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Total Attorneys Practice Management Platform: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Neil J. Squillante | Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Today's issue of TL NewsWire covers a practice management and client development system (see article below), an online marketing service for local listings, a wireless mobile scanner, a business intelligence service for law firms, and a free iPad magazine. Don't miss the next issue.

A Practice Management System That Costs Just One Dollar

After the initial breakthrough of organizing contacts and calendars by client and matter, practice management systems have experienced a number of major inflection points such as information sharing over a local network, integration of billing, and of course Internet connectivity and entirely cloud-based applications. But most practice management systems continue to have an inward focus. In other words, they help you manage all the work in your firm. But that work doesn't just appear out of thin air. A new practice management system has both an inward and outward focus with tools that help you attract new clients and better serve all your clients.

Total Attorneys Practice Management Platform … in One Sentence
Total Attorneys Practice Management Platform (Total Attorneys) is a cloud-based practice management and client development system.

The Killer Feature
Probably because I often find myself sitting in front of an $18 glass of barolo or franciacorta, I always marvel at how little tortilla chips cost. But even tortilla chips at $2 per bag at my local Trader Joe's can't beat Total Attorneys, which costs just $1 per user per month.

This price imposes no limits on any of the inward features, and even includes all of the outward features except for three — lead generation, payment processing, and virtual receptionist.

Other Notable Features
Those of you in consumer practice areas such as bankruptcy, criminal defense, divorce, personal injury, social security, and taxation can take advantage of Total Attorneys' lead generation service. You enter your practice areas and preferred zip codes, after which leads begin appearing in Total Attorneys under the Leads tab. You can adjust your settings anytime, and turn off this tool when you have enough business.

Total Attorneys also offers a secure client portal for agreements, communications, and document sharing. For example, you can have clients sign a retainer agreement. You can also provide clients with a collection of all the documents in their case that they can access anytime. The client portal doesn't require any plugins such as Flash so it also works on the iPad and smartphones. You can enable it on a client by client basis.

The calendar straddles the line between inward and outward features. It has all the functions you would expect, but you can also invite a client to a call or meeting via the calendar. And if you enable it, clients can schedule meetings with you. Similarly, Total Attorneys can log billable time and generate invoices, but it can also process online credit card payments that clients can initiate directly from your bills.

Regarding pure inward features, the Matter Overview Page serves as a dashboard for a specific matter, displaying all information such as open and close dates, lawyers, documents, billing records, etc. Contacts also serve as a dashboard. In addition to contact information, you'll see an activity log of appointments, documents, email, notes, etc.

Other features include bulk email and email templates for client alerts and newsletters (replies go to your regular email address), document management with access controls, and a tool for creating and tracking proposals (quotes).

What Else Should You Know?
Total Attorneys runs in any web browser. There's also an iPad and iPhone app. As noted above, you can use most functions for $1 per user per month. Leads cost $50 to $107 each, payment processing costs $35 per month, and a virtual receptionist costs $199 per 50 calls. Learn more about Total Attorneys Practice Management Platform.

How to Receive TL NewsWire
So many products, so little time. In each issue of TL NewsWire, you'll learn about five new products for the legal profession. Pressed for time? The newsletter's innovative articles enable lawyers and law office administrators to quickly understand the function of a product, and zero in on its most important features. The TL NewsWire newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Online/Cloud | Practice Management/Calendars | TL NewsWire

Document Markups on the iPad Plus 101 More Must-Reads

By Neil J. Squillante | Monday, February 13, 2012

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 101 articles from the past week worthy of your attention. Below you'll find a sample article from each section of today's issue, including our BlawgWorld Pick of the Week.

Is Worldox GX3 a Document Management Game Changer?

