
Episode Overview
What is the #1 marketing strategy every law firm needs to have? How do you ensure your marketing is in compliance with the law? Do you think you would survive a zombie apocalypse? Bobby and Andrew are joining forces to answer these questions and many more in this special episode of Hot Docket!
Tune in to this “Ask Me Anything” for a rollercoaster of questions on everything from building strong brand credibility to what type of lawyer Bobby and Andrew would be if they weren’t marketing gurus.
Trust this episode is one you won’t want to miss! Get to know your Hot Docket hosts on a deeper level while learning their top legal marketing tips, strategies, and metrics.
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Episode Topics
- How did Bobby and Andrew become friends?
- How has legal marketing changed for All in recent years?
- Unique marketing challenges and opportunities for All in 2024.
- Top digital marketing tactics for All: SEO, paid search, local service ads, & more.
- The #1 marketing strategy All NEED to have.
- How to build strong brand credibility/reputation.
- What’s in Bobby’s pizza spreadsheet? + Their favorite NY pizza shops and toppings.
- The most important marketing metrics All should track.
- How to use your marketing metrics to drive impact.
- Bobby and Andrew reveal the TV villains they most resemble.
- Ethics and compliance issues in legal marketing.
- Strategies for online networking and relationship building.
- Innovating legal marketing: Emerging trends, tools, and tactics.
Key Actionable Takeaways for All:
- Be sure you’re choosing a marketing strategy that aligns with the type of law firm and clients you have, rather than just choosing a strategy you’ve seen work for another firm.
- Having an online presence plays a major role in attracting clients. Create a website, social platforms, and utilize marketing specialists that can help you implement digital marketing tactics.
- Differentiating your brand is the key to building a strong marketing strategy and online presence for your law firm.
- Strong brands have higher conversion rates, even when it comes to employee applications. Mean Pug gets 3-4x more quality applicants because their applications are heavily branded.
- If you can’t measure a marketing metric, it’s usually BS and you shouldn’t bother using it.
Episode Transcript
[00:00:00] Producer Rita Richa:
We interrupt your regularly scheduled podcast for this very special feature of
Hot Docket with your hosts, Bobby and Andrew of Mean Pug. This episode is a
compilation episode, Legal Bites of Wisdom. Enjoy these small, but mighty
moments that will help you take your law firm marketing to the next level.
[00:00:23] Producer Rita Richa:
We hope you enjoy.
[00:00:25] Bobby Steinbach:
Hot Docket Podcast. We’re here.
[00:00:27] Bobby Steinbach:
Legal bites of wisdom, talking to lawyers, people in the industry, marketing
coordinators, directors, anybody who has interesting things to say about legal.
I wish I could say that I saw more cutting edge strategies make their way in,
like more interesting use of AI or like just interesting widgets.
[00:00:49] Bobby Steinbach:
I haven’t really seen so much of that. I feel like what I have seen is
just Like more consolidation of brands. So Morgan getting bigger, like, uh,
other firms getting bigger and kind of eating up market share.
[00:01:03] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yeah. I think the idea of economies of scale within legal has always kind of
been there though.
[00:01:09] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Even pre digital being a large portion. of where firms are getting cases. Even
within the digital landscape, there is a consolidation effect because the player
at the top of Google is going to get roughly, let’s say a third of all
case volume from search on those particular terms. The same has always been true
of traditional media too.
[00:01:32] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Because of the buys happening, getting better unit economics as you have larger
buys. It’s somewhat always been the case. So, legal though, I think is
particularly interesting because it is so fragmented. And because such a large
portion of the cases are still acquired through referrals. Just knowing
attorneys.
[00:01:52] Andrew Nasrinpay:
That’s why I think it has lasted as long as it has as a fragmented
industry.
[00:01:57] Bobby Steinbach:
Yeah, but I think like consolidation has gotten worse. Even if you just look at
Google. There’s more and more real estate taken up by paid placement. LSAs
are now like the big and, like what is a big, hot and big thing in marketing, in
digital marketing.
[00:02:11] Bobby Steinbach:
That’s just another paid placement. The top is paid, the bottom is paid.
It, it, it, they’re moving, uh, even the local SEO is now getting moved
down on the SERP for more and more terms.
[00:02:21] Andrew Nasrinpay:
It, that dynamic though, causes more consolidation. Correct. Yep.
[00:02:27] Bobby Steinbach:
Which is what I was saying, I think it’s getting more and more
consolidated over time.
