As more and more law
firms hear that message... the more articles, the more presentations, the more publications and the many more professionals we'll see in 2014 and beyond.
Not exact matches
Keith brings his passion for great language and storytelling to his role as partner at m + p, a research - driven language strategy
firm that specializes in finding the right language and
messages to frame or reframe how your target audience
hears what you're trying to say.
Some will be only just
hearing the
message, others will be resistant to the plans, and some may be struggling to understand their role within the new
firm.
Given that the average American consumes more than 10 hours of media every day of the week, it's likely that your law
firm's marketing
messages are being seen and
heard in a variety of ways.
We need more
firms to
hear the
message and get on board.
That's why, one of the things you and I were talking about some things
firms can do, I think
firms need to be able to talk about and women need to ask for and they need to be
heard when they say, «I need breastfeeding accommodations,» just a simple concrete thing that a
firm can do to give them the
message that says, «We want gender equity at this
firm.
Recently elected chairman Paul Rawlinson has been busy setting out the
firm's new strategy to its global partnership, with hundreds of European partners gathering at the Grosvenor in London to
hear his pitch last week, before moving on Bangkok to deliver the same
message to the Asian partnership this week.
You can offer what the
firms can not — personalization, efficiency, flexibility, and singular innovation — and your potential clients are waiting to
hear that
message.
BTI's research underscores
messages that law
firms have been
hearing for years.
And, it was undisputed, in each
message the
firm's GC was asked for advice on «the
firm's ethical obligations» — principally, how the
firm should respond to a notice from opposing counsel in the employment case that it intended to call one of the
firm's attorneys as a fact witness at a forthcoming arbitration
hearing.
I
heard a similar
message from Jordan Furlong at the Law Society of Upper Canada's recent Solo and Small
Firm Conference.