Social Media in the Professions - Is there an APPetite for the digital revolution?

I'm pleased to announce that I have accepted an invitation to serve as chair of the upcoming PSMG annual conference to be held in London on 14 November 2012.  This year's theme is "Social Media in the Professions - Is there an APPetite for the digital revolution?"  There are numerous substantive and informative sessions in the plans, as well as a compelling keynote presentation by Clare Adshead-Grant, managing partner of Calista, one of the leading digital marketing and business development consultancies in the professional services sector.

The Professional Services Marketing Group is for those with an interest in marketing within professional services organizations, including practitioners, recognized consultants, suppliers and those who have an interest in this sector.  PSMG is a UK-based organisation with active groups in key commercial centers in the UK and international links in North America, Canada, Europe, Australasia and the Middle East.  Its members come from various professions, including law, accountancy, real estate, banking, architecture, actuarial, insurance, management consultancy, marketing communications, engineering and construction as well as those with an interest in professional services marketing.

Book your tickets now and join me in London in November!

More on MBAs for CMOs

One of the most popular destinations on this blog is my post about the utility of  an MBA for a modern law firm Chief Marketing Officer, and the healthy discussion that ensued.  You can re-read that post here.  In short, I suggest that the traditional path to prominence in a senior law firm marketing role -- including knowing how law firms operate, working for several law firms to establish credibility, and focusing more on tactics than change management -- is giving way to a more progressive role where business acumen and sometimes specifically no law firm experience is of greater importance (see the quote here by the law firm leader who specifically recruited a CMO with no legal industry experience). In my view, an MBA can be very helpful in providing the critical thinking, vocabulary and out-of-industry references to help a law firm CMO.  Not all agreed with me, as the comments appended to the post attest.  The reality is that some law firms will take years to adapt to the new normal.  Herewith I offer two relevant updates to that discussion.

The law firm marketer demographic is skewed toward females, for whatever reasons.  However, business schools pose challenges for working mothers who try to squeeze in higher education.  Notably, Wharton, the prestigious business school at the University of Pennsylvania, has enjoyed two consecutive years of dramatically increased female student enrollment, and the administration is working to continue this trend.  This is a welcome trend, and we can only hope it's both sustainable and mirrored at other schools of all tiers.  Diversity of thought, gender, culture and beliefs is critical to the growth and adaptability of a modern enterprise, and as it turns out not all business decisions made by middle-aged white males are as informed as they could be!

Unrelated to this, but no less newsworthy, is a recent poll of corporate CEOs which indicates that executive management questions the relevance of CMOs in the corporate sector.  To whit: "CEOs say that marketers lack business credibility."  Oh, the horror!  The fact is, there's a bell curve of competence and productivity in every discipline and it's not at all surprising that as we emerge from a global economic crisis our business leaders question the effectiveness of their marketing professionals, in the same way that they are questioning the ability of their manufacturing operations to operate leaner, their sales teams to sell more, their legal departments to improve predictability (more here)... and we the stockholders question whether the business leaders themselves are effective stewards of our capital investments.  Marketers should be held accountable, whether in law firms or corporations, and those who aren't getting it done will need to move on.  Such is life.

To a casual reader it may appear as if I long for law firms to operate like big corporations.  Nothing could be further from the truth.  I have long experience in publicly-traded multinational corporations, and I have a good dose of experience in privately-held enterprises.  Most businesses have huge operating inefficiencies, many are rife with internal politics that pose greater obstacles than any competitor, and sadly more than a few have leaders at the helm focused more on their next bonus than on the long-term health of the business.

That said, there are a number of business practices which, if adopted and adapted by law firm leaders, would hugely improve the efficiency, client focus and profitability of a modern law firm.  And that, in a nutshell, is the point of this blog.

Web 2.0 / Social Media Update

Periodically I take stock of my web 2.0 efforts, to ensure that I continue to derive value from the tools that matter and discard the rest.  Here's my latest appraisal: Blog - I've moved my professional commentary to this blog from my personal blog, which now allows me to maintain two personas.  Frankly, I don't mind mixing business with pleasure, as it were, and many of my readers have mentioned that an occasional family photo or recap of my basketball league provides insights into my personality that might not otherwie shine through.  Nevertheless, I made the split and it's working out well.

