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Most attorneys have recognized the value of holding seminars
at which they can make presentations on a variety of topics.
The problem with these seminars is that, more often than
not, the law firm is preaching to the choir. The attendees
at these seminars are usually often from existing clients
or who are already familiar with the firm. What law firms
need to do is expose their expertise and practice groups
to prospective, not just existing clients.
What is the way to accomplish this? By speaking at
public conferences and meetings produced and sponsored
by other organizations – at conferences, seminars
and forums held by independent event organizations,
associations, professional and industry trade groups,
and academic institutions and think tanks. There is
much evidence that speaking at public forums often results
in the attainment of business, by providing increased
awareness of the firm in general and specific practice
areas in particular, to an audience comprised of potential
clients. The key to the success of a speaker program
is to identify and secure speaking opportunities with
audiences of business executives (or whomever buys your
firm’s legal services), not just other attorneys.
Speaking opportunities for attorneys represent a strong
marketing, public relations, and business development
tool for the following reasons:
- Attendees get to learn about a firm’s or
a specific attorney’s expertise first-hand and
can interact directly with the attorney immediately
before or after the presentation. An attendee asking
for a business card can be the first step to attaining
a client assignment. Even having attorneys from other
law firms in attendance can have a benefit since some
of them could be potential partners in certain practice
areas.
- Gaining increased visibility in practice areas
that the firm has determined is in need of greater
exposure.
- The firm gains "advertising" by having
its name and the attorney speaker’s name published
in the agenda of thousands of brochures and promotional
announcements mailed or e-mailed by the event organizers.
What should a law firm be doing to get its attorneys
out on the speaking circuit? Take the following steps:
- Decide which practice area or areas the
firm should be targeting for increased visibility.
This can be an established practice where the firm
speaks from a position of strength and is known as
a “go-to” firm for a particular legal
area. Or it can be a practice that is just getting
off the ground or at an early stage in its development
and needs some fast exposure to let potential clients
know that they can get legal counsel in an area for
which they previously had to go elsewhere.
- Get the right speaker on board.
Proposed speakers should be experienced attorneys
who preferably are also experienced speakers. Make
sure that there are attorneys in the participating
practices committed to the idea of making public presentations.
Some will resist the idea of taking time away from
billable hours so make sure that you have the full
support of the attorneys that are being proposed as
speakers.
- Speak to the right audience. Thoroughly
research the events for which your firm’s attorneys
can be proposed as speakers, as solo presenters or
as panelists. There are so many events taking place
on so many topics, frequently simultaneously, that
in order to maximize the time and expense associated
with speaking, you’ll need to choose wisely.
Identify speaking engagements whose audience represents
the people your attorneys want to speak to, be they
in-house attorneys, senior executives, entrepreneurs,
or functional managers, such as human resource executives.
Decide if your firm should speak at only high-profile
events or if, for example, speaking to a local chapter
of a key industry association would also be of great
value. Recognize that your firm benefits from having
attorneys speak at a variety of events, not just law
conferences. For example, there are law topics in
virtually every major conference, from e-commerce
to intellectual property to employment issues to corporate
finance. Look for events held by organizations where
there isn’t necessarily a strong relationship
already established with your firm; organizations
that know your firm and have close ties to some of
your attorneys are likely to directly invite them
anyway. Seek out speaking opportunities with event
organizers that would be open to having your firm
submit speaker proposals, such as independent conference
firms or trade show companies and industry associations.
- Develop a proactive speaker placement program.
It’s fine to evaluate unsolicited speaking
opportunities, but having someone dedicated to the
task who will aggressively identify opportunities,
develop relationships with event organizers and submit
speaker proposals, should lead to an increase in the
frequency of speaking engagements and thus increased
visibility for both the attorneys participating in
the program and the firm as a whole. Remember that
when done correctly, this is a time-intensive activity.
- Decide on the geographic area to target
for speaking engagements – locally
or regionally in the cities in which your firm has
offices and/or clients, or nationally or even internationally.
- Create high-impact presentations.
Audiences want to acquire actionable information they
can take back to their companies – “how-to”
or legal trends or legislative updates. They don’t
ever want to hear that your firm is the leading firm
in this or that subject area. A solid, informative
presentation will create instant credibility and obviate
the need for a “sales pitch.” A presentation
that turns out to be a sales pitch represents the
kiss of death and will ensure low evaluations by the
audience and a one-way ticket home from the conference
organizer. Create a presentation that offers information
that adds value and is not the same run-of-the mill
talk that is often given on that particular subject.
Make your presentation stand out.
- Learn the process for submitting a speaker
proposal to the event organizer – first
identify the program organizer and then follow carefully
the established format for writing a presentation
abstract. Submit a summary of the required length,
submit bios and attorney expertise, including previous
speaking experience and, of course, always meet proposal
deadline. Make sure you tailor the abstract and the
bio to each speaking opportunity and the audience
that will hear the presentation, rather than pitch
the same proposal to all targeted events.
- Follow up continuously and persistently
with the event organizer to gain mindshare
and have your firm stay above the noise, since you
will often be competing with other law firms for the
same speaking slot. By staying in touch with the program
organizer you’ll increase your chances of being
selected to speak.
Where are the best places for a firm to look for speaking
opportunities for its attorneys?
National events: there are hundreds of major conferences
held across the country on dozens of subjects from finance
and securities, technology, intellectual property and
mergers and acquisitions to labor and employment, tax,
patent law, biotechnology, health care, and real estate.
These are held by associations and independent conference
organizations and are marketed to potential attendees
nationally. Speaking opportunities can come from events
in different forms, from stand-alone conferences to
trade show conferences to small forums with specialized,
targeted audiences to college and university-sponsored
events. Events that award CLEs held by bar associations
and private CLE companies also provide opportunities
when it makes sense to speak to audiences of both inside
and outside counsel.
Local and regional events: these can
be local or regional chapters of associations or business
groups. Or they can be one-day workshops held by independent
event organizers.
International events: attending conferences
is just as popular a vehicle for networking and education
in Canada, Europe, Asia, Latin and South America, and
the Middle East, as they are in the U.S. So if your
firm is looking to expand its client base overseas,
speaking at conferences is an excellent way to gain
increased exposure.
By developing an effective speaker placement program
you will have taken a big step in meeting your firm’s
business development, marketing and public relations
objectives.
Steve
Markman is President of Markman Speaker Management,
(MSM) a Needham, Mass.-based speaker placement firm
established in 1994. MSM is used by corporate executives
and professional service firms from numerous fields,
including law, technology, consulting, healthcare, marketing,
consumer goods, and financial services. Steve writes
and lectures frequently on the subject of obtaining
speaking engagements for use as a business development,
marketing and public relations tool. Mr. Markman has
20 years of experience in the speaker industry. Prior
to launching MSM, Steve headed the conference divisions
of COMDEX, The Conference Board, and Giga Information
Group.
To learn more about Steve and MSM, visit www.markmanspeaker.com.
He can be reached at (781) 444-7500 or by e-mail at:
smarkman@markmanspeaker.com
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