Review of AirStash: WiFi Flash Drive

Pepper Hamilton Names Non-Lawyer as CEO

Lawyers Debate the Usefulness of Social Media

Congratulations to Martha Sperry of Advocate's Studio on winning our BlawgWorld Pick of the Week award: Look Out PC, the iPad Now Handles Document Markups

How to Receive BlawgWorld
Our newsletters provide the most comprehensive coverage of legal technology, practice management, and law firm marketing, but not the only coverage. BlawgWorld enables you to stay on top of all the noteworthy articles (and podcasts) published online without having to hire a research assistant. Even when you're busy, you won't want to miss each issue's Pick of the Week. The BlawgWorld newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BlawgWorld Newsletter | Coming Attractions | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Technology Industry/Legal Profession

The Scoop on LawLoop Plus 97 More Must-Reads

By Kathryn Hughes | Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 98 articles from the past week worthy of your attention, including our Pick of the Week. Here's a sample:

A Review of Lexis Practice Advisor

Scanning on the Go, Wirelessly

Law Firm Headcount Up, but Demand Down (PDF)

A Lawyer's Claims Online Gets Him in Hot Ethical Water

Don't miss this issue or future issues.

How to Receive BlawgWorld
Our newsletters provide the most comprehensive coverage of legal technology, practice management, and law firm marketing, but not the only coverage. To stay on top of all the noteworthy articles published in blogs and other online publications you could either hire a research assistant or simply subscribe to BlawgWorld. The BlawgWorld newsletter has received rave reviews and is free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BlawgWorld Newsletter | Coming Attractions | Copiers/Scanners/Printers | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Technology Industry/Legal Profession

TranscriptPad: Read Our Exclusive Report

By Neil J. Squillante | Thursday, February 2, 2012

Today's issue of TL NewsWire covers a transcript review app for the iPad (see article below), a scanning service, a new mobile scanner, and two new electronic discovery applications. Don't miss the next issue.

Transcript Review Meets the iPad

As a young litigator, I used a Mac program called Ready for Trial to review deposition transcripts and generate reports of key testimony. Once when I presented a report to a senior associate to append to our brief, he rejected it because it looked "too slick." Now long forgotten, Ready for Trial was ahead of its time and on the wrong platform. Enter Apple's revenge, otherwise known as the iPad, which already outsells Macs and will likely outsell all PCs before the end of this decade. While most legal vendors have only dipped a toe in the iPad waters, one legal vendor focuses solely on the iPad, including its newest app for transcripts.

TranscriptPad … in One Sentence
Released earlier this month, Lit Software's TranscriptPad is an iPad app for managing and reviewing transcripts.

The Killer Feature
Transcript review seems straightforward, but somewhere along the way transcript software became increasingly complex and expensive. TranscriptPad seeks to reverse this trend, and disrupt the marketplace in the process.

TranscriptPad costs $49.99. That's it. This one-time price includes new versions and support. The company already has a track record in this regard. Last year, Lit Software released TrialPad for exhibiting documents. Version 2.0 added more sophisticated trial presentation features at no charge to those who bought version 1.0.

"Lawyers want to mark up multiple depositions on a train, plane, or their favorite easy chair without juggling highlighters, tape flags, and post-it notes," Lit Software CEO Ian O'Flaherty told us. "They don't want to create accounts, register their documents, host them on someone else's server, or pay for upgrades or per-seat subscriptions every month or year. We designed TranscriptPad to meet their needs."

Other Notable Features
You can import transcripts in TXT format into TranscriptPad via Dropbox, email attachment, or iTunes sync. TranscriptPad also supports exhibits in PDF format.

Once you load transcripts, you can organize them by client/matter, and of course review them. You can choose between manually flipping through transcript pages or having TranscriptPad automatically scroll (you can adjust the speed). A scroll bar along the side works like a scrubber, enabling you to navigate to a specific page and line of testimony.

You can also search through a single deposition, all depositions for a witness, or all depositions for a case. TranscriptPad's tools include the ability to flag and designate key testimony, and create and assign color-coded issues.

What Else Should You Know?
After reviewing transcripts, you can generate reports (e.g., designated testimony pertaining to an issue) in PDF or TXT format, and print or email them to yourself and colleagues. TranscriptPad works on the original iPad and iPad 2. Learn more about TranscriptPad.