LinkedIn - I continue to maintain a robust profile, inviting or accepting invites from those I meet in business settings.  I have instant recall of perhaps 80% of my 463 contacts.  For the remainder I have to consult my notes to recall who they are.  It would be very helpful if LinkedIn allowed personalized annotation of the contact record itself.  Recently I've received several "Please introduce me to someone you know" and "Please introduce me to someone who knows someone I want to meet."  All but one request has come from a trusted source so I have happily complied.  I've met several job seekers who have indicated a desire to troll my contacts and ask for introductions, but not a single one has followed through.  Apparently cold calling still gives one pause, no matter what the form.

Facebook - I've spent significantly less time here since the recent upgrade which, to me at least, made it more difficult to navigate.  But I still drop in a few times a week.  This is mostly reserved for family, close friends, old friends getting back in touch and the occasional  business connection, now totaling 230.  I really wish FB allowed categorization of friends so I could accept invites from distant acquaintances but limit their access to my personal content.

Twitter - I'm a regular tweeter and reader, and careful readers will note the Twitter feed in the right column of this blog.  Twitter leads me to some of the most compelling articles, of both professional and personal interest, that I might not otherwise see.  It's also increased my visibility and allowed me to find others with like interests.  I will regularly tweet from conferences and speeches I attend, and eagerly read others' recaps of conferences I cannot attend.  I tend to amuse myself by posting personal updates alongside professional commentary, a habit which many disavow.  But as with my blog I tend to believe that injecting some of my personality makes things interesting.  Somehow I have attracted 364 followers, and I follow 233.  Twitter Grader ranks me 96.7 out of 100, though I'm still waiting for my gold star!

Google Reader - I monitor a large number of legal and news sources daily in Google's RSS reader.  This can become overwhelming, but I find it necessary to stay on top of what other thought leaders are saying and what trends are influencing our marketplace.  At the end of this post is a partial list of the professional sources I rely on.  I'm a voracious reader but years ago I found that I couldn't keep up with all the books I purchased until I overcame my reluctance to start a book unless I had time to finish it.  I also redefined "finished" to mean when I lost interest and not when I reached the end.  With that burden off my shoulders, I now read books and magazines and skim hundreds of articles and blog posts daily without the obsession of reading every word.  It's faster that way!

Legal OnRamp - This legal community has been around a couple years now and I'm starting to spend more time there.  As an alum of Counsel Connect, the early 90's online legal community launched by American Lawyer, I enjoy re-connecting with the brilliant minds discussing the fundamental changes taking place in the legal marketplace.  Whether it's a debate on the billable hour, the use of technology to automate routine tasks to lower costs for clients, substantive legal issues such as the American Law Institute's (ALI) proposed changes to the law for software contracts -- the point is savvy outside lawyers have an opportunity to demonstrate expertise to a captive audience of in-house counsel.

LMA Connect and the Lawmarketing listserve are two networks where I monitor and contribute commentary to the legal marketing community.  There is overlapping membership but often robust discussions.  Many law firm leaders might be surprised at the level of business expertise already residing within their firms today.

Classmates.com - I maintain a profile here, which is helpful solely to reconnect with school chums.  However my profile points visitors to Facebook and LinkedIn.

Sites I do not use:

Martindale Connected - I am an alum of Martindale and, quite evidently, a regular user of web 2.0 tools, but I have not been allowed to join so I have no opinion.

ABA's Legally Minded - I joined this community but can't find a reason to participate.

Plaxo, Naymz and Spoke - All are similar to LinkedIn, but other than accepting requests from others to connect I don't visit.

MySpace - My profile still exists but not even my young nieces visit any more.  It's all about Facebook.

 

A partial list of my daily reading:

  • Above the Law - David Lat's legal tabloid
  • Adam Smith, Esq. - Bruce MacEwen's brilliant commentary on the intersection of law, business and economics. This is a must read
  • Are You Writing This Down? - Legal marketing expert Lance Godard's excellent commentary
  • The Becker-Posner Blog - Economist Gary Becker and Federal Judge Richard Posner offer commentary on issues of the day from an economist's perspective.  These are rich, deep, thoughtful insights which, admittedly, I often don't have the time or energy to fully absorb
  • Bill's Blog - Incisive Media (formerly American Lawyer) CEO Bill Pollak's commentary. While orginally intended for his staff, his insights are applicable to others, and his informative style is one which many CEO's should emulate
  • Business Development - Occasional legal marketing commentary by Peter Darling
  • The Client Revolution - Jay Shephard is a practicing employment lawyer who promotes his innovative practice which doesn't bill by the hour, ever
  • CMO 2.0 - Interviews with leading CMOs from multiple industries
  • College of Law Practice Management - As an elected Fellow I like to see what my fellow, um, Fellows are up to. Turns out most of us with something to say do so on our own blogs so not a lot happening here
  • The Common Scold - Veteran journalist and editor of Law Technology News, Monica Bay reports on legal technology, legal technologists, the Yankees and her varied other interests
  • Cotterman on Compensation - I followed Altman Weil consultant Jim Cotterman's commentary long before I joined the firm.  There are few in the field with more experience on law firm compensation topics than Jim
  • Decent Shred - Shy Alter, a Toronto-based law firm information and knowledge management expert, is someone I became aware of via Twitter
  • Demand Trigger - Veteran sales coach Mike O'Horo's take on the legal profession
  • The Dilbert Blog - Dilbert creator Scott Adam's quirky take on life through the eyes of an economist/humorist/cartoonist. He's also a fascinating writer
  • Enlightened Tradition - Another law firm KM expert I've come to "know" via Twitter, Mark Gould hails from the UK and discusses organizational knowledge
  • Erik J Heels Blog - My former colleague Erik is an IP lawyer, Internet pioneer and veteran legal technologist.  He's also a very interesting guy with a wide range of interests
  • Freakonomics - The authors of the popular book discuss everyday issues through the eyes of economists
  • Get Creative - COLPM member Merrilyn Astin Tarlton's take on law firm innovation
  • InHouse Rants - An anonymous corporate lawyer discussing his dissatisfaction of outside counsel.  Dormant for quite some time, I guess he has nothing more to say
  • In Search of Perfect Client Service - Patrick Lamb, the Chicago co-founder of innovative law firm, Valorem, discusses the disruptions in today's legal markets and how he and his colleagues have adopted a new approach
  • Inhouse Access - Commentary from various inhouse counsel hosted by the Association of Corporate Counsel
  • Inhouse Blog - News and Jobs for inhouse counsel, edited by Geoff Gussis, a private-practice lawyer in NJ
  • Inside Legal - News and commentary on legal service providers and vendors, edited by the good folks at legal PR firm, Envision Agency
  • Karasma Media - Legal social media marketer Kara Smith reports and opines on the legal issues of the day
  • Larry Bodine Marketing Blog - Longtime legal marketer rants on topics of the day and promotes his services
  • Law.com - The must-read site for legal news.  I pay particular attention to the legal technology feed
  • Law Department Management - Rees Morrison's fantastic and robust blog for in-house counsel
  • Law Firm Competitive Intelligence - CI guru and veteran legal marketer Ann Lee Gibson on topics related to law firm competitive intelligence and business development
  • Law21 - Canadian lawyer and journalist Jordan Furlong publishes "dispatches from a legal profession on the brink."  This is a must read
  • LawBeat - Veteran legal journalist turned academic, Mark Obbie "watches the journalists who watch the law"
  • LawBizBlog - Ed Poll is a longtime lawyer, business development consultant, coach and author. He's been at this so long he coined (and trademarked!) the phrase "The Business of Law."  His award winning commentary is a must read
  • Leadership for Lawyers - Veteran legal marketer Mark Beese is now consulting in the areas of law firm business development and law firm leadership development
  • Legal 1-to-1 Marketing Blog - Bill Vannerson, a BigLaw KM and information technology expert, discusses the legal issues of the day
  • Legal Blog Watch - Lawyers/Journalists Bob Ambrogi and Carolyn Elefant read and analyze legal blogs and websites of interest to the legal profession
  • Legal Marketing Blog - Veteran legal marketer Tom Kane discusses legal issues of the day
  • Legal Marketing Reader - Amy Campbell compiles and comments on legal marketing news and resources
  • Legal Process Outsourcing - A discussion of outsourcing and offshoring news
  • Legal Spend Management - TyMetrix, an e-billing provider, discusses topics related to law firm billing
  • The Legal Thing - Notes from Mike Dillon, General Counsel of Sun Microsystems
  • The Legal Watercooler - Insightful and timely commentary by veteran legal marketers Heather Milligan and Jayne Navarre
  • LSSO Raindrops - A presently dormant but periodically rich source of commentary on law firm sales efforts
  • Maddock on Marketing - Altman Weil consultant Biff Maddock, a veteran legal marketer, discussing topics relevant to marketing and business development
  • Martindale-Hubbell Blog - As an alum I enjoy checking in now and again to celebrate the company's successes, and lament at its missteps... primarily driven not by the clever people at the helm of MH but by the inept navel-gazers at the parent company
  • Next Generation Law - Kevin Thompson of Advanced Advocates, a platform for law students, discusses legal issues of the day
  • The [non]Billable Hour - Matt Homann, innovational speaker, lawyer and consultant, discusses the changing practice of law
  • Progressive Marketing - Mid-size law firm marketer Russell Lawson opines on topics of the day
  • Real Lawyers Have Blogs - Kevin O'Keefe, an early adopter of legal technology and now blog evangelist, covers the world of legal blogs
  • Rick Klau's Blog - My former colleague Rick is a lawyer, an internet pioneer, a legal technologist, a political activist, an early adopter of everything, and now a Google exec.  He's also a great guy
  • Seth's Blog - By law every marketer must read Seth Godin. If you read it, you'll see why
  • Set in Style - Mister Thorne (yes, that's his name) discusses legal writing.  A must read for legal writing and marketing
  • Strategic Legal Technology - Veteran legal technologist Ron Friedmann discusses the intersection of technology and the business and practice of law.  This is a must read
  • Thoughtful Legal Management - David Bilinsky advises the Law Society of British Columbia on practice management topics and edits the Law Practice Management magazine
  • Wicker Park Group - Nat Slavin, former publisher of Corporate Legal Times (now Inside Counsel) and veteran legal marketer Laura Meherg and team discuss issues related to client feedback
  • Wall Street Journal Law Blog - With all due respect to excellent veteran legal journalist Ashby Jones, this blog has become less cutting edge than it was a couple years ago.  But still a must read for legal news and commentary