[00:02:32] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yeah, because in a lot of scenarios, the person who ranks number one in the paid
listing is also ranking number one or number two within the organic listing. So
if the click, on Google’s side, they always want more people clicking more
ads, and they want the cost of that click to be correct. So. I think one way to
think about this is there’s always been like a small group of firms
regionally that dominate and I think that we’re going to see that play out
more and more.
[00:03:03] Bobby Steinbach:
Yeah, yeah and like we are not even talking about like hedge fund money and
weird outside money coming into the space which changes the dynamic. In, in, in
a way that I don’t know we can predict.
[00:03:15] Andrew Nasrinpay:
A lot of firms end up choosing a strategy that doesn’t align with the type
of firm that they are. So even talking strictly within personal injury as an
example, you will see firms choose strategies that are more in line with being a
volume firm when they are trial lawyers and they want a very selective type of
case but they will try to win in a channel that will bring in a lot of volume of
cases that they wouldn’t want to take anyway.
[00:03:42] Andrew Nasrinpay:
They may be better off choosing something that will increase the referral base
but they’ll end up selecting a strategy that’ll bring in a mass type
of cases that just won’t align. I
[00:03:53] Bobby Steinbach:
think the hard part about that problem is you can’t cherry pick the cases.
Somebody who got in a catastrophic car accident doesn’t have a different
targeting per se than somebody who got into a normal car accident.
[00:04:04] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Correct. So
[00:04:05] Bobby Steinbach:
you’re just pivoting the problem from a marketing problem to an operations
problem. How do you screen people? the volume of cases that you need to find the
needle in the haystack.
[00:04:13] Andrew Nasrinpay:
You would change where you allocate your marketing resources. So they, they
would probably be better off building out their referral relationships instead
of spending the money on, let’s say, PPC or SEO for car accident lawyer, a
term that’s going to be difficult to win.
[00:04:31] Andrew Nasrinpay:
And they wouldn’t be able to service, let’s call it 90 percent of
the claims anyway, if they just wanted. Commercial policies or something along
those lines.
[00:04:39] Bobby Steinbach:
I think though, at the end of the day, a lot of it still comes down to just
opportunity costs. Like if you’re a firm that’s small and you have
very limited spend.
[00:04:46] Bobby Steinbach:
Yes, you need a cherry pick, the thing that’s going to drive the value
quickest. However, if you’re a firm that is in some ways struggling to
allocate spend, you have a marketing budget, you want to spend it. You know, you
have short, medium, long term growth horizons. At that point, you still have the
same problem of where to put the money to hit those time horizons.
[00:05:08] Bobby Steinbach:
And I think a lot of firms just don’t necessarily break down the problem
into, into that level of granularity. They’re just like, I want cases.
[00:05:16] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yep. And then another problem when you’re looking at a arbitrary number
that is your budget for, let’s say, the year is you are left over with a
certain amount that needs to be spent.
[00:05:30] Andrew Nasrinpay:
But certain strategies will have a certain level of allocation that they will
need. So oftentimes those firms will underfund certain channels and they will
look at that poor performance in that channel and not know what to do with it.
the next year after looking at the performance of the previous year when what
they really needed to do was increase that channel that was struggling instead
of maybe in the following year cutting it all together.
[00:05:56] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Bobby and I met, I don’t know, maybe eight or nine years ago. We were
working together at a startup at the time and it was one of those environments
that was I’d say a very work hard, play hard environment. And I
don’t know, we just connected there and we’ve worked together ever
since.
[00:06:12] Bobby Steinbach:
Yeah. I have some pretty epic, um, ruckus at that place for anybody who’s
big into secondary ticket marketplace and wants to collect dead companies
ruckus.
[00:06:21] Bobby Steinbach:
We had, I remember. Like we had nerf guns, but we got the super high powered
ones that I think are illegal in the US and they’re only like available in
China with like the plastic tipped heads, the ones that take out an eye. So I
remember we would have crazy, uh, full company nerf battles in the hallways.
[00:06:40] Bobby Steinbach:
It was in WeWork too. It was when WeWork was fun. We had like, um, crazy
battles. And I remember, uh, Probably probably like one of my clearest memories
of that was pistol whipping you in a corner I think I came into the other one
and we had like barricades set up and I came over pistol whip It’s pretty
bad.
[00:06:58] Bobby Steinbach:
Yeah. That was probably a lawsuit.
[00:07:00] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yeah. I, I feel like pretty much everyone there got an eye shot out and it was
usually the bystanders that were like the casualties, the eye shots.
[00:07:09] Bobby Steinbach:
I remember that CEO, very quick to fire, very quick to like let people go. And I
had a new intern on my team. So I was the first engineer.
