7 business development tips every lawyer should know

7 business development tips every lawyer should know

As a lawyer, if you develop your skills in each of these areas, you should be well positioned to keep generating new work in these challenging times. Professional services business development (BD) consultant and coach, Kevin Wheeler, provides some key areas to focus your efforts:

 

Doing structured networking

 

Undertaking lots of networking among existing clients, potential clients and referrers is crucial to ensuring a flow of new business opportunities. There is no substitute to wearing out shoe leather, getting out and about talking to those who may give you work directly or who may recommend you to others. Face-to-face contact is the key to building trusting relationships with users/buyers of legal services by understanding their problems and suggesting solutions to these. Therefore, the more people you talk to, the more opportunities you will unearth.

However, your networking needs to be structured in order for it to be most effective. In other words, you need a strategy. This needs to be formulated on the basis of: ā€œWhat am I selling, to whom and why should they buy from me/my firm?ā€ Randomly bouncing around the marketplace handing out business cards to all and sundry is unlikely to be a fruitful approach to BD.

 

Having great interpersonal skills

 

We all remember those who we meet who create a great first impression with us: a firm handshake, a warm smile, an engaging personality and an interest in us are all factors which help to leave an abiding memory of someone who we enjoyed meeting. The same applies to BD. You only have one chance to make a good first impression and those that are good at BD usually have these great interpersonal skills, which leave those that they are meeting with a good positive first impression.

 

Setting up meetings

 

The only objective of networking should be to set up meetings with those who you think are in a position to buy your services. It is unlikely that you will be instructed until you have sat down and met with those who are in a position to give you work. All your marketing should be geared towards engineering opportunities to have meetings with decision-makers. Only by having formal meetings can you really understand an individualā€™s needs and put forward your proposition for addressing these, or in the case of the "", challenging the clientā€™s thinking by teaching them about an aspect of their business that they had not previously recognised/understood.

 

Offering a differentiated proposition

 

Most organisations and individuals already have lawyers that they instruct. If you are to be instructed, you need to displace the incumbent legal adviser. This means that you need to demonstrate benefits which the incumbent cannot match. Usually, this means having better expertise, delivering better service or providing better value for money, or any combination of these. If you cannot articulate a differentiated proposition to potential clients, they are unlikely to instruct you.

 

Acquiring industry knowledge

 

Building credibility with a potential client usually means demonstrating an understanding of their business and industry sector. Therefore, building and maintaining comprehensive industry knowledge is a key component of effective BD. This knowledge can be obtained by reading the industry press (often these days through daily online news updates), attending industry conferences and reading (or even commissioning yourself) research reports into industry trends and developments.

 

Becoming a thought leader

 

Through their deep understanding of an industry, great business developers use their insights to become thought leaders. In other words, they look into the future and predict issues that will impact on their clients and proactively present solutions to these issues, often before the client is even aware of the issue or the risk that it poses to their business.

 

Being opportunistic

 

Finally, although all good marketers and business developers will have a strategy and plan, a lot of opportunities come along that were not foreseen. Being opportunistic and taking advantage of these is another aspect of excellent BD. These triggers ā€“ a change of decision-maker, a change in client ownership, an acquisition or merger, a company crisis like a product recall, etc ā€“ all represent opportunities to approach the potential client with a view to displacing the incumbent lawyers to advise on that issue.

 

Further reading

 

Business development strategy

Drafting a business plan

Pitching for business

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About the author:

Kevin Wheeler has been advising professional services firms on all aspects of marketing and business development for more than 30 years. As a consultant he helps firms to manage and grow their key clients as well as to win new ones. As a Meyler Campbell qualified coach he works with partners and those approaching partnership to improve their BD skills.