Meet The Rainmaker

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Meet The Rainmaker - Anna M. Maiuri
Presented by the Women Rainmakers
March 2005

NAME: Anna M. Maiuri
FIRM: Miller, Canfield, Paddock and Stone, PLC
ADDRESS: 840 West Long Lake, Suite 200, Troy, MI 48098
PHONE: (248) 267-3260
E-MAIL: maiuri@millercanfield.com
PRACTICE AREA: Environmental Law

Interviewed By: Marisa Davies
Nominated By: Brandy Mathie

Most Successful/Favorite Rainmaking tip:

Know your target. Get educated not only with respect to the prospect’s business but with the prospect’s personality. Observe and listen to the prospect’s needs. Pay attention to body language. Be attentive and responsive. Remember, establishing a reporte of trust and respect is vital to securing the personal relationship, which virtually always leads to the professional relationship.

Biggest influence on career/best career advice:

When I was choosing a career path, I was leery about joining a large firm. I was concerned about the demands, getting lost in a sea of associates, and not being afforded the opportunity to do meaningful work for several years. When I received my job offer from Miller Canfield (my current firm of 340 lawyers), an attorney friend told me, “you can always go down (to a smaller firm), but you can’t always go up. Take the job.” I did and it was the best choice I could have made. I consider myself extremely fortunate to be a member of this Firm and its fine attorneys and staff. Miller Canfield has been serving the public for over 150 years. Not many institutions can say they have been around that long.

Percentage of time devoted to marketing:

No idea. Marketing is a constant and never-ending job. I do it in one form or another every day.
Whether I am updating my biography, giving a seminar on brownfield redevelopment or serving on a non-profit Board of Directors, each activity serves as a marketing opportunity to showcase my expertise as well as that of my Firm.

Proudest accomplishment:

To date, serving in various leadership capacities at Miller Canfield and in the community. Most importantly, spearheading a Firm initiative called the Women of Miller Canfield (WOMC). All our women attorneys meet quarterly to share marketing ideas and develop strategies for increasing our client base, particularly with women clients. We have discovered that many of our women clients prefer more unconventional practice development activities, such as visiting a museum exhibit or taking a private cooking class. Because of the collective efforts of our women partners and associates, our events have been quite successful and are beginning to create quite a buzz with our female clients. Because the events involve both partners and associates, they also serve as a good training exercise in nurturing client relationships and promoting mentoring.

Knowing what you know now, if you were starting out as a lawyer today, what would you do differently?

I would get more business and real estate experience. I would expand my practice area to have a more general business transactional practice.

Tell me about one rainmaking strategy or tactic that you initially thought would work, but it failed. Why did it fail?

Joining certain organizations for the purpose of networking when the activity was just not bearing any fruit. I just stayed involved too long. It is important to know when to cut your losses and move on to other things.

Tell me about one rainmaking strategy or tactic that you initially thought would fail, but it was a great success. Why was it successful?

Attending targeted industry group meetings, such as the Original Equipment Suppliers Association or Oakland County, Michigan’s Automation Alley. I thought I would get lost in the crowd of industry specialists but found that as long as I was genuinely interested in the group’s purpose, I could connect with its members as well as successfully market and meet those individual’s who could help me find potential clients.

What has been your greatest frustration about trying to get new business or new clients?

That it is a never-ending job that requires the three Ps--planning, patience and perseverance.

If you were mentoring a young woman lawyer, what advice would you give her regarding rainmaking?

Find what you like to do and integrate it into your marketing goals. If you like to research and write, write articles in your field and publish them. If you like to do public speaking, find a forum to do seminars in your practice area. If you like what you are doing, you will automatically be more successful doing it. In addition, do an individual practice development plan and reevaluate it every year.

Would you say you ever had a mentor that made a genuine difference in how your career turned out? If yes, please describe.

I have not had a single dedicated mentor but instead several mentors. Some have helped refine my technical skills, others have helped me to learn marketing, and still others have enlightened me on workplace policies and politics. I gravitate to those who I believe are particularly skilled in a specific area and then observe and ask them for advice on how to get better.

Think about when you started out as a lawyer. Now think about the new female lawyers just starting out. What is different now compared to when you started?

I believe that today’s new female lawyers are more polished, more confident and seem to know what they want. Many of the new lawyers have outlined a clear career path and have a better understanding of how to get to their goals than I did when I started out.

How would you like others to describe you:

Energetic
Intuitive
Good Listener
Problem Solver/Change Agent
Loyal/Dedicated
Sometimes Impatient

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ABA Women Rainmakers is a national forum enabling women to network and develop business opportunities. By understanding how to develop business, women can exert greater control over their careers and integrate their personal lives successfully with the practice of law. For more information on LPM Women Rainmakers, visit www.womenrainmakers.org.