How to Receive TL NewsWire
So many products, so little time. In each issue of TL NewsWire, you'll learn about five new products for the legal profession. Pressed for time? The newsletter's innovative articles enable lawyers and law office administrators to quickly understand the function of a product, and zero in on its most important features. The TL NewsWire newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | TL NewsWire

Technology and the Intergenerational Law Firm Plus 128 More Must-Reads

By Kathryn Hughes | Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 99 articles from the past week worthy of your attention, including our Post of the Week. Here's a sample:

Document Management Tips

Apple's Disguised Docking Station for Laptops

Alternative Fees 101: Oxycodone Cannot Replace Billable Hour

RFP Attorney: A New Client Development Platform

This issue also contains links to every article in the January/February 2012 issue of Law Technology News. Don't miss this issue or future issues.

How to Receive BlawgWorld
Our newsletters provide the most comprehensive coverage of legal technology, practice management, and law firm marketing, but not the only coverage. To stay on top of all the noteworthy articles published in blogs and other online publications you could either hire a research assistant or simply subscribe to BlawgWorld. The BlawgWorld newsletter has received rave reviews and is free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BlawgWorld Newsletter | Coming Attractions | Document Management | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management

Capture Contact Information in Email Plus 105 More Must-Reads

By Kathryn Hughes | Monday, January 23, 2012

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 105 articles from the past week worthy of your attention, including our Post of the Week. Here's a sample:

Legal Forms for the Price of a Song on iTunes?

The Most Tech-Friendly Airports and Airlines

Female Lawyers Make Their Own Tracks to Success

Law Firm SEO Is Not An Advertising Strategy

Don't miss this issue or future issues.

How to Receive BlawgWorld
Our newsletters provide the most comprehensive coverage of legal technology, practice management, and law firm marketing, but not the only coverage. To stay on top of all the noteworthy articles published in blogs and other online publications you could either hire a research assistant or simply subscribe to BlawgWorld. The BlawgWorld newsletter has received rave reviews and is free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BlawgWorld Newsletter | Coming Attractions | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Technology Industry/Legal Profession

Google Tips for Lawyers Plus January 2011 Issue of Law Practice Today Plus 106 More Must-Reads

By Kathryn Hughes | Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Coming today to BlawgWorld: Our editorial team has selected and linked to 107 articles from the past week worthy of your attention, including our Post of the Week. Here's a sample:

CES 2012 Recap: Everything You Need to Know (Probably)

Xerox Unveils Mobile Scanner (That's It's Name)

Nice Perk if You Can Get It: Law Firm Offers Free Massages

The Problem With Ambulance Chasing

This issue also contains links to every article in the January 2012 issue of Law Practice Today. Don't miss this issue or future issues.

How to Receive BlawgWorld
Our newsletters provide the most comprehensive coverage of legal technology, practice management, and law firm marketing, but not the only coverage. To stay on top of all the noteworthy articles published in blogs and other online publications you could either hire a research assistant or simply subscribe to BlawgWorld. The BlawgWorld newsletter has received rave reviews and is free. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BlawgWorld Newsletter | Coming Attractions | Copiers/Scanners/Printers | Laptops/Smartphones/Tablets | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | Law Office Management | Technology Industry/Legal Profession

SmallLaw: The Secret to Leveraging Twitter for Client Development

By Kevin O'Keefe | Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Originally published on September 26, 2011 in our free SmallLaw newsletter. Instead of reading SmallLaw here after the fact, sign up now to receive future issues in realtime.

"What's happening?" That one little prompt on Twitter spurs thousands of tweets every single second. It has given way to country-defining revolutions, some of the biggest reporting scoops of our generation, and life-saving warnings of natural disasters.

But for busy professionals at small law firms like yours, that prompt prevents so many lawyers and other professionals from using Twitter, which has an onboarding problem. Onboarding refers the process of enabling new users to quickly benefit from a service. For example, when you signed up for SmallLaw, you knew you'd start receiving newsletters like today's issue.

Regarding Twitter, why would prospective clients want to know what you ate for breakfast? How could that possibly make you money? They don't. And it won't.

Leveraging Twitter by Curating Information

What many lawyers don't realize is that Twitter isn't for mundane updates on one's day-to-day life. It isn't for anything specific. Twitter provides you with a ball and a field. What and how you want to play is up to you.