The last time I posted my reading list I received several excellent suggestions.  So please, tell me what you read that you find interesting and helpful for staying on top of the changing business of law.

Vendor Perspective of the LMA Annual Conference

Some years ago when I led a company that was a prominent vendor and sponsor to the legal marketing community, I would regularly take the LMA to task for its tone-deaf and heavy-handed approach to vendors.  They listened and today the association, and the legal marketing community, are far more receptive and embrace the involvement of legal vendors and suppliers.  Don't get me started on other legal associations which appear to regard vendors as evildoers whose role is to send money and logos in return for some token table scraps. So other than one comment, this post does not address the effectiveness of the LMA annual conference from the vendor perspective.  Rather, I will comment on vendor participation at the conference... what worked, and what didn't.

First, the one comment directed to LMA:  The hotel was a beautiful venue and well-suited for a business conference. However, the exhibit hall must be closer to the educational session rooms. No ifs, ands or buts about it.  Periodically a conference planning team will underestimate the importance of this single fact.  That's a mistake.  Since I'm confident every vendor made this point in their post-conference evaluations, I won't belabor it here.

I presented on the topic of managing legal directories, lists and rankings along with Nicole Carrubba of Captivate Legal Marketing.  Though we both have considerable expertise in this area, we spent some prep time on the phone interviewing directory publishers and consultants who specialize in this space.  The publishers, without exception, in some way incorporated the following three assumptions in their remarks: everyone hates us; the competitors stink; and our offering is defined by what the competitors are not.

There are certainly some legal marketers who don't like the very notion of directories, rankings and lists, believing them all to be part of some scam based on lawyer vanity.  But there are many who view these tools as standard components of a law firm's marketing mix, plus there is a constant influx of new marketers from outside the legal profession who have no pre-formed bias.  My recommendation, lose the chip on your shoulder.

In every business there are competitors.  There are often head-to-head fight-to-the-last-bullet battles between competitors.  And it's important to know the competition.  But my view has always mirrored legendary UCLA basketball coach John Wooden's (possibly apocryphal) view on  game preparation. He never reviewed film of his opponents, and instead focused his team on flawless execution of the basics.  In other words, it doesn't matter what the other guy is doing; all that matters is that we execute well.  In business, deliver what you promise, deliver what the client needs, and let the other guy worry about what you're doing.

In a similar fashion, find your own unique selling proposition.  Help the legal marketers answer the question, Why is your offering additive to my marketing mix?  It's not effective to use "We're better than the other guy because we don't do X or Y, we do Z."  This assumes I have superior knowledge of the other guy, which immediately diminishes your offering. What do you do well? Figure out how to say it.

