It also needs to be tied to a business goal. You can read more about these goals on our post on evergreen content for law firms.
The topics are endless, as is the method of delivery. But as long as it’s relevant, useful and educational – it has the potential to be effective.
Why do we want to educate readers?
Put simply, people don’t know what they don’t know.
A lot of the time, people don’t even know that they have an issue that needs solving. Or they know they have an issue, but have no idea how to start solving it.
As marketers, we know that most new work for a law firm will come from existing clients or referral sources.
When content is done well, it’s often the catalyst for a referral. It’s the “tangible” knowledge that gets shared and demonstrates that your lawyers understand their issues, business or industry.
If your target audience is alerted to an issue or potential problem, they’ll want to know if and how it might affect them or their business, and what can be done to address it.
If you position your content well, your firm’s content will be the first to educate these readers about the issue. This will show that your firm is up-to-date with industry and legal developments, and that you understand their problem enough to recognise what’s relevant. This raises the likelihood that they’ll turn to your firm for an answer.
What is a content committee?
A content committee is a group of people responsible for ensuring content is produced by the law firm. As a guide, it will involve one or two lawyers from each practice group and a member of the marketing or communications team.
The lawyers will become the “content representatives” for their area of law.
Tip: Marketing and business development efforts should be taken into account as a part of the committee members’ performance reviews.
If the firm has more than one office, try to include individuals across offices and conduct meetings by video conference. By having representatives from all practice groups and offices, you have a greater chance of ensuring your content reflects the firm’s expertise in all relevant areas of law and jurisdiction.
Tip: Don’t exceed more than seven or eight members, or you’ll never get a consensus about anything!
If your firm has a lot of practice groups, try to bundle some of them into more general categories for this purpose. Similarly, if you’re a multinational firm, it may be worth considering multiple content committees across locations.
What’s the purpose of a content committee?
A content committee’s mandate is to create accountability and ensure content matches your goals and standards. Each member is a content representative, and armed to make decisions on behalf of their practice group.
It doesn’t mean that the lawyers on the committee are necessarily creating all the content – but rather, they are responsible for generating ideas for relevant and noteworthy content and bringing in others to handle the execution.
When someone in a practice group (or whatever the committee’s area of responsibility is, e.g. industry, client group, etc.) has an idea, they should go to their local “content contact” and run it past them. The committee then makes a quick, final decision at the meetings as to whether or not the content should be created; essentially using a voting (yes/no) process.
The goal is that they’ve been vetted by the content representative before the meeting begins, so most of the topics should be voted as “yes”.
Regardless of whether your firm bills on time, fixed price or value-pricing, it’s important to consider measuring how much time a lawyer(s) will need to create the content, as well as the benefit it may have for marketing, learning and development, and industry leadership. It may, in certain circumstances, be worthwhile having outside help produce first drafts of content. We can recommend copywriters who specialise in legal writing.
What is the marketing person’s role in the committee?
In a nutshell: making it all happen.
Your firm’s lawyers are busy, and marketing can take a backseat to billable work even though marketing is vital to the practice’s development. It’s the marketing person’s job to maintain the momentum and keep everyone accountable. S/he is the chair’s right-hand person.
Other tasks that will logically fall to the marketing professional (or team) are:
- distributing content both internally and to the firm’s content mailing list.
- posting content to the website, the firm’s social media pages etc.
- crafting the SEO page titles and meta descriptions.
- email marketing.
- amplifying the content beyond “owned” media to “earned” media.
What’s the purpose of the committee meetings?
The main purpose of the committee meeting is accountability and ensuring your content is working as well as it can, and for the marketers to offer support wherever possible.
The meetings should be quick (no more than 30 minutes) and as a basic rule, the agenda should cover the following items:
- What’s been posted since you last met?
- How did the content perform? (Consider quantitative and qualitative feedback)
- Are there any opportunities to repurpose the content?
- What’s coming up for the next period? (Yes/No vote)
- Are any obstacles likely to arise?
- What can you do to make this next period even more successful?
The marketing team should pre-fill the answers to these questions for the Chair and then circulate this information to the other committee members a few days before the meeting. If you’ve done a distribution campaign (email marketing, social, etc.) you could add some engagement analytics, such as email open rates, social click through rates and comments, page views and average time spent on the page.
Tip: Committee communications are a lot like giving a team member feedback. Do it often and as needed; don’t wait for the next formal meeting to discuss something.
The marketer will come away from the meeting and produce a schedule that makes sense based on what else is happening within the firm.
How often should the committee meet?
In the beginning, meet every 4 to 6 weeks to make sure everything is in place and running smoothly. If you can keep your communications going without the need to meet, you may then reduce meetings to once every 2 to 3 months.
Communications between the committee should be more regular. It is the marketing person’s responsibility to follow up on action items and ensure things are progressing between meetings.