[00:07:18] Bobby Steinbach:
So I had a couple of people under me. I had a new intern on my team and I was
just like getting her warmed up, getting her set up with her computer, all that
other stuff. I go to the bathroom. Five minutes later, I come back. She’s
gone. And I, I say, where’s, what’s, whatever her name is. And he
goes, Oh, I fired her.
[00:07:34] Bobby Steinbach:
Like she wasn’t working out. Same day. So there was a, like a lot of stuff
like that, that went on that I remember. Um,
[00:07:43] Andrew Nasrinpay:
I’m not sure these are stories that need or should be shared. Well, no,
there’s probably an
[00:07:47] Bobby Steinbach:
employment lawyer listening. Employment lawyers. That’s got to be
something bad about that, right? I guess it’s, I guess it’s at will,
uh, employment.
[00:07:54] Bobby Steinbach:
Yeah. Okay. I don’t know.
[00:07:56] Andrew Nasrinpay:
I think that was an unpaid intern. Oh, she was, she was. It’s not even,
it’s just very, uh,
[00:08:05] Bobby Steinbach:
okay. Um, are there any others? That was his
[00:08:08] Andrew Nasrinpay:
fun story. I just want to bring this back full loop.
[00:08:10] Bobby Steinbach:
Yeah. Yeah. That was a fun story. I mean, like, there were crazy stories. We
had, um, this was the time when there was WeWork summer camp.
[00:08:19] Bobby Steinbach:
I don’t know if anybody was around during this. This was obviously before,
like, the Newman implosion and things happened there. But um, at WeWork summer
camp, it was like a adult summer camp where we would get shipped off to the
woods of northern New York with like 400 people, 500 people, Adirondacks.
[00:08:39] Bobby Steinbach:
Which is Northern New York. Okay, so, Adirondacks. Um, with like 400 people.
And, it would just be, you’d get there, it’d be like canoes full of
beer, like liquor stands, things like that. Everywhere they’re like
throwing beer at you when you first get off. And they would ship in like great.
We had the first year, I think we had, um, chain smokers came in and perform.
[00:09:00] Bobby Steinbach:
They flew them in on a helicopter. The weekend came in the second year and they
flew them on a helicopter into like the main area. So it was a crazy time. And
like, there were obviously ridiculous things that happened there. But I
don’t know that I can talk about it on this podcast.
[00:09:14] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Probably, uh, goes into that category of best not to as well.
[00:09:18] Andrew Nasrinpay:
So what are we talking about? What are we talking about here?
[00:09:20] Producer Rita Richa:
Sorry to bother you should better mind your own
[00:09:23] Bobby Steinbach:
business and get back to work. On
[00:09:25] Andrew Nasrinpay:
the digital side, things typically break out. into a few different buckets.
You’ve got search, where there’s going to be SEO and paid search,
and then paid search will fork again into the native varieties like local
service ads, as well as the more traditional paid search ads.
[00:09:43] Andrew Nasrinpay:
And those break down into different intent types. So some folks are going after
More transactional intent terms, like whatever type of law firm you are,
employment lawyer, personal injury lawyer, while other terms will be more
informational. So it’ll be something like, what do I do after a car
accident? Or what do I do if insurance is not paying a claim?
[00:10:05] Andrew Nasrinpay:
And those sort of strategies are very different and the landing pages for them
are very different and you need a marketing team that can focus on both. So
you’re not going to want just a specialist for SEO, just a specialist for
PPC, or just a company that can make a website. You need all those things to
work together.
[00:10:24] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Um, So on the search side, that, that’s like a basic overview and then you
have other walled gardens like social, which has both organic and paid
components to it as well.
[00:10:37] Andrew Nasrinpay:
I think every firm needs to start with their brand. So your, your brand is more
than just a website, but I think a lot of times a website is the starting place
because that’s where, where most potential clients will see you.
[00:10:52] Andrew Nasrinpay:
That’s where a lot of referral partners will go to, to look up your phone
number. And having a very professional differentiated brand online is super
important.
[00:11:02] Bobby Steinbach:
Yeah, I mean, how many people we’ve talked to who say you guys were like a
breath of fresh air. It was so great seeing like a company in the legal
marketing space that doesn’t fit the mold of everybody else.
[00:11:15] Bobby Steinbach:
That’s not unique to our business. That’s every business. You want
to differentiate your brand. It doesn’t have to be that you’re the
most professional or the hardest fighter or the Like most passionate, but you
should be the most something right? So like figuring out what that most is and
then making sure that your brand and your site.
