Maybe law firms should consider the same technique, listing
lawyer Web logs on their home page.
Not exact matches
Rather, they'll just go to the
lawyer with the
Web log on Maryland civil rights law who comes up at the top of the listing — or the
lawyer who bought the Google ad words «Maryland civil rights» whose links appear in a feature box...»
Two Washington, D.C.,
lawyers have each launched
Web logs intended to serve as resources for solo and small - firm
lawyers.
I was inspired to write the column when, at the close of a seminar I chaired recently that covered, among other topics, legal
Web logs, a
lawyer from the audience approached me and said, «I can see the amusement value in these things, but I can't see how they are of any use in a law practice.»
Two Georgia criminal defense
lawyers, Rob Leonard and John Barrett, recently launched Georgia Criminal Law Blog, described as «Georgia's premier
web log for people accused of crimes and the
lawyers defending them.»
One of the best analyses I have seen of
Web logs as legal - marketing tools is Web Logs for Lawyers: Lessons from Ernie the Attorney, written by the esteemed Jerry Lawson and published on LLRX.
logs as legal - marketing tools is
Web Logs for Lawyers: Lessons from Ernie the Attorney, written by the esteemed Jerry Lawson and published on LLRX.
Logs for
Lawyers: Lessons from Ernie the Attorney, written by the esteemed Jerry Lawson and published on LLRX.com.
Web logs written by
lawyers can be of value for many reasons.
B. Janell Grenier, a
lawyer in East Goshen, Penn., launched Benefitsblog, a
Web log offering news and commentary on employee benefits and ERISA law.
Lawson, of course, knows this well, as he made clear through his great article,
Web Logs For
Lawyers: Lessons from Ernie the Attorney.
All the apps, programs and devices
lawyers use, from Microsoft Word to Excel and browsing the
web to talking on the phone, would feed into a
log of what has been done on what matter for what client and for how long.
«Needless to say, it would be practically impossible for a Kentucky
lawyer to publish a law - related
Web log if he or she were required to pay a $ 50.00 «filing fee» each and every time the content of the blog is modified.
As is common on the
web I learned this fourth hand, and traced the story back from the Language
Log, to Defending People, the Art and Science of Criminal Defense Trial
Lawyering, which had a brief post about a memo from the Harris County (Texas) D.A. that congratulated «a prosecutor on convicting a guy while overcoming «a subversively good defense by Matt Hennessey that had some Canadians on the jury feeling sorry for the defendant...» ``; this blog post led back to The Daily Bellwether, and ultimately to CindyBlurg's «The Sheriff is a Canadian.»