For lawyers seeking an effective client development strategy through Twitter, acting as a curator of information and active intelligence agent is the best game to play.

Instead of starting by figuring out what to say, lawyers must instead begin by deciding to whom they should listen.

By drawing on information from a wealth of credible sources and monitoring keywords relevant to your practice (client names, articles, cases, and the like) and then passing the best content along through Twitter, you can effectively establish yourself as a knowledgeable source of information within your desired niche. Twitter's limit of 140 characters per tweet is a blessing because no one expects a detailed treatise when you link to an interesting resource (including your own blog posts and articles).

Every morning before work I spend almost the entirety of the 35-minute ferry ride from my home on Bainbridge Island across the Puget Sound to LexBlog's offices in Seattle perusing the content in my RSS newsreader — a collection of feeds from sources I find credible and keywords relevant to my expertise — and passing along 10 to 12 headlines and my own short comments by way of Twitter.

Not only do I learn by skimming the latest news, but my brand as a thought-leader in my niche is going through the roof — all because I spend a half hour every morning using Twitter. All of the following metrics have increased as a result of my tweets:

• Traffic to my blog.
• Comments on my blog.
• Speaking engagements.
• Calls from reporters.
• Calls from law firms asking me to speak.
• Employee morale and our ability to recruit talent.
• And most importantly, our bottom-line.

Why Twitter Works So Well

These 35 minutes probably produce a higher return on investment (ROI) than any of my other client development work. Why? How could something so basic and seemingly impersonal work for client development?

Pause and think about how people get their best clients not just in the legal profession but in almost every single field — relationships and word of mouth reputation.

I have over 11,600 people following me on Twitter. While this group includes clients and potential clients — lawyers other legal professionals (managing partners, CMOs, CKOs, CIOs) and marketing and communications professionals — it's also comprised of the individuals who influence them — conference coordinators, editors, publishers, reporters, and the like.

These folks have come to rely on me for news and commentary about client development for lawyers, online networking, social media, and other relevant subjects. I'm their trusted intelligence agent.

This is the type of audience a public relations professional craves. A tool that puts me in touch with my target audience on a daily basis? Previously impossible.

And as an added kicker I'm nurturing and making meaningful relationships with people I want to get to know. We're becoming friends with one other.

Whether you work in employment law, estate planning, intellectual property, personal injury, or any other practice area, Twitter can be an effective client development tool. I have watched numerous lawyers connect with clients, prospective clients, and their influencers on Twitter. Those who follow them on Twitter aren't simply reading and digesting the information the lawyers highlight — they're passing it along to friends, business associates, reporters, and association leaders all the while keeping the originating source in mind.

Start Small and Think Big

Start small. You are not going to gain 1,500 valuable followers overnight. Growing an audience interested in news related to your niche area of the law from 50 to 100 to 500 followers can take time.

That's okay. You're strengthening your brand as a reliable and trusted authority in your specialty and creating relationships with your target audience.

Call Twitter mindless babble and beneath lawyers if you like. Smart lawyers and law firms will ignore such short-sighted rhetoric and use Twitter as a high ROI relationship-building tool.

Written by Kevin O'Keefe is CEO and Publisher of LexBlog, the leading provider of social media solutions and strategies to law firms.

How to Receive SmallLaw
Small firm, big dreams. Published first via email newsletter and later here on our blog, SmallLaw provides you with a mix of practical advice that you can use today, and insight about what it will take for small law firms like yours to thrive in the future. The SmallLaw newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | SmallLaw

BigLaw: Does the Design of Your Law Blog Matter?

By Adrian Dayton | Thursday, December 22, 2011

Originally published on October 4, 2011 in our free BigLaw newsletter. Instead of reading BigLaw here after the fact, sign up now to receive future issues in realtime.

Remember the popular advertisements for beer in which two groups argued between the relative importance of "great taste" versus "less filling"? A similar debate is brewing regarding the creation of blogs for large law firms. What is more important — great content or great design? Most law firms have lawyers capable writing great content, but few have designers in-house that can build and design good-looking blogs. Can you ignore design? Or should your blog(s) have both?

