friend Rick Baker, Chairman of the Orange County Bar Association Bankruptcy Committee, to give a presentation at an OCBA luncheon. I also presented at the Central Florida Bankruptcy Law Association Seminar in December, and many of the questions asked there were the same as at the OCBA luncheon. Most questions involved marketing on the internet, and it prompted me to write the following article.

Before I begin however, do yourself a favor and commit to reading the full article. I'm about to let you know how your practice can win at the internet game.

Do any of these problems sound familiar?

· You are a veteran in your field and you just want to practice law, but some young kid fresh out of grad school has a web-site that runs circles around yours.

· You have no idea how to measure your website's effectiveness and you are no where to be found on Google.

· You are spending money on website marketing and your web site every month. You believe its running at max capacity, but you only see your sales rep at renewal time (I love that just one).

· You have heard that social media marketing (Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn or Twitter) is the next great thing, but you have no idea how to leverage it.

· You just want to practice law and not deal with online issues.

To those of you who don't want to deal with it, I say fine. I respect that, but do yourself a favor and find someone whose expertise will drive your ROI (return on investment). In the last decade your advertising and marketing should have fundamentally changed. If it didn't, you are a dinosaur facing rapid extinction and you better do something fast. The "newbie" down the street is forging full force ahead. Web marketing is a vital step for any firm that is looking to advance in this day and age. The world wide web is here to stay and its growing FAST. How fast? Consider the following:

The term "bankruptcy attorney" gets searched on Google over 365,000 times per month 94% of world-wide-web searchers never click beyond the first search web page. Surveys show that first web site placement gives businesses high credibility value 96% of Generation Y is on a Social websites Network such as Facebook, LinkedIn or Twitter If Facebook were a country, it would be the 4th largest in the world It took TV 13 Years to reach 50 Million users, it took Facebook less than 9 months to reach 100 million users The fastest growing segment on Facebook is users age 55+ You Tube is the second largest search engine in the world 78% of users trust peer recommendations, only 14% trust advertisements Pay per Click Advertising and marketing increases in effectiveness by 56% when coupled with a solid Search Engine Optimization campaign (source: socialnomics)

Let's Get To Working On Your Site:

Search Engine Optimization:

This is the area on Google where you can show up without having to pay each time someone clicks on your internet site. How do you show up in that area? Simple: write the content of your web site according to what your potential customers are searching for. How do you figure that out? Do a Google search for "Google keyword tool".

Enter a keyword term you think someone enters to find you. Google will then spit out the search volume for that term and similar ones. If you can't think of any good keywords to start with, I'll let you in on another little secret. Go to a internet site called Keywordspy. Enter in the domain name of your biggest competitor that shows up within the first webpage of Google and voila, the Keywordspy system spits out a list of keywords people are punching in to find them. Now rework the visible content of your web-site to reflect the search habits of your clients and the initial work on your web site is done.

Links:Next, write an article (1-2 pages) about your industry on a monthly basis. This will build link backs to your web-site and is the single most important search component for Google. If you don't want to write about your industry, write about yourself. Most attorneys I know love to talk about themselves. Write anything that makes you look like an absolute expert in your field. It shouldn't be too hard. You are then going to take this article and submit it to several article submission sites about the online. I like EzineArticles, GoArticles, ArticleDashboard, ArticlesBase & iSnare. When you submit the articles, make sure to link them back to the blog on your web-site. What blog you ask?...Read on!

Now you are going to have your "web guy" (or Findlaw, or whom ever you have) setup a blog on your website and commit to writing 1 blog entry per week. We are not talking much here...5-10 sentences. What are you going to write about? You are going to write about the article you submitted to the sites above and you are going to link it to that article.

While we're about the topic of your "web guy", make sure to let him know you also want your web-site "verified by Google." Through the Google webmaster tools, have a regular sitemap and a xml sitemap, have it submitted to dmoz.org and have it submitted to directory, Google.com to name a few.

Google Local:

If you haven't done so, have someone in your firm go to the Google Local Business Center at Google.com/lbc and register your business there as well. Google local is a whole different animal in itself. I'll devote a separate article to that in the future, but for now get registered.

Videos:

Did you know Videos are now being indexed in regular Google searches? Did you know that videos index faster on Google because there are less video pages than text pages to compete with? Consider using a virtual spokesperson or a video within the site explaining your services. Make sure your videos include a call to action such as "call us now". Websites with videos convert over 40% better because people are visual and would rather watch you than read text. Make your videos instructional. Give the viewer something they can truly sink their teeth into. Forget the commercial approach. Be a solid resource and provide good information. Don't just put the videos on your web page. Put them on other video distribution sites such as You Tube and Viddler. Remember the bullets from earlier? Let's repeat them again:

You Tube is the second largest search engine in the world 78% of users trust peer recommendations, only 14% trust advertisements

Think about that second bullet and then think about how easy it is to have a customer give you a 30 second video testimonial. Just do it!

Social media Promoting:

Ahhh yes, the Unicorn of the world-wide-web! Think about Social websites advertising for your business for a moment. Not only are you internet marketing to your immediate customers, but you are reaching out to their friends and family, and then their friends and family, and then their friends and family, and so on and so on. I'm not a big fan of MLMs, but they exist because they work. Social websites functions like a legit MLM. Social media advertising simply put, is exponential exposure for you.

The problem you potentially run into with social media marketing internet marketing is two-fold. You may not understand social websites advertising and marketing, and if you do, you don't have the time to manage it all. You are running a firm and it is obviously imperative for you to keep up with your case load. Web marketing and social media internet marketing is at the bottom of your "To Do" list. Nonetheless, you need to get over the ball. The longer you wait, the harder and more costly it will be to reach the top.

Although social websites may seem easy, and it may seem silly to pay someone to help you with it, there is a certain rhythm to it that is important to follow. Most social media advertising and marketing campaigns fail because of a lack of proper execution. Campaigns try to speak to everyone, versus selecting specific channels. People think any web guy can do it versus finding an expert. Content is often irrelevant and even worse, structured like an ad. Those are all social media advertising killers and if you make any of those mistakes, you are toast.

You want to make sure that you are being seen but not obnoxiously so. You want to make sure that what you are posting, tweeting, or blogging about is interesting and attention catching. Work on building your downline by asking individuals to join your network and providing very valuable information. Here are the initial networks you need to join:

Twitter: Set up a Twitter account and send out a 140 character tweet about industry news twice a week.

Facebook: Create a Facebook web page and add a Business Fan Page. Set a goal to add 20 fans per month.

LinkedIn: Setup a free LinkedIn Account and work on setting up 5 connections per month.

These are very reasonable goals helping you to expand your business network. For a list of additional networks to join, give us a call.

Search Engine Advertising and marketing (SEM) / Pay per Click / Sponsored Search:

Whatever you want to call it, this is what put Google within the map. In short, you pay each time someone clicks on your ad and goes to your website. It essentially functions like an auction house for keywords. You bid against your competitors for certain keywords. Many attorneys have tried this and some are successful. However, let me clue you in on a little secret about SEM. It's a double-edged sword and it's not as easy as some of these sales reps make it sound. If you are thinking of joining a single of those search engine marketing and advertising companies that tell you they will drive a ton of traffic, I simply suggest you do a Google search for their name and see what people are saying.

Don't misunderstand me. I'm not against SEM, I'm actually for it as long as it is used properly. I'm just against the companies that bill you out tons of money and provide average results. I am planning on writing an entirely separate article about SEM in the future because it is such an extensive maze of pitfalls that I'd be adding pages upon pages to this already lengthy article.