[00:11:35] Bobby Steinbach:
Uh, highlight that like, uh, that will be how you end up building your marketing
collateral, how you end up building your, your content presence, how you end up
building your social media. It all starts from that singular point.
[00:11:47] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yep. And I think there are some attributes that every firm is going to want to
say they want to be known as.
[00:11:54] Andrew Nasrinpay:
So like trusted and honest being some of those, those are things that every firm
needs. And
[00:12:00] Bobby Steinbach:
untrustworthy lawyers.
[00:12:03] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yep, so I don’t think you can completely make your differentiation on
those things that are kind of table stakes.
[00:12:10] Bobby Steinbach:
I’m almost interested to know what would happen if you tried. What if you
made your, what if your brand, what if, I’m not saying to do this, but
what if a law firm went out and said, we are.
[00:12:19] Bobby Steinbach:
The scrappy lawyers, we’re going to do whatever it takes to win and like
whatever it takes. Obviously, I don’t even know if you can do this like at
all because it’s probably unethical and you’re going to get barred
depending on like where you’re practicing. But I am curious.
[00:12:35] Andrew Nasrinpay:
I think there are some examples like that that have edgy advertisements and
their whole brand is.
[00:12:42] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Whatever the law firm is, wins. And you do see these in some markets. So the one
that comes to the top of my mind when you talk about like an edgy ad, it would
be the Mike Morse ads. Where he like, looking at one of them where, I think
I’ve shown you this TV commercial where a guy drops his wallet. And the
attorney ambulance
[00:13:00] Bobby Steinbach:
chaser
[00:13:00] Andrew Nasrinpay:
picks it up and it looks like he’s chasing an ambulance.
[00:13:02] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yeah. He’s leaning into some of the stereotypes and leaning into the,
I’ll do whatever it takes to win sort of thing. And uh, he’s been
very successful in his geographic regions doing that. Yeah.
[00:13:14] Producer Rita Richa:
We now randomly interrupt your LegalBytes session with a segment on whether or
not Bobby and Andrew think they could survive a zombie apocalypse.
[00:13:24] Producer Rita Richa:
The
[00:13:25] Andrew Nasrinpay:
zombies are coming. So I think there are two groups. Well, there’s
probably more than two groups, but the two main groups of people that would
survive a zombie apocalypse. We’re going to be preppers that have stored
food and guns and gold and all that. I think Bobby falls into that category.
He’s a very like thought out person.
[00:13:46] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Then there are going to be the people that hunt the preppers because they know
that they’ve got all the resources needed to survive. So would Bobby
survive? Probably as a prepper. Would you survive too? Would I survive? Well, I
know that you have all of these things prepped, so I’d have to hunt you
down.
[00:14:01] Andrew Nasrinpay:
You forgot the third category. The parasite. The parasite.
[00:14:03] Bobby Steinbach:
The parasite who feeds on the prepper.
[00:14:05] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Well, I, I would say there’s the fourth category too. The completely
under, unprepared. Yeah. That are just not going to make it.
[00:14:12] Bobby Steinbach:
You, this was who you said will make it. So the fourth category of who
won’t make it.
[00:14:17] Bobby Steinbach:
The food for everyone else. Right, okay. So the food. So there’s,
there’s preppers, there’s hunters, there’s parasites, and
there’s food.
[00:14:24] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Um. Food, fodder, you can replace.
[00:14:27] Bobby Steinbach:
I think the problem with it is like zombie apocalypse falls under Is it 28 weeks
later, 28 days later, style zombie, or is it like walking dead zombie?
[00:14:36] Bobby Steinbach:
Are they shambling, or are they sprinting? Right, like, if it’s a
sprinting zombie, I don’t think I’d make it. Cause, like, I mean, my
legs aren’t what they used to be. But I think if it were a Shambling
zombie very good chance. I just have to hole up. I’ve got my gold for
everyone listening. I don’t have gold no gold I have food hoarded Bad
cardio, I’ve got food bad cardio and probably there might be a gun perfect
target.
[00:15:05] Bobby Steinbach:
Yeah So yeah, I think I could probably live on a shambling scenario for
let’s call it a year or two I think I’d probably get Like
lackadaisical at some point might be out hunting a shambler comes up behind me
Kills me that could happen, but I think Andrew, I actually think Andrew would
live longer just kind of jumping parasite to parasite like a tick He’d
kind of move between hosts and find his way.
