Put Your Creativity to Work (Yes, You)

Put Your Creativity to Work  (Yes, You)

The legal industry is changing. In order to thrive in the marketplace, lawyers need to tap into their creative side in order to stand out. My latest article, published by Attorney at Work today, explains the importance of creativity in the legal industry and how lawyers can put their creativity into practice. The full text can be read below:

Almost everyone accepts that we are in a time of radical change in the legal industry. Demand for legal services is flat. Entrepreneurs are finding ways to leverage technology to pick away at work — from discovery to estate planning — that once was the exclusive domain of the traditional lawyer. And what are most lawyers and law firms doing to adapt? Very little. They’re playing it safe, hunkering down and waiting to see how things “shake out.”

Bad Growth: Destructive to Your Law Practice

Bad Growth: Destructive to Your Law Practice

Every successful law firm strives for growth. But growth – unbridled – can be dangerous. Our article “Bad Growth: Destructive to Your Law Practice,” published today by Attorney at Work, covers a different kind of growth: bad growth. Read our article to learn how to distinguish good growth from bad growth, and ensure your firm is on the path to productivity and profitability. You can also read the full text here:

The focus of “One of a Kind” has been on growth. Growth that’s good. The steps and strategies identified in prior posts — establishing a niche expertise, a compelling personal brand and a robust content marketing strategy — will lead to more clients, more revenue, more staff and more opportunities. Exciting stuff.

But growth — unbridled — can be dangerous. Things can get out of control. If you’re not careful, your practice can get on a “bad growth” path that is, at best, counterproductive and, at worst, personally and professionally destructive.

Substance and Form: The Elements of a Lawyer Brand

Substance and Form: The Elements of a Lawyer Brand

The third article in the “One of a Kind” series I am writing for Attorney At Work was published today. It focuses on the importance of building a personal brand in order to build a profitable practice. The article discusses the distinction between personal “reputation” and personal “brand,” and discusses why personal branding is important and how to do it. Please check it out if you get a chance. You can also read the full text below:

Branding. It’s one of the most overworked and overanalyzed topics in the marketplace of ideas. Paradoxically, or perhaps consequently, it’s also one of the most misunderstood. This misunderstanding isn’t a definitional one. There’s a general consensus that a brand “is the sum of what others think of you” or something similar.

But there are two pertinent, preliminary questions beyond “what is branding?” worthy of exploration: Why is it important? And how is it done?

The Expertise Effect

The Expertise Effect

The second article in the “One of a Kind” series Jay Harrington is writing for Attorney At Work was published today. It focuses on the importance of building, maintaining, and promoting one’s expertise in a narrow, discreet practice or industry in order to establish an interesting and profitable legal practice. Check it out if you get a chance or read the full article below:

There are countless ways lawyers can and do compete with one another for work. We have price — what work costs; process — how work is performed; personality — the lawyer’s and her firm’s; place — one’s geographic location; principles — “honesty,” “integrity,” “work ethic.” Those and countless others that don’t start with “p” are all characteristics that lawyers emphasize in an effort to differentiate themselves.

But these are not the fields on which you want to play. Expertise, narrowly defined, is what good clients crave and are willing to pay a premium for. Unlevel the playing field. Become an expert.

17 Things I Wish I Knew as a First-Year Associate

17 Things I Wish I Knew as a First-Year Associate

A family friend will be graduating from law school this spring and starting his career at a large law firm next fall. Asked to provide some advice, I started compiling tips and recommendations — things to do and not to do. As I considered my own experiences as both a new and senior lawyer, I quickly formulated a list that required a scroll rather than a Post-it and subsequently decided to write an article on the things I wish I knew as a first year associate.

Attorney at Work, a website that focuses on legal marketing, business development and practice management tips for lawyers and legal marketing professionals, recently published the article. The full text can be read below:

A family friend will be graduating from law school this spring and starting his career at a large law firm next fall. Asked to provide some advice, I started compiling tips and recommendations — things to do and not to do. As I considered my own experiences as a first-year associate at a big firm, and subsequent experiences as a more senior attorney, I quickly formulated a list that required a scroll rather than a Post-it.

There are so many things not taught in law school that are only learned by young lawyers through the hard-knocks school. These tips are intended to help young lawyers develop the attribute that is the single-most important building block for future marketing and business development efforts — namely, becoming an excellent attorney.