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Firm marketing inspires email vitriol

10 August 2009 | by The New Lawyer Print this article Comments Share this article
Letter to the editor

RE: Firms weigh up name changes. See original article here.


I am writing in reference to your recent story: 'Firms weigh up name changes' on 6th Aug 2009.

The article quotes a Mr. Boundy who states that:

“If partners understand the importance of a short, catchy name, its clear they are more marketing orientated and therefore more aggressive marketers overall, so odds are the firm will do better in the long run,” said Boundy.

I think Mr. Boundy has confused marketing with promotion. There is no evidence that firms who are more marketing orientated and aggressive (akin to a promotion orientation) will perform better. Research shows that it is indeed a market orientation (which is a firm culture and set of behaviours) that has a significant impact on law firm performance but this has next to nothing to do with external promotion or aggressive marketing.

Law firms are already grappling with the concept of marketing and how it applies to law firms and comments such as those by Mr. Boundy are sending the state of law firm marketing back to 1976 (Bates vs State Bar of Arizona) when it was all about promotion.

For law firms to truly benefit from marketing they must embrace the concept on a strategic level, whereby listening to clients and being innovative is at the heart of a firm’s strategy. Transplanting the ideas of consumer goods marketing to law firms is nothing but a recipe for disaster.

Robert Sawhney
Managing Director
SRC Associates Ltd
Hong Kong

 

RESPONSE FROM BRUCE BOUNDY
Dear Editor
Your respondent clearly has little or no understanding of the power or value of marketing. In fact “promotion” or “sales promotion” are actually subsets of the marketing process not a separate discipline. Note that firms whose primary services are to individuals do tend to benefit more from broader based marketing activities (whether aggressive or otherwise).

We have numerous case studies of Australian law firms who have grown their businesses significantly from adopting this strategy.

As a humble marketer I am not sure of the relevance of quoting a 33-year-old US case. Once again your respondent is displaying their ignorance by attempting to relate case law to the ability of marketing to grow a law firm’s business.

We must also always have a healthy level of cynicism for people who make the statement “Research shows” without ever actually quoting any valid source for such a statement.

And our final coup de grace lies in our response to the statement that by “transplanting consumer goods marketing to law firms is nothing but a recipe for disaster”.

This is errant nonsense. The ability to understand buyer psychology when marketing to a sophisticated audience is to attain one of the highest levels of competency in the marketing discipline.

To attempt to refute this skill being transferable to the legal industry is absurd.
 
Yours,

Bruce Boundy
Managing Director
Legal Marketing Agency


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Tags: | Australia | hong kong | Law Firm | Letter to the Editor | marketing

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  1. at 04:33 AM on 11 August 2009, Patrick J. McKenna wrote:
    In my 26 years of serving law firms on a global scale, no where have I observed lawyers pissing away more money than on ill-advised, ego centric 'branding' campaigns. It is absolutely true that clients are looking for more value and innovation from their legal advisors - but to suggest that shortening the firm's name is symbolic of innovation is moronic! The real question that every client (or prospect) brings to the table (articulated or not) is: “Why should I choose you (your firm) - what makes you distinctive, and what specific added-value do you bring to my particular business matters . . . that I can NOT get anywhere else?” And please do notice those last six words. The answer is not: we have a long rich history or we have a shorter memorable name! Now I'm not suggesting that firms should not shorten their name to whatever the client refers to them by. Just don't piss away money on it by trying to convince yourself that you being innovative or marketing oriented.

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