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It takes time to develop legal business, and the most significant results from any workshop or coaching program will be seen weeks or months after the event. Here are a few examples that occurred faster, within our eight week coaching programs. Each represents a return on investment many times the initial cost. For more examples, and for references:

 
 

The free meeting that led to a seven figure litigation

A lawyer attended one of our public workshops, and decided he should do more to increase the satisfaction of one of his biggest clients. He reviewed a summary of best practices from other law firms (in The LegalBizDev Desk Reference), and decided to offer a free meeting, to learn more about their business challenges. When he called the client to offer the meeting, the first reaction was skepticism. ("This meeting will be free? You mean you won't charge for the time? Will you bill me for preparing for the meeting? How about following up?") When the client was finally convinced that his lawyer was genuinely offering to do something for free, he became quite enthusiastic, and provided a list of additional people to invite. The lawyer from our workshop called these new contacts, and got chatting with one person who said "By the way, did you know that we are about to assign a significant litigation to one of your competitors?" "No, I didn't," the lawyer replied. "Why don't I bring over one of our litigators this afternoon to see if we can help." He did, and his firm got the assignment before he even held the free meeting. Clearly, this new business resulted from a proven record of legal excellence, a strong existing relationship, timing and luck. But if this lawyer had not offered the meeting, he would not have gotten lucky.

 
 

An associate's weekly reports that produced substantial new business

In his first meeting with our coach, one lawyer reported that he worked for a large insurance company that loved him and had plenty of additional work, but the client felt that our lawyer was stretched too thin and too busy to handle anything new. As we talked more, it became clear that the lawyer was indeed juggling a number of clients and matters, and did not always return phone calls or handle issues as quickly as this large client preferred. We discussed how to change the reality and the perception, and decided to increase the visibility of a senior associate on the team. This particular associate was not known for her interpersonal skills, but was loved by the client for her competence and reliability. She met every client need the instant it arose. The senior lawyer decided to institute weekly reports to this client, and put the associate in charge. This accomplished two things at once: it increased the client's satisfaction with the handling of current matters, and it reduced the demands on the senior lawyer's time by strengthening the relationship between the client and the associate. Within a few weeks, the client had concluded that he could offer more work to this firm after all, and assigned new matters with fees in the high six figures.

 
 

The third time was the charm

When one lawyer started talking to us about the best way to find new clients, we reviewed The LegalBizDev Desk Reference section entitled "How to find new clients, step by step." After we discussed one of the first steps -- "Set up meetings with people you already know" - we compiled a list of people he had lost touch with. One was a former client, now inside counsel at a Fortune 100 firm, and someone whom he felt comfortable calling to say hello. Our lawyer was enthusiastic about picking up the phone for the first call, but ended up leaving a voice mail. He did not get a call back, so a few weeks later, he tried again. This resulted in another voice mail, then silence. At this point, the lawyer's enthusiasm for this particular follow-up had declined. When the coach urged persistence, the lawyer agreed to one last try. This time the old friend picked up the phone, and said "I was really glad to get your messages. We have a new matter coming up, and you'd be perfect for it. Will you be in California in the next few weeks? I'd like you to come to my office to talk about it." The lawyer went to California, and got the business. His persistence had paid off.

 
 

The value of passing someone in the hall

Taking clients to lunch is hardly a novel technique, but that does not make it any less powerful. When we coach lawyers, we often suggest scheduling a few lunches that seem overdue, and plan the best way to maximize results. In one case, a client had just moved to a new office. Since the lawyer had worked with many managers at that company, we urged him to arrange a lunch near the new office, and combine it with a visit. The lunch was a huge success, because it focused on some client satisfaction questions from our Desk Reference and enabled the client to address a new matter within their existing retainer. When they went back to the client's office afterwards, they passed a manager in the hall who said to the lawyer: "I've been meaning to call you. I have several new files stacked up in my office, but I just haven't had time to get to them." This chance meeting put the matters "top of mind" and within a few days, the lawyer was working on the files. This might have happened at a later date if the lawyer had not walked the halls. But the lawyer need the work right away, and the office visit made that happen.

 
 

What these success stories have in common

There was nothing magical or difficult about any of these activities. The hard part was identifying the best use of time, and then actually following up. Our materials and processes are designed to help each lawyer find their own individual "low hanging fruit," the cases where follow-up is likely to pay off most quickly. The lawyers we coach work on self-selected activities that they are comfortable with, within a weekly time commitment that they agree to, and with a coach who helps assure that business development stays near the top of their very long lists.

For more success stories or for references: