Lawyers with blogs aren’t necessarily bloggers

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One of the best ways to show prospective clients and referral sources what you can do to help them and the people they know is to post high quality information on your website. Whether that information comes in the form of articles, blog posts, videos, or anything else isn’t that important. It’s also unimportant whether you post that information on a static website or a blog.

If you post your content on a blog, that doesn’t make you a blogger. A blog is merely a convenient format for displaying content to visitors in a way that is accessible and search engine friendly.

Blogging is often said to be more than just writing and posting content. We are told that there is a distinct social aspect to blogging, involving things like engaging visitors through comments, interviewing subject matter experts, and conversing with other bloggers. But it appears that the importance of these activities may be overstated.

I read a post this morning which asked whether introverts can be successful bloggers. The author cites Pete Cashmore (Mashable), Guy Kawasaki, Brian Clark (Coppyblogger), and Darren Rowse (Problogger.net), four successful bloggers and self-confessed introverts, in support of his position that yes, introverts can be successful bloggers. In fact, these four individuals have all built big businesses through blogging.

I noted recently that a preponderance of attorneys are introverts. I am, too. I have a successful business that is built on a framework of blogging. While I don’t ignore the social aspects of the job, my primary focus is on creating and delivering content.

Am I a blogger? Perhaps. I don’t know. I really don’t care. What’s important is I don’t let my introversion stop me from leveraging the power of the Internet, and neither should you.

Quality content attracts traffic via search engines and social sharing (done by your visitors). That content then educates visitors about their legal issues and the possible solutions. In so doing, it shows those visitors how you can help them and demonstrates your skills and experience. It helps visitors get to know, like, and trust you, and prompts them to hire you or inquire about doing so. If they’re not ready to hire you immediately, your content can prompt them to join your email list so you can stay in touch with them until they are ready to take the next step.

If you want to add more of the social elements to the mix, that’s fine. It can help. And if you’re an extrovert, you’ll be naturally inclined to do so. But if you are an introvert, you can dabble with the social aspects, as I do, or ignore them completely.

You don’t have to be an extrovert to have a blog and lawyers with blogs aren’t necessarily bloggers.

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Do prospective clients read lawyers’ blogs?

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Of course they do.

They may not know that your web site is a blog or that what you wrote is a blog post. They may not know what RSS is or care about Google Reader’s impending demise. But when they have questions, they go searching for answers and when they find your blog post via Uncle Google or Auntie Facebook, they read it. If you answer their question, they’ll go read more of your content and about what you have to offer.

When they’re ready, they’ll call.

Prospective clients have questions. About their rights, about the law, about their options. They know how to use a search engine to find restaurant reviews and oil change coupons and movie times and they know how to use it to find answers to legal questions.

Give them something to find.

Answer their questions. Tell them about the law and their options. Tell them about other people like them who had the same problem and how it got resolved. You know what they want to know. What do prospects and new clients ask you when you speak to them? Write about that.

It’s true, they may never before had any interest in reading anything you wrote, and they may never again. But when they have a legal problem and they want a solution, they will read everything you have to say on the subject.

So yes, prospective clients read blogs. So do your existing clients, former clients, and others who may not need your services but know people who do. So if you don’t have a blog, now you know why you need one. And if you do, you know why you need to keep writing.

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