Define A New Niche To Seize A Big Competitive Advantage When Marketing Legal Services
When marketing legal services, generalities fail and specifics
persuade. The same is true when you decide which legal services
you wish to feature in your attorney marketing program.
When you practice in various areas of the law, your prospects
and referral sources see you as a generalist. Often, they don't
remember you for any particular area of practice. In their
minds, your image is blurred.
On the other hand, when you practice in one narrow area of the
law, your prospects and referral sources know exactly what you
do. Your image is clear and precise. So even if you want to
practice in a broad area, or offer a wide range of services,
you'd do well to define your niche in narrow terms so prospects
and referral sources see you in one specific niche.
The more narrow your niche, the easier it is to establish
yourself as the authority in that niche and for people to
perceive you as the expert. Also, the easier it is for clients,
prospects and referral sources to remember exactly what you do.
The more narrow your niche -- and the more effective your
marketing program -- the more your law practice will soar. It's
no exaggeration to say that when you focus on one narrow niche,
the sky's the limit.
So, how do you "specialize" when you're good at many things --
and when you may want to do many things?
Simple.
When I started in marketing, (a long time back), I was
overwhelmed with all the skills I needed to learn. I thought no
one person could possibly know how to write powerful ads,
generate publicity, design seminars, create newsletters -- and
do it all well.
Now, 30 years later, I see the bigger picture -- realize that
basic principles apply across the board -- and view marketing
much differently from the way I viewed it 3 decades ago. Today,
I know how one person can understand how to create a powerful
marketing message -- and then deliver that message using a
number of different methods.
So today, I use a wide range of tools, including advertising,
publicity, seminars, newsletters, tapes, web sites, and more.
Yet these many tools all fall under the one umbrella of
Education-Based Marketing.
Here's how you can create and profit from your own unique niche:
Step #1: Determine the areas of law in which you want to
practice. Do you want to practice family law? Estate planning?
Commercial transactions?
Step #2: Determine the types of clients you want to serve. Do
you want to work with affluent consumers? Business owners?
Doctors? Or all clients who need specific types of services?
You can approach your law practice either from the service point
of view, meaning the services you want to provide. Or the client
point of view, meaning the clients you want to serve. Or a
combination of both, providing these types of services to those
types of clients. Then write down your clients/services
statement, so you can see clearly -- in writing -- exactly who
you want to serve and what you want to do for them. Next:
Step #3: Create a new playing field. One problem lawyers have is
that they practice in areas of law that are nearly identical
from one lawyer to the next, and from one law firm to the next.
If you want a personal injury lawyer -- an estate planning
lawyer -- or a divorce lawyer -- you can probably find a dozen
up and down your city block.
True, the generic label helps prospects identify the type of
lawyer they need. But the generic label also reinforces the
perception that all lawyers in a specific field are the same --
just because they all share the same label.
Don't accept the playing field defined by the marketplace,
tradition or other lawyers. Create your own niche. Rise to a new
level. After all, if you're investing money and time in
marketing, you have every reason to re-define the playing field
so it benefits you.
Step #4: Name your niche or area of specialization using
fact-oriented, descriptive words. The old marketing adage is
that people buy benefits and not features. Even so, when naming
your niche, don t use a benefit title because it says nothing
and arouses suspicion. When I named education-based marketing, I
wanted a term that clearly describes what I do. I could have
called it Power Marketing, Marketing That Works!, Brilliant
Marketing -- or some other ridiculous combination of meaningless
words. But, instead, I wanted a term that accurately described
my marketing process in terms my prospects could relate to and
understand. Hence, education-based marketing.
Name your niche so it describes what you do as factually and
accurately as possible. At the same time, make sure your new
name covers all the services you want to provide. If you use a
narrow name, often prospects will think you provide only those
services, not realizing you can and want to provide services
outside that narrow area as well. So you want a niche name that
creates the impression of a narrow focus, yet is broad enough to
include everything you want under that umbrella.
Step #5: Market like crazy. From a competitive point of view, a
new niche is worthless if your prospects don t know it,
understand it and see it as a major competitive advantage. You
could be the only lawyer in that niche -- and the only lawyer
using the term -- but no one will care if your prospects don't
see why they should hire you instead of your competitors. As a
result, your new niche should become a key part of your
marketing message. Then you need to educate prospects about why
a lawyer in your niche -- who provides the services you offer --
is exactly the lawyer your prospects need.
Step #6: Reflect your new niche in all your marketing materials.
If you create a powerful niche -- and believe in it -- then
shout it from the mountaintops. All of your brochures, seminar
materials, advertising, publicity and web sites should reinforce
the existence and importance of your niche. The more traction
your niche develops, the more validity prospects attach to it.
The more prospects and competitors talk about it. The more real
is becomes. Soon, prospects see it as a genuine niche, as
opposed to a term you made up after a little wine. At that
point, the niche you created moves from perception to reality,
which, for marketing purposes, is the same.
SUMMARY: In a marketing sense, you should focus on one area of
law. You're in the strongest competitive position when you
create your own narrow niche. Make sure your niche is broad
enough to include all the services you want to provide -- yet
narrow enough so your prospects perceive you as an authority in
that area.
IMPORTANT: Take your time and make these decisions carefully.
Create different terms for your niche and ask clients and
friends for their reaction. See which niche names do and don't
appeal to them. See if they have an idea what the niche name
means. The name you attach to your niche will likely determine
its success or failure. So make this decision slowly, carefully,
wisely.
I first wrote the term education-based marketing in 1984. Today,
22 years later, I still use it because (1) it describes exactly
what I do, (2) it's the only marketing method I use, and (3) my
prospects hire me to provide those services. That's the test of
a good niche.
Now develop one for yourself so when marketing legal services,
you gain a significant advantage over your competitors who also
strive for attorney marketing success.
About the author:
TREY RYDER LLC, Education-Based Marketing for Lawyers / Lawyer
Marketing Advisor http://www.TreyRyder.com Trey Ryder is the
Lawyer Marketing Department Sponsor At
http://www.JerseyJustice.com
Written By: Trey Ryder