General consumers get ~20-40 promotional emails a day, whereas professionals and business owners get upwards of 70. You know exactly the ones we’re talking about. Odds are, you delete most of them without reading or opening them. Though you may see them as useless junk, marketers track these diligently. 

For instance in 2023, a “birthday email” had a conversion rate of 0.72%. What happens when someone visits a website, puts something in their cart, and then leaves? These people often get reminder emails, and these had a conversion rate of 2.56% in 2023. 

Now that you have a general idea of the conversion rates, it’s important to highlight that one type of email is significantly more successful than others. “Back in stock” emails had a conversion rate of 5.84%. 

Sure, law firms don’t sell out of services and have to restock, so they’ll likely never send this type of email. However, the principles behind the back-in-stock email apply to legal marketing, even if your focus is to stay top of mind and drive referrals. 

Create Urgency Around Real Opportunities

The best ecommerce emails often create a sense of scarcity—limited stock, flash sales, or expiring discounts. While law firms aren’t selling physical products, you can still introduce urgency by pointing out real deadlines or time-sensitive issues. For example, you might alert clients to upcoming changes in legislation or court filing deadlines. You can also create a sense of exclusivity by offering limited slots for free consultations, webinars, or other time-bound services.

It’s not about manufacturing pressure—it’s about helping your audience take action when timing matters. When clients feel like they’re being informed instead of sold to, they’re more likely to stay engaged.

Build Anticipation by Offering Consistent Value

One reason back-in-stock emails work is that people are waiting for them. That sense of anticipation can also be built into your legal email strategy. Readers look forward to your emails when your firm consistently provides helpful, practical content.

You can build this anticipation by creating multi-part content series or teasing upcoming resources. For example, an estate planning attorney might offer a three-part email series on updating wills, or a business lawyer might share exclusive commentary on a new regulation. When readers expect value, they keep opening your emails and will be more likely to think of your firm when someone needs legal help.

Lead with Useful, Shareable Content

The most effective emails don’t always sell, they inform. Product review emails convert well because they offer insights, not just promotions. In legal marketing, this translates to emails that answer common questions, explain recent legal changes, or provide actionable tips.

When your content is genuinely helpful, your audience is more likely to forward it to others, bookmark it, or follow up with questions. That helps you stay top-of-mind and increases the likelihood of referrals. Don’t underestimate the power of consistency—regular, helpful emails reinforce your firm’s credibility over time.

Let Us Handle Your Email Marketing 

Your email newsletter is one of the simplest and most effective tools for staying connected to your audience, growing your referral network, and positioning your firm as a reliable source of information. Schedule a Discovery Call with Spotlight Marketing + Branding —we’ll help you build a strategy that keeps your audience engaged and your firm top-of-mind.

People often tend to view marketing as a checklist. There are professional marketers who do the same thing as well. It’s an easy trap to fall into, especially if you are diligent enough to set aside time each quarter to map out a marketing strategy. On these plans, people list various initiatives, such as newsletters, events, and social media ads. 

All these tactics will remain disconnected (and the results may even be underwhelming) if you don’t have a cohesive system tying it all together. Regardless of whether you hire an agency or run your marketing in-house, keep the concept of connectedness in mind as you develop a marketing plan. 

Content & Ads Should Work Together 

Think of content as the foundation of your marketing plan. You don’t write blogs or social media posts to “convert.” That’s what paid ads, landing pages, and drip campaigns are for. But if that’s the case, then what’s the point of all this content then?

Content is part of a long-term strategy. Blogs, organic social media posts (unpaid), and videos demonstrate to your audience that you have something valuable to say. Each of these tools works toward establishing credibility. 

There’s a person out there actively looking for a lawyer they can trust, and you must show you are that person. Educational content brings the right prospect further along on the buying journey, and it also filters out the wrong ones. And because content lives on your website, it will work forever if you make it evergreen (timeless). 

How Content + Paid Ads Get You Clients 

Now, combine this with a paid ad on Facebook promoting one of the free guides on your website. (This type of content is commonly referred to as a lead magnet.) These ads are effective because they are purposeful and they give your content more reach. You can target a particular type of client to ensure that the right people see the content you’re creating. 

But here’s where things get interesting: content improves ads, and ads improve content. A well-written blog post doubles as an ad destination. You run an ad that offers value such as a checklist, a video, or a how-to article, and people click because they’re curious, not because they’re being sold. 

Ads validate your content strategy. Run two ad variations promoting different blog topics and see which performs better. Suddenly, you’re not guessing what your audience wants. You’re seeing it in real time. The data informs what content you create next. 

Retargeting takes this a step further. Someone visits your site and reads your post on what to do after a car accident. That’s not the end, but rather the opening. With the right pixel in place, you can send the same person an ad a week later, such as a free consultation, a case study, or another article that delves deeper into the topic. That’s a conversation, not a cold pitch.

Adopt A Complete Marketing System 

If you have ever felt that your marketing plan lacks direction or is not generating a sufficient return, consider building a better system. One that gets you more of the right clients. Book a one-on-one discovery call with Spotlight Marketing + Branding to see if our content and paid ads strategies make sense for your firm. 

Law firms are usually pretty good at generating leads. They’ve got ads running, SEO dialed in, intake forms set up—but once a lead comes in, it often just sits there. No follow-up, no reminders, no value-add. Just silence.

That silence is a problem. Because while you’re waiting for a lead to “decide,” some other firm is sending helpful emails, building trust, and staying top of mind. And guess who ends up getting hired?