Interestingly, as I walked the exhibit floor talking to multiple vendors, this theme reappeared several more times.  In one notable case, the president of a small technology company was barely able to articulate what his offering delivered. He hemmed and hawed waiting for the top sales guy to finish up with another prospect, and while he was waiting he described his product thusly:  "We're sort of a Product N light. We don't do all that they do, but then most people don't need all that anyway."  Product N, in case you hadn't guessed, is a leading product in the category.  My advice (well, beyond "Don't stand in the booth if you have nothing helpful to add") once again is to define your unique selling proposition in a few words.  Surely you must offer something that doesn't require me to know all about the competition first!

At one point I worked the exhibit hall during one of the educational sessions.  I suspect I'm not the only conference attendee who occasionally finds nothing of interest at the offered sessions, or perhaps just wants to talk to vendors without the crowd that amasses during breaks. However, the booths were mostly empty. Obviously I wasn't able to poke my head into every educational session, but since many vendors had exhibit-only passes, I surmised that they weren't attending a session and they weren't in the booth.  Where were they?  I can only hope that they were busy in a demo room or were holding some other private client discussions.  If they were at the hotel but not in the booth when prospects were there, that is a travesty.  Nevertheless, I enjoyed the 15-minute chair massage in the information vendor's booth while no one was around.

The opposite is also true.  In some booths the vendor representatives repelled visitors through one of two techniques:  either they stood in a semi-circle in the front of the booth facing in while talking amongst themselves, making an approach impossible; or they stood in a semi-circle facing outward, making an approach daunting as 4 or 5 sets of eyes stared at every passer-by.  Some sat quietly working on their laptops undoubtedly attending to important client matters while we walked by, glanced at the literature, possibly picked up a giveaway pen, and moved on, never making eye contact.  A few, of course, made visitors feel welcome.  I won't go into detail here how to make that happen because it's more amusing to point out what doesn't work -- and besides, helping vendors better reach clients is part of what I do for a living!

Actually, I will reveal the greatest secret to increasing your ROI at a conference, particularly a close-knit community like the legal marketers.  It's this:  Be part of the community.  It's that simple.  How?  Buy more than exhibit-only badges and spend more time with the clients and prospects, learning alongside them in educational sessions, spreading out and mingling with them at breakfast, lunches and cocktail receptions, and attending all the after-hours events.

My former sales teams knew, enjoyed and heartily participated in this credo of non-stop client interaction.  We reached a point where our conference booth was the least important place for us to interact with clients.  We didn't even post a schedule.  We knew that during the conference, from roughly 7 AM to midnight every day, we were with our clients -- our friends! -- participating and contributing alongside them. When the exhibit hall was open, we'd all be around, though we wouldn't congregate in the booth and scare visitors away.  And we most certainly, and enthusiastically, joined our clients after-hours.  And we didn't always pick up the tab either.  Because we were members, not vendors.

At one point at the LMA's "gala" event, amidst all the dancing and frivolity, I stepped outside to get some air and to drop in to a bar next door to the conference hotel to have a drink with an old colleague.  There, arrayed in a group of 15 or so, was one vendor team.  There wasn't a client in sight, for they were all enjoying themselves back at the conference hotel.  Just the vendors enjoying themselves, by themselves. This is poignant example of what to do as a vendor to the community, rather than as a member of the community.  I'll wager a tall, cold drink at the next conference that the ROI report delivered to this vendor's management team was that the conference was good, but not great.

Legal vendors: what sort of sales team preparation do you undertake before attending a major industry conference?  Does the team memorize clear and concise elevator scripts, unique selling propositions and positioning statements?  Do they know their responsibility at the conference is not equal to their assigned booth times?  Does management in attendance know what to say, or when to be quiet?  Do they know when to join clients, and when to take the team offsite for well-deserved R&R?  This isn't rocket science.  Good products, even great products, don't sell themselves.  It takes work and practice to move along the continuum from vendor to the client community to member of the client community.  Are you there yet?  What are you waiting for?

Business Development in the Economic Downturn

At the recent Legal Marketing Association annual conference, I was interviewed by Incisive Media, publisher of countless legal trade journals, organizers of legal conferences and provider of competitive intelligence tools to legal marketers. I was asked how law firms can adapt their legal marketing tactics in light of the economic downturn. You may view the short interview here.