2009 Goals


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4 Final Thoughts for 2009

Posted by Peter on December 31, 2009
Arbitration, billing, law firm management, marketing / 1 Comment

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Well, there’s about 8 hours left in 2009 as I jot down a few thoughts here in the Central Standard time zone. Can I say that New Years Eve is a non-event for me…not sure why although it may have to do with the fact I’m more of an early morning person than a late night person so the concept of staying up past midnight to see fireworks or some lighted ball dropping isn’t quite the cat’s meow for me. But the one thing I do enjoy about the transition from year-to-year is the opportunity to reflect on the last year and plan ahead to the next year.

Here are 4 Final Thoughts for 2009 from one Solo (attorney) In Chicago

Steady Income Sources are Nice and/or Cash Flow is King. I’d guess that like with me, this is a huge struggle for many solos. I think a lot of it stems from the fact that sole practitioners tend to be more dependent on individual clients than larger law firms. And if these individuals are anything like some of my clients they’re not always rolling-in-the-dough which equals paying their lawyers in dribs and drabs. It’s hard to lawyer like that and it’s hard to live with that. Can you find some steady sources of income to create an “income floor” that you can count on each month? Over the last 6 months or so the combination of my work as part of the Cook County Domestic Relations Division Referral Program (run through the domestic relations division of the Circuit Court of Cook County per rule 13.8b) and as an arbitrator through Cook County’s mandatory arbitration program have allowed me to create more a floor under my income. Not huge dollars but at least I have knowledge at the start of each month I can count on say $1,500 of income that isn’t dependent on a client’s payment that month. Might there be some court-appointed options that you can plug into? Or is there a way you can gain some business or entity clientele with more repeat business to supplement your individual clients?

Marketing/Selling is Key. Here’s a fact they don’t teach ya in law school:  The lawyers who make the most money aren’t the best legal practitioners rather the lawyers who make the most money are the best salespeople and marketers. This fact is of the utmost importance if you’re starting/building a law firm. I’m just about at a point where I’ve located the marketing sweet spot in terms of really getting the phone ringing regularly with new client inquiries. The big 3 marketing channels that work for me are:  1) Current/former clients (reached via personal meetings/contacts, annual mailing, and monthly Constant Contact e-mail newsletter); 2) Other professionals (reached in many ways like category #1 plus memberships in local Rotary and LeTip chapters); 3) Bar Association referral services. For me categories #1 & #2 are where the action is BIG TIME. Other areas I’m pondering are better Internet-based ads and targeting the evangelical Christian community which I’m active in better. I’d hope to maybe do an interview with some small firm attorneys and their Google AdWords experience. I see them up on this blog and they just seem so generic that I can’t imagine why/how they’d be effective plus I’ve heard of some bad experiences…I suppose it’s all about the correct keywords, no?

Under-Billing:  A Problem with Solutions. This is becoming less of a problem for me as my self-confidence grows, I see the quality of work I do vis-a-vis other attorneys (and vis-a-vis their billing rates), and I do better with regards to items 1 & 2 above…in other words these things are all interrelated. Lawyers under-bill because they might not think they’re very good lawyers but I’m starting to see I am a pretty good lawyer. And as I build some steady income sources and effectively open several effective marketing channels I’m not as worried about losing that 1 client if I quote too high of a fee because there will be others who will happily compensate me for the quality of work that I do.

Use Friendly But Aggressive Billing Communication. I like where I am right now with regards to our billing communication and follow-up. And I don’t say that theoretically, I say it meaning we’re getting paid well and our receivables are reasonably low. What’s working for us? It’s one non-lawyer’s job to mail our bills our each month and to follow-up with clients at specific time increments if there has not been payment. And this isn’t some a-hole collection agency (I’ve sworn off of them) rather it’s a friendly member of our staff making a reminder call. Full and accurate communication in your billing is key too…the description on your bills is as important as any of your in-court legal writing and probably more. I bet most clients are reading your bills more closely than a lot of judges are reading your pleadings. Eventually you must withdraw and bring your fee petition if there’s non-compliance. I haven’t crossed the sue-my-ex-clients bridge yet, BUT, if you’re in area like under the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act where you can bring a simple fee petition as a pleading like anything else in the case you’ve got to do it. Clients seem to act if you’ve got a judgment against them and a wage deduction’s comin’.