The truth is, lead generation gets a lot of attention. Lead nurturing doesn’t. But it’s the missing piece for a lot of firms that wonder why their intake numbers don’t match their marketing spend.

Understand What Email Sequences Are For

Email sequences aren’t about spamming people. They’re about guiding someone who already showed interest. Maybe they downloaded a checklist, scheduled a consult, or just filled out a contact form. That’s your chance to stay in touch.

A well-done email sequence reminds them you’re there, answers common questions, explains what happens next, and builds confidence in hiring you. It’s not aggressive—it’s consistent.

Keep the Focus on the Reader

Each email should help the lead feel more informed and more confident. You’re not pitching. You’re helping. Think simple answers to common concerns: how long the process takes, what documents they’ll need, what mistakes to avoid, what hiring a lawyer looks like.

These emails don’t need to be long or fancy. A few paragraphs is enough. Use clear subject lines, plain language, and one call-to-action per email.

Don’t Wait Too Long to Follow Up

The first follow-up should happen within 24 hours. After that, plan a short sequence—maybe five or six emails over two to three weeks. Don’t assume silence means no. People get busy, forget, or need more time. Your emails keep the conversation going.

If you’re only following up once, you’re leaving money on the table. A simple, automated email sequence gives you multiple chances to stay relevant.

Be Clear About the Next Step

Every email should have one purpose. Maybe it’s booking a consultation. Maybe it’s downloading a helpful resource. Maybe it’s just replying with a question.

Don’t clutter the message with multiple links or too much detail. Tell the reader what to do next—and make it easy to do.

Lead Nurturing Isn’t Optional—It’s the Difference Between Interest and Action

If your pipeline is full of leads that never convert, it’s probably not a lead generation problem. It’s a follow-up problem. And email sequences are one of the easiest fixes.

They keep you in front of the people who already raised their hand. They build trust. And they help you win more cases without chasing cold leads all over again.

Your Website Isn’t a Lead Machine. It’s a Conversion Tool.

A lot of lawyers ask why their website isn’t generating leads. The better question is: are you making the most of the traffic you’re already getting? Your website doesn’t create demand out of thin air. It supports it. People land on your site because something else—Google, social media, a referral—led them there. What matters is what happens after they arrive.

If your site is slow, confusing, or vague, even the most qualified leads will bounce. On the flip side, a clear, fast, and easy-to-use site helps people take the next step. And that’s what turns a visit into a lead.

Make It Ridiculously Easy to Contact You

If someone has to click more than once to figure out how to reach you, they probably won’t. Your contact button should be visible on every page. Ideally, it’s in the header and the footer. Your phone number should be clickable on mobile. And your contact page should be clean, short, and simple.

Also, consider using a scheduling tool. Some people don’t want to fill out a form and wait—they want to book a time now. Make it easy.

Ditch the Legalese

If your homepage reads like a court filing, you’re losing people. Visitors aren’t looking for impressive language—they’re looking for reassurance that you understand their issue and can help.

Use plain English. Speak directly to your ideal client. Replace long mission statements with clear, simple messaging: who you help, what you do, and what happens next.

Include One Clear Call-to-Action Per Page

Don’t overwhelm your visitors with too many choices. Every page should guide them toward one next step: call now, book a consult, download a checklist—whatever you want them to do.

If a page ends without a clear CTA, it’s a missed opportunity. Don’t assume people will poke around. Tell them exactly what to do next.

Show Proof That You’re Worth Contacting

Most people check out your reviews, testimonials, and case results before deciding to reach out. Don’t bury that information.

Highlight a few key testimonials on your homepage. Link to more on a dedicated page. Include logos of organizations you’re involved with or publications you’ve been featured in. Social proof builds trust, fast.

Make Sure It Loads Fast and Works on Mobile

If your site is slow or doesn’t load right on phones, you’re losing leads. Most people will leave if your site doesn’t load in a few seconds.

Run a speed test and check how your site looks and functions on mobile. Fix anything that gets in the way of a smooth experience. It doesn’t have to be fancy—it just has to work.

Capture Leads Who Aren’t Ready Yet

Not everyone is ready to call you today. That doesn’t mean they won’t be ready next week. Give those visitors a reason to stay in your orbit.

Offer a simple lead magnet—like a free checklist or guide—in exchange for an email address. Then send occasional follow-ups that keep you top of mind.

Your Website Should Make It Easy to Say Yes

Your site won’t generate leads by itself. But it can turn attention into action—if it’s clear, fast, and built to guide people to the next step.

If you’re putting effort into driving traffic from referrals, search, or social, your site should be doing its job once they arrive. Make it easy for visitors to take action, and you’ll stop losing leads you already earned.

You have a Facebook presence. You want people to look you up after they are referred to you, and you want to stay in touch with your existing audience. You consistently post educational and valuable content. You’re doing everything right and you’re likely assuming a lot of people are seeing your content. However, lawyers quickly become frustrated with their limited reach, the lack of comments, and the likes that never appear.

The disconnect isn’t due to your effort or approach—it’s the platform. Facebook’s algorithm decides what content gets seen, and typically, business pages are not at the top of that list. We’re not saying that organic social media isn’t practical, but instead that it is selective. A post’s visibility largely depends on its timing, format, and level of interaction. While it is free to post, getting seen requires a strategic approach. 

Organic social media should be part of your marketing strategy, so it’s essential to understand