[00:15:35] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yeah, I don’t disagree Please go back to your work. I Think there are some
definite attributes that can be measured You With strong brands, one will be
that they have a higher conversion rate. So a brand with a good brand. is going
to convert higher, so when they run media, whether that be TV or digital ads,
they will see a higher conversion rate, so they will get more cases for the same
amount of money.
[00:16:02] Andrew Nasrinpay:
They also have higher recall, so people are going to remember their creatives.
And that, again, gives you better performance numbers. So you get this sort of
Lollapalooza effect where you have good building on good, and I think that is
the most important thing. Aspect of firms that do well
[00:16:22] Bobby Steinbach:
and just to highlight that with a real world example.
[00:16:25] Bobby Steinbach:
We built probably like a unnecessarily outrageous LinkedIn job description that
we use for all of our job descriptions we post on LinkedIn. When you’re
going through the posting process on LinkedIn, it tells you here’s how
much you will likely get, like here’s how many applicants you’ll
likely get for your budget.
[00:16:46] Bobby Steinbach:
Our numbers we get on applications are probably triple to quadruple what they
estimate. And the reason why is because our job description is so branded and
like so over the top and so kind of like Out the outside of the norm and that
leads to even though it’s not conversion rate on like a revenue generating
Uh metric it does lead to the conversion rate bump On our application quality
and quantity.
[00:17:14] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yeah, you’re going to get it. There are so many examples like that, where
you’re going to win out in getting better employees. You’re going to
get better retention and you’re going to get it for better rates because
you have more to choose from. So I think that it’s true of a lot of things
that your brand is really the most important.
[00:17:35] Producer Rita Richa:
Hey, y’all the pizza here. Branding is cool and all, but what about your
favorite pizza though?
[00:17:41] Bobby Steinbach:
I think my favorite three places in New York, I haven’t gone to Lucali and
I haven’t gone to Lindustri, which I feel like everybody kind of puts in
their favorites, so I feel like it’s a little skewed. But top, top three
favorite is probably Brooklyn Pizza Masters.
[00:17:57] Bobby Steinbach:
I actually like the one in Midtown, which is kind of nonsensical. I like that. I
like Williamsburg Pizza on Upper East Side, which is also nonsensical. And then
I like, probably Table 87 is, is number three.
[00:18:10] Andrew Nasrinpay:
I’d go with Table just because that is our, our convenience slice around
us that’s high quality.
[00:18:15] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Solid slice. And, um, I also, uh, really, I think it’s Upside I really
like for some of their variety style slices, like their vodka slices. Yep. are
really the only vodka slices I’ve had that I’ve liked. So, I would
give them a mention. In terms of topping style, I think that pepperonis really
hit or miss. You need the cup and jar.
[00:18:39] Andrew Nasrinpay:
They need the jar, yeah. Little, uh, curled pepperonis if you’re gonna go
pepperoni. A lot of times, though, Those style slices can get too oily just
because of the fats and meats. I think the topping that has the most, like, uh,
variability would be something like a sausage, where it could be absolutely
disgusting or amazing.
[00:18:59] Andrew Nasrinpay:
And it’s really, really hard to find a good, like, sausage and pepper
slice. But when you do, amazing.
[00:19:06] Bobby Steinbach:
Toppings just like screw up all the the it ruins the structure of a pizza I
that’s for that reason. I only I used to be a big pepperoni guy. I still
think pepperoni can hold its own I just feel terrible when I eat it So I’d
say it’s either gonna be mushroom, which I feel like doesn’t really
disrupt the pizza integrity or onions Which also they’re just like light
enough that they sprinkle on
[00:19:28] Andrew Nasrinpay:
onions are so underrated on a pizza.
[00:19:30] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yeah, very very good Yeah The only wrong answer is probably pineapple. You
don’t put f ing pineapple on pizza.
[00:19:38] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yeah, so I, I’m of the camp that if you can’t measure it, it’s
kind of bullsh And the ultimate KPI is always going to be ROI. Of money in,
money out. Every other metric. That’s not that, is kind of a proxy hoping
to achieve that, right?
[00:19:56] Andrew Nasrinpay:
So I think if you look at ROI, one level above that would be something like a
cost per case, which isn’t as good as ROI because some cases just hold
much higher value. So you have ROI, cost per case. Then you have a lot of like
proxy metrics that will get to those, which would be like a cost per lead, cost
per intake, CPM.