SEE YOU BACK HERE NEXT YEAR!

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Evaluating My Progress Towards 2009 Goals w/ a Look Ahead

Posted by Peter on July 10, 2009
blogging, entrepreneurship, finance, law firm management / 3 Comments

Well a belated happy 4th of July and hope you didn’t get too wet at your local parade and fireworks display. It was cold and rainy in Chicago but the morning and the evening were fine so no great impact on my plans. Yet beyond celebrating the signing of our Declaration of Independence and John Cabot’s discovery of our nation, the 4th also serves as a handy half-way point for the year so I thought I’d gauge my progress…

2009 Business Goals & Plans

1.  Generate an average of $6,000 gross income per month and $72,000 for the year, specifically from lawyering revenue only.

Analysis: I’m going to be just beneath this goal at the halfway point of ’09. I was at just over $30k through May but I know that June’s income wasn’t great. I’m still very dissatisfied with the inconsistency of my income month-to-month. Simply for living and planning purposes I’d like to just churn-out month after month of $6k to $8k sort of months rather than some big months and then a $1,500 type month. Some things I’ve been doing to generate more business were to put in an application with the CBA’s Domestic Relations Referral Service, I’m set to attend a seminar in August to get on the Cook County Arbitrators list of panelists, and I joined a weekly LeTip group. Three marketing initiatives for the rest of ’09:  experiment with Google Adwords, Website redesign, and really reachout to other attorneys to make more professional referral relationships. If there’s one thing this blog has done is it has helped me meet many lawyers and I’m sure some of them need a family law referral source so I need to become that person.

Grade: B.

2. Become a Cook County Circuit Court Child’s Representative.

Analysis: I do have a very vibrant domestic relations practice involving many, many child custody matters and I do surely seek out continuing legal education seminars covering this subject. I really need to figure out if this or becoming a certified collaborative attorney is the better use of my time and resources. I need more information for 1-2 real seasoned family law practitioners.

Grade: C.

3. Complete a law review style article.

Analysis: Minimal progress. I want to get a couple scholarly articles under my belt because I really do enjoy writing but I’d also like to bolster my resume for law school teaching purposes.

Grade: F.

4. Create both law firm and blogging business plans.

Analysis: Very little progress on this front sad to say.

Grade: F.

5. Blogging consistency and attend Chicago Bloggers Meetup Group monthly.

Analysis: Primarily the issue here is simply viewing blogging as a very serious business endeavor that’s very much about of my future career and income generating plans. I’ve made around 90 postings here this year and about 70 over at ClosingChicagorealestate.com…not too shabby I’d say. Plus the traffic has really been solid as we’ve solidified things since the transfer over to WordPress. I’m just about halfway through Yaro Starak’s BlogMastermind program and expecting that to be a great guide as I work through more of the marketing portions of the program.

Grade: B.

6. Coaching and Mentoring and Getting Mentored.

Analysis: I’d like to have at least three mentors in my life:  one for lawyering, one for business consulting, & one for my Christian faith. Unfortunately I only have the lawyer mentor in place currently. The one I’m frustrated about is the business mentor/coach…I’m not sure where to turn on that front. There are a lot of business coaches out there but they cost $500 per hour. I may have to seek this out through a local group like Rotary or a Chamber of Commerce. I did get my first contact to act as a mentor through the ISBA’s MentorCenter so I was happy about that…I think that’s the ideal, having both sides of the mentor/mentee relationships in your life. And I am making some progress on the blog mentor program that I bought in early ’08 so that’s good.

Grade: C.


The Road Ahead…

Some fairly random things I’m thinking about beyond the above:

  • Improve my Website and really make it a business generator and tie in with online ads…take advantage of decent traffic stemming from my blog profile on the Web.
  • Create a firm overview publication with fee listing as part of the package that clients see prior to our initial meetings.
  • Market hard to other lawyers I meet here to turn them into referral sources and vice versa.
  • Consider a firm merger. I want to play bigger and take on bigger cases and I think great teamwork and synergy might be the answer…any takers?

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