The Case for Great Content

Great content alone can make a blog successful. If you write blog posts helpful to your industry, people will read them, email them, tweet them, etc. — and the media will take notice too. Eventually, they'll end up on sites that corporate counsel use such as JD Supra, Lexology, and Legal OnRamp.

Perhaps most importantly, Google loves great content. The better your content is, the more links it will accumulate. Google's search algorithm uses more than 200 "signals" to rank web pages, but inbound links remain among the most important (the famous PageRank patent). One caveat — Google does not "value" links on social networks as highly as those on web sites so try to encourage others to link to you from their sites (easier said than done).

The Case for Great Design

People who read your blog via email or an RSS reader like Google Reader could care less about your blog's design. But many people will read your blog in a web browser, including everyone who first discovers it with a Google search. So let's explore the design issue.

You don't need to be a designer to recognize a good design. Even if only for a second, we're all conscious of the design when visiting a blog for the first time. Sometimes, the design is so good we notice for more than a second because it blows us away. And sometimes the opposite happens — we can't believe how bad it looks. This first impression is important.

A key element of blog design is user interface, which is often overlooked. A while back I was on a law blog trying to find the author. It took me several clicks before I could find his contact information. What's the point of creating a blog and gaining exposure if prospective clients can't contact you?

The layout and design of your blog is not just important but critically so. Make sure it's easy for people find your contact information. Make sure your blog gives people a positive impression (no pop-ups is a good policy with which to start).

Can You Have Both?

"Why can't you have both"? A designer at a recent conference I spoke at asked me that question. Yes, of course you can have both. As a large firm, you have an advantage. Hiring a top-notch designer won't have a material impact on your expenses unlike at a smaller firm with a much smaller marketing budget.

That said, a blog with great content that uses a prefab template will outperform a beautiful blog with a custom design that lacks great content — as long as the template makes it easy to contact the author(s).

So feel free to spend $10,000 on the design of your blog, but make sure you can create quality content on a regular basis before making that leap. After all, the leading cause of law blog failure is the failure to publish at all.

Conclusion

Blogs don't cost much money to start. Many inexpensive and free options exist. Far more important is the quality of the content and the frequency with which you add content. Publishing is a grind. Law firms are not media companies by nature so many just wing it without editorial calendars and other publishing workflow tools that they may not even realize exist.

I recommend that even large firms start conservatively. Have a basic blog built for you by a local web designer for no more than $1,500. Try blogging for six months. If you like it and think you can keep it up, make a more substantial investment.

The blogosphere is littered with failed blogs that never made it past their first couple of blog posts. Having a blog experiment fail quietly is no big deal, but having a blog fail after spending a lot of money is fodder for Above the Law and others in the large firm gossip business. If you start creating great content, people will ignore the design as long as it's not terrible. After all, you're a law firm, not a fashion magazine.

Written by Adrian Dayton of Marketing Strategy and the Law.

How to Receive BigLaw
Many large firms have good reputations for their work and bad reputations as places to work. Why? Answering this question requires digging up some dirt, but we do with the best of intentions. Published first via email newsletter and later here on our blog, BigLaw analyzes the business practices, marketing strategies, and technologies used by the country's biggest law firms in an effort to unearth best and worst practices. The BigLaw newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: BiglawWorld | Graphic Design/Photography/Video | Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites

SmallLaw: The Most Effective Type of Blog for Law Firms

By Kevin O'Keefe | Monday, December 19, 2011

Originally published on August 16, 2011 in our free SmallLaw newsletter. Instead of reading SmallLaw here after the fact, sign up now to receive future issues in realtime.

Sitting in the audience at the Legal Marketing Association annual conference this spring, I heard an "Internet marketing expert" advise that blogs were only for lawyers who had a lot of time on their hands.

She warned that publishing a blog requires posting three or four times a week, constant moderating of comments, and thinking of original stories and updates to cover. She's wrong.

Quality, Not Quantity

If blogging were that hard, I would never started publishing a blog eight years ago.