[00:20:18] Andrew Nasrinpay:
If you’re buying on an impression basis, if you can’t measure it,
it’s kind of bullshit. And each channel will have its own KPIs and
measurements that are important. So for SEO, it might be something like, uh,
rank tracking and looking where you rank. for each particular term or the number
of terms you have, uh, ranking with the traffic you get from it or the
conversion rate from those, that traffic, all of those things are things you
should look at.
[00:20:43] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Uh, but the time windows for some of them are, are totally different.
[00:20:47] Bobby Steinbach:
I agree, but I think it to play devil’s advocate, I also think you
shouldn’t be dogmatic. Like you should do things that might not be
measurable if they’re good ideas and you want to try them. For instance,
let me give an example. We ran an ad in trial lawyer magazine.
[00:21:06] Bobby Steinbach:
We didn’t see results for a year. Then we got three calls or two or three
calls in maybe a month’s time span. I don’t know if we had measured
that and just gone based on measurement alone a month and a half ago or
whatever, it would have looked like an abysmal failure. But if you think about
how. That medium actually works.
[00:21:27] Bobby Steinbach:
Those things stay around forever in people’s offices, in lawyers offices.
They get picked up by other lawyers. They get looked at by clients who then talk
to the lawyer. They like, so if you put something memorable in there, even
though it’s not immediately trackable. What the brand lift is, or like the
direct response conversion rate, it might still be a good idea.
[00:21:44] Bobby Steinbach:
So I think you can’t really be dogmatic in how you look at things.
[00:21:47] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yeah, that comes back down to the timeline in which you’re looking at it.
And unfortunately, I feel like with most of these metrics, the timeline is, When
the decision maker is looking at it at that particular day, right? Yeah. So I, I
think, yeah, a lot of those things you need to look at it at longer time, time
horizons, but it never happens that way because you’re not scheduling it
ahead of time to say, this is the day we’re going to make a decision on.
[00:22:13] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Two years worth of data prior to that or what, whatever it may be.
[00:22:16] Bobby Steinbach:
But, and you also hear all over, like all, all the time, should I get
billboards? Should I get TV commercials? Should I put a tracking number in
there? Should I get a vanity number? Like, should you not get a vanity number
because you can’t track it.
[00:22:28] Bobby Steinbach:
Like, probably not a, a good vanity number is worth its weight in gold.
[00:22:31] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yep.
[00:22:31] Bobby Steinbach:
So there is like a give and a take I think to, to this question.
[00:22:36] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yeah. But it can be tracked in terms of the lift of using a vanity number versus
a non vanity number. Right. You could do that. But it’s not worth it
because you know it’s going, you know it’s going to be better,
right?
[00:22:47] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yeah, so part of it is using common sense Where you don’t need to over
measure I would say bobby would be like one of the nerdy engineering villains,
which isn’t like something that’s very common But I feel like there
was that the golden eye episode of james bond how there was boris Where he
always was like a genius and he ended up exploding himself with that little
clicky pen That’s who I’d have to choose for Bobby if I had to think
of a villain.
[00:23:14] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Scrooge is a good one, too. Pile of money. How could I not remember Scrooge?
Pile of gold.
[00:23:18] Bobby Steinbach:
Yeah, okay. Classic
[00:23:21] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Prepper.
[00:23:22] Bobby Steinbach:
Yeah, okay. Who’s that guy in Game of Thrones who flays people? Like,
loves to, like, puts them on sticks and flays their backs. Ramsey? Ramsey. I
don’t remember. I think you’d be Ramsey. What was his house?
[00:23:37] Bobby Steinbach:
Um. God, I can’t remember this. I keep on thinking Iron Worm or like Worm
Eye or something, but I think that’s the other guy. I think that’s
the one who he slices off his, um, pee pee. Huh? Is the, uh, the gray, gray
worm, gray worm. Gray worm he slices, I think.
[00:23:53] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Who was the iron? He was an ironborn. Gray worm
[00:23:56] Bobby Steinbach:
was an ironborn.
[00:23:57] Andrew Nasrinpay:
But I can’t remember who the other guy was.
[00:23:58] Bobby Steinbach:
I think it was Ramsey.
[00:23:59] Andrew Nasrinpay:
You picked the most violent, like, uh, that’s crazy.
[00:24:03] Bobby Steinbach:
Yeah, I think, um, well, you didn’t really give me a name. You
didn’t give me a name for the engineer, you said engineering guy who blows
his hand. Boris,
[00:24:10] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Boris from Goldeneye.
[00:24:12] Bobby Steinbach:
I don’t, I don’t, I don’t know Boris from Goldeneye.
[00:24:14] Andrew Nasrinpay:
But we’ll have to pull up a clip and show it.
