How to get your employer to approve your marketing plan

Share

Back when I was selling a relatively expense marketing course, from time to time I would hear from lawyers asking for suggestions for getting their firm to pay for the course. “If nothing else works,” I said, “see if they will agree to reimburse you after you bring in a new case or client using what you learn. If not, negotiate. Maybe they’ll split the cost.”

No risk to them. How could they say no?

The other issue, then and still today, is that some firms aren’t always on board with some of their associates’ marketing activities. How do you convince them that what you want to do isn’t a waste of time or money and won’t embarrass them?

How do you get your employer or partner to approve your marketing plan?

I have a few suggestions.

First up, it’s often better to beg for forgiveness rather than ask for permission. Especially when what you’re doing is working and you’re bringing in new paying clients. Money is a salve for all wounds.

So do what you want to do (on your time and your dime) and show the firm that it’s working.

What if what you want to do will take a long time to bear fruit and you can’t hide it that long? What if it is difficult to tie what you’re doing to the results you’re getting?

In this case, instead of running at full speed, start with baby steps.

For example, I consulted with a lawyer recently about his firm’s website which is sadly in need of work. I suggested he create his own website. Start with one page, with just his bio, practice areas, contact information, and a link to the firm’s website.

Show this to your overseer and get them to okay it. It’s really nothing more than a business card and they can hardly argue that it is radical or harmful in any way.

Once you have buy in, you can (slowly?) add features to the site and see what they think.

You might add a contact form, for example, so visitors can email you directly from the site. Or a page with some details about your services. If anything isn’t approved, you can always modify it or remove it; you’ll stilll have the basic site and you can try again later.

By the way, every lawyer who works for a firm should have their own web presence. You want to brand your name online, not your firm’s. Even if you are a partner in your firm. In case you haven’t heard, partnerships do break up.

For other marketing ideas, try nibbling away at current protocol by suggesting variations on what is already approved, rather than suggesting something completely different. If you have a standard lunch presentation you do now, suggesting a different topic or different venue should be relatively easy to get approved. Suggesting advertising to a firm that has never advertised is a different story.

Another idea for convincing your firm to okay one of your ideas is to find other lawyers in your jurisdiction who are doing something similar. Use them as a case study to show your firm that what you propose isn’t unusual and, as they can see, it actually does work.

This can work especially well if the lawyer(s) you point to are direct competitors with your firm.

For a simple marketing plan that really works, get this

Share