Can you publish a law blog that enhances your reputation, grows your network, establishes you as a domain expert, and brings in not just clients, but quality clients, without it consuming all of your time? Yes.

Seattle lawyer Dan Harris of Harris & Moure publishes the China Law Blog, one of the more influential law blogs.

He spends 15 to 45 minutes to write a blog post with 25 minutes being the average. Harris characterizes his blog as very successful in generating new business.

Quality over content is key. About one-half of the law blogs on our LexBlog Network are updated once per week. About 75% are updated once every two weeks. That's a far cry from 3-4 times per week.

Those who don't talk all the time command attention when they do talk if they have something interesting to say. That's especially true for law blogs focused on a niche area of the law or geographic region.

The Share-and-Comment Blog Post

Like this and other columns in SmallLaw, blog posts should be short and cover only one point. Actually, shorter — 200 to 500 words is sufficient.

Think of blogging as sharing what you read. Blogging to share not only takes less time, but also works much better for business development. With your blog, you can create and participate in a rich, ongoing conversation regarding matters relevant to your area of practice and the industries or consumer groups you represent.

Here's how it works:

1. Follow what is being written in relevant blogs and news stories. Use Google News and Google Blog Search to track key words and key phrases germane to your practice areas. You can subscribe to these searches via email or with Google Reader.

2. Share a story or blog post you find interesting and which you believe prospective clients and others who read your blog would find of interest as well. Offer your insight and commentary.

Think of it as clipping out an article, highlighting a paragraph, and dropping a note to a client as to why you thought the story would be of interest to them. But don't just say, "I saw this, here's the link." Instead:

• Link to the source material. For example, linking the title of the article on which you're commenting will create a consistent style across your blog. If you prefer, link keywords that describe the article.

• Link to the author or reporter's LinkedIn profile or Web site bio. They'll notice and appreciate the link.

• Share a fair use block quote or two that brings home the salient points you want to share.

• Offer your insight in a paragraph or two.

For example:

John Schwartz, the National Legal Correspondent for the New York Times, wrote an interesting story last week, Florida: Drug Laws Ruled Unconstitutional.

In the article, Schwartz writes: "…"

Judge Scriven's 43-page opinion is noteworthy for the following reasons.…

The Advantages of This Style of Blogging

Sharing and commenting on articles:

• Demonstrates to your clients, prospective clients, referral sources, industry leaders, bloggers, and reporters that you stay up to speed in your niche. You see things your competitors are not following or at least not blogging about.

• Enables you to learn about developments in the law as well as the industries and groups you serve.

• Engages the influencers and amplifiers — the 5% of people who influence 95%. You need to engage and build relationships with bloggers, reporters, association leaders and conference coordinators who your clients, prospective clients, and referral sources follow. Do this and you will be cited and quoted by influential bloggers and reporters. You will be speaking at conferences led by the association leaders you've engaged.

• Creates a strong online identity and reputation for you. The most important Google search for you, as a good lawyer, is not one based what you do and where you are located (e.g., Seattle real estate lawyer). Instead, the most important search is on your name. People turn to a trusted source for the name of lawyer. They'll then Google the lawyer's name. A search returning citations of what you have blogged, reporters quoting you, conferences where you have spoken, and people sharing your blog posts on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Facebook beats the heck out of results returning just your Web site and LinkedIn bio.

Don't Let Any "Experts" Dissuade You From Blogging

You can publish a law blog that enhances your reputation, grows your network, establishes you as a domain expert, and brings in quality clients without it consuming your life. Think quality over quantity, brevity, listening to relevant conversations, and sharing your insight and commentary.

Written by Kevin O'Keefe, CEO and Publisher of LexBlog, the leading provider of social media solutions and strategies to law firms.

How to Receive SmallLaw
Small firm, big dreams. Published first via email newsletter and later here on our blog, SmallLaw provides you with a mix of practical advice that you can use today, and insight about what it will take for small law firms like yours to thrive in the future. The SmallLaw newsletter is free so don't miss the next issue. Please subscribe now.

Topics: Law Firm Marketing/Publications/Web Sites | SmallLaw
 
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