[00:24:17] Bobby Steinbach:
Nobody screws with Boris Grishenko. Do you feel like you relate to Ramsay, the
flayer? The
[00:24:24] Andrew Nasrinpay:
flayer, no, he’s a little bit too far.
[00:24:28] Bobby Steinbach:
Okay.
[00:24:28] Andrew Nasrinpay:
The amount of like, torture for pleasure there is probably the most I can think
of, of anyone. So
[00:24:34] Bobby Steinbach:
you like, torturing for pleasure, but slightly less?
[00:24:38] Andrew Nasrinpay:
What?
[00:24:39] Bobby Steinbach:
Um, chow. Anyway, so.
[00:24:42] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yeah, I think this is different state by state. So some things that’ll fly
in California might not in Georgia or North Carolina or South Carolina. Every
state has different ethics and bar compliance that you need to follow. So for
some channels, it’s very like cut and dry what you can and can’t do.
[00:25:02] Andrew Nasrinpay:
So. And then it changes firm by firm. Some firms, even beyond the ethics of it,
have a different type of brand and reputation that they want to uphold. And I
feel like the firms that are most conservative in that regard are going to be
like trial lawyers who have like a lifetime or multiple generations of
reputation that they have to uphold.
[00:25:25] Bobby Steinbach:
But also to directly respond to how we maintain This, and how we do it. It all
comes down to like having a team that can do the, because no one’s going
to know all the ethics state by state. You need to have a team that you can
trust and who has experience marketing for legal. So they have like an
understanding of the pitfalls, can do their own research and ensure that
everything is compliant.
[00:25:47] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yep. And also the, just passing everything through the firm that you’re
working with too. Because even beyond the compliance, it’s uh, making sure
the firm you’re working with is happy with what you’re going to run.
[00:25:59] Producer Rita Richa:
What kind of lawyer would you be?
[00:26:01] Andrew Nasrinpay:
He’s the type that tortures other people. Is that a corporate attorney?
[00:26:05] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Yeah. I think this is a like hard question because I feel like my skill set
would just be like an attorney that would originate cases. So if it was geared
that way, I would, I think I would care less about the type of law and more
about where you fit in. In the ecosystem, so I would probably originate all
types of cases, but if I actually had to practice and choose something
that’s, like, interesting to me, I think it would be a different answer,
where it might be something in, like, intellectual property or something,
something that you get to It’d be like eel law.
[00:26:38] Bobby Steinbach:
It’d be like the law of eel hunting Yeah, it would be something
outrageously esoterical. Um, yeah, I think mine would probably be IP. Yeah, IP.
Because I get to see cutting edge tech. I would understand what they’re
going for and like roughly how it could be original I think that’s where I
would practice We’re both horrible networkers.
[00:27:03] Bobby Steinbach:
I don’t know. What have you found successful?
[00:27:07] Andrew Nasrinpay:
I would say that it’s a very important part of any business whether
it’s especially if it’s a b2b business where the Like conversion
path isn’t always so clear in the timelines for when someone needs an
agency or someone who provides any level of like specialized service.
[00:27:24] Andrew Nasrinpay:
I think referrals are always going to be the most important, but those are
things that take time and energy of partners to actually do. So it might be
going to events or it might be, um, whining and dining. The people who You do a
lot of whining and dining? No.
[00:27:44] Bobby Steinbach:
Yeah. I think, um, for us, we, I personally just can’t stand like very
shallow kind of surface level conversation.
[00:27:52] Bobby Steinbach:
So I’m, I think it makes me, I mean, that probably is probably one
component of what makes me a really poor networker. Um, so I think it’s
probably true for you too. And the reason I think what that leads to is most of
our networking is really in the form of client introductions. Coworker
introductions when, when they kind of understand that we like to think about
these problems deeply and wanna talk to other people about it deeply, so they
intro us.
[00:28:21] Bobby Steinbach:
I think there’s room for improvement across many dimensions. There’s
room for improvement on the marketing side. You still see a ton of brands. law
firm brands that look all the same. They’re all trying to like walk the
same line, do the same things. And that’s not how marketing and branding
work. So marketing, branding, lots of room for improvement.
[00:28:42] Bobby Steinbach:
Second layer, I would say is like operational fit, basically handling intake,
putting things into a CRM so that you can. You can follow up on them and track
them and all that good stuff. I think legal is getting there. At least
there’s like a, there’s plenty of CRMs to choose from. There’s
plenty of knowledge I think being shared around why to do it.
