Posted by Peter
on June 27, 2007
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Saw this nugget about La Cocina in San Franciso…a sort of shared-space incubator for food entrepreneurs in S.F.
Known as a “kitchen incubator,” La Cocina (la-koh-SEE-nuh) is a shared-use space created two years ago to provide a platform for women entrepreneurs without assets. Offering a low hourly rate for access to 2,200 square feet of restaurant-quality kitchen space, the nonprofit La Cocina also provides training from high-profile mentors and technical assistance on creating business plans and building marketing programs.
I personally like the low budget, shared space for the lawyer entrepreneur. I’m leaning towards a transiton to home office when our current lease ends but I’d be open to sharing a small space with a bunch of lawyers to keep costs down, trade referrals, help each other practice together. Then just have conference room space for client meetings as needed.

Posted by Peter
on June 20, 2007
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As ISBA loves to say. I have my General Practice, Solo and Small Firm and Law Office Management and Economics Section Council meetings…now maybe I’ll really learn about some of this practice management stuff! I know Law Office Management and Economics is sponsoring a Friday breakfast seminar:
Friday, June 22
Breakfast Symposium 7:30-9:30 a.m. Marketing on a Shoestring: How to Make More Money by Bringing in and Keeping Paying Clients Sponsored by ISBA Standing Committee on Law Office Management & Economics Enjoy breakfast and hear from the “experts”
I’ll be at the opening reception Thursday night…see you there hopefully!

Posted by Peter
on June 20, 2007
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Saw this in the Law Bulletin classifieds:
Divorce Practice for Sale
Great opportunity for young lawyer! Loop family law firm – 38 year client base, 350 files/yr., gross $1.2 million, 3-4 associates. Ready to retire will stay on as consultant. Serious inquiries only. Asking $1.4 million. Call XXX.
Anyone consider these options? I suspect we’ll be seeing more and more of these offers since Rule 1.17 got amended along with Baby Boomers retiring. Anyone have an opinion on the viability of buying a practice to build your practice?
In 2003 I was faced with a related dilemma. Right out of law school I took a job with a family friend who was planning his retirement and our expectation was that after a year or so we’d form an entity and agree to some buyout provisions. This was before 1.17 got amended so he could NOT flat-out sell his practice like he could now. So we both ran the numbers and had our respective accountants value the practice…we didn’t agree and thus I’m “Solo in Chicago” instead of in that partnership. He was asking far less than $1.4 million.
My general thinking is that unless it’s a practice with heavy repeating entity representation it’s not worth it to pay a premium for a law practice. What’s the value of all these files of people who got divorced once? That’s a one-time legal service. Conversely I think there is some decent value in say 50 suburban municipality clients. It’s not quite this black or white but I think this dichotomy should underlay one’s thinking. Contact me if you face this decision…I still have a lot of the “valuation modeling” that the accountants did.

Posted by Peter
on June 20, 2007
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MyShingle had another take on lawyers writing articles for marketing purposes.

Posted by Peter
on June 20, 2007
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Saw a useful discussion between posts here (Build a Solo Practice, LLC) and here (Lawyer Profit Systems) about how to handle fees with initial consultations. I think they’re both right…essentially I think it turns on experience and if you’re not charging what might that “free” time be used for in the alternative.
I feel as if I’m right on the fence. I’m in practice for 4.5 years now…done mostly free consultations up to this point. I think for some “preferred” referral sources (i.e. people who are sending us a ton of business) I’ll keep doing free 30 minute referrals…others I’m going to scale back on and start charging. Obvious exceptions are some of the contingent fee areas that I have no experience with but I think free initial consultations are common.
Mike Sherman over at Lawyer Profit Systems say always charge and once your book of business is pretty full I think he’s right. Then if you don’t charge you’re essentially throwing away whatever your hourly rate is for this free consultation.

Posted by Peter
on June 19, 2007
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(from Alabama I think)…http://www.lawforprofit.com/. Mike’s a regular commenter in this space.

Posted by Peter
on June 19, 2007
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Saw this little nugget from one of the eZines that I get…
Publish your articles at no cost on the Internet.
Did you know there are literally dozens of sites online that will allow you to submit your full article including your bio and a link back to your website into their searchable database, at no charge?
Top search engines regularly visit these websites and collect all the new information articles so they can distribute them to the tens of thousands of people every day who request information on various topics.
Stephen Fairley, M.A., RCC 888-588-5891
President & Master Business Coach 480-659-9700
Today’s Leadership Coaching, Inc
http://www.YourPracticeMadePerfect.com
I’d concur with this advice…it’s essentially another good reason to have a blog: search engine optimization.
Regarding writing articles, I like to write really more than practice law…one of these days I’ll have my novel published and then no more trips to court (but that’s another story). But my point, I’ve seen a great return from publishing articles in very reputable publications and then sending copies out to referral sources. I wrote what I thought was a pretty good piece on residential real estate early this spring and then sent out copies to maybe 50-100 referral sources. It’s brought in great amounts of real estate business. Our real estate practice is probably 300% – 400% larger than the last two years.

Posted by Peter
on June 19, 2007
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Interesting announcement from LexisNexis Martindale-Hubbell here about new television advertising options pitched to law firms.
LexisNexis Martindale-Hubbell, which publishes a directory of lawyers and their credentials, announced a deal in late May to work with Spot Runner, an online service that helps small businesses advertise on television. Spot Runner, which is based in Los Angeles, will help law firms produce inexpensive television commercials that can run in local markets…While the commercials in Spot Runner’s general catalog can be purchased and personalized for as little as $499, packaged advertising campaigns for Martindale-Hubbell’s firms will start from $10,000 to $50,000, including air time.

Posted by Peter
on June 18, 2007
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Freivogel on Conflicts: A guide to conflicts of interest for lawyers.

Posted by Peter
on June 18, 2007
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Well add me to the list of people who’ve blogged about Avvo.com. Class-action suit filed against them Thursday in Seattle.
My $.02 are, is Avvo worse than all these other lawyer ratings bodies that exist? Avvo’s ratings are based on your experience and whether or not you’ve had any ethics violations. My rating was a 5.7 out of 10 because I’ve had zero ethics complaints filed against me but my experience is only 5 years. The ratings are based on factual data…but how useful is experience and ethics to evaluating whether or not a lawyer is skilled in “x” subject area to handle your specific case?
It seems to me this IS an objective criteria although borderline useless. Is it worse than Leading Lawyers where essentially you’re rewarded for providing them referrals to additional customers er ah lawyers and then you get rewarded by being listed as a Leading Lawyer in a particular subject matter?