[00:29:03] Bobby Steinbach:
I still think there’s like slow to adopt, which is just common to what we
see in legal as a whole. So at least we’re moving in the right direction.
I think on the other side of operations, like call center side, I’ve said
it for a while. I think there’s a huge lack of like, Reliable call center
solutions, um, if you wanted to outsource that problem as a law firm.
[00:29:23] Bobby Steinbach:
So I think there’s a huge, if someone could figure out that problem, which
I mean, it’s easy to just say spin up a call center. It’s much
harder when you understand the breadth of practice areas and how each one
requires a different type of agent, different script, different all everything.
So so it’s not an easy problem, but there is like there is a problem
there.
[00:29:44] Bobby Steinbach:
And then I guess the third layer is like the back back office type of work. So
how does tech relate to the actual litigation process? And we actually have a
guest on today who we’re going to be talking to about that. Pretty deeply.
I wouldn’t say that’s like my strength. I don’t think I have a
ton of knowledge around how the legal process works kind of behind the scenes
But I’m sure that there’s like plenty of room for improvement.
[00:30:09] Andrew Nasrinpay:
I’m gonna agree across the board like, uh, oh wow I have nothing to add
there.
[00:30:13] Bobby Steinbach:
So you’d plenty to say about milk and burgers, but you can’t talk
about Innovation and legal.
[00:30:18] Andrew Nasrinpay:
I think most of the area that is lacking isn’t necessarily due to
technology It’s just the use of it, where the technology’s been
around for a while.
[00:30:29] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Even like you were talking about like CRMs, there’s still a ton of firms
that don’t even use CRM or an intake process. So a lot of it is going to
be on the intake and the operation side.
[00:30:39] Bobby Steinbach:
You’re also constrained on marketing. Like it’s kind of unfair
because you just can’t do things that are modern. Like you can’t run
retargeting on GDN.
[00:30:47] Bobby Steinbach:
Right? It’s just a barred situation. They won’t let you do it. The
audiences aren’t allowed or whatever RLSAs or whatever it is, right? So
it’s hard to innovate when you’re being like kneecapped by the
platform.
[00:30:58] Andrew Nasrinpay:
And then there are other platforms where you just can’t run at all. So
like all of that will exist.
[00:31:04] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Typically, the largest constraint on the marketing side will probably be budget,
right? Because every company is going to have a budget. And that will probably
be the first thing hit. But on the ops side, you don’t need to change a
dollar going in, right? You can make a lot of those changes to the process and
you’ll probably see a better result.
[00:31:24] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Than increasing or decreasing budget on the front side
[00:31:31] Producer Rita Richa:
Before we wrap up your delicious hot docket plate of legal marketing bites
Please enjoy these hilarious and whimsical Outtakes from Bobby and Andrew that
didn’t make it to the episode.
[00:31:48] Bobby Steinbach:
I feel a little uncomfortable in general around a guy who’s Ramsey like
and talks about human burgers, but
[00:31:54] Andrew Nasrinpay:
How did I become, what was his last name?
[00:31:59] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Now we gotta look that up.
[00:32:01] Bobby Steinbach:
Bolton. Bolton. Bolton, Ramsey Bolton, that’s right. Gotta look up his
flag. It’s the man, it’s the man being flayed. It’s uh,
Redman. Red man, not the rapper. It’s red man. Red man, a red man being
flayed.
[00:32:17] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Okay.
[00:32:17] Bobby Steinbach:
For burger consumption, likely.
[00:32:20] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Do you think he drinks it with whole milk?
[00:32:24] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Probably, yeah. God, so
[00:32:25] Bobby Steinbach:
stupid. How, how, I don’t even understand how you could think that milk is
only mammalian. There’s no way that that’s true. And just because
the FDA says it doesn’t mean that we don’t use semantic terms
differently.
[00:32:41] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Uh, no, it is. It is what? Uh, it is literally the definition of milk. I’m
saying there’s, but you are drinking.
[00:32:50] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Almond milk or oat milk. It’s just dirty water. Eww. It’s dirty
nuts. Well put, Hope. I think it’s, uh. I drink milk and you drink dirty
nuts. We’ll leave it at that. Welcome to the Hot Docket Podcast.
[00:33:10] Bobby Steinbach:
We hope you’ve enjoyed this episode of Hot Dockets. We’re your
hosts, Bobby and Andrew, founders of Mean Pug, the marketing agency for
ambitious All.
[00:33:18] Andrew Nasrinpay:
Have questions about marketing or anything we covered today? Email us at bark at
mean pug dot com. Be sure to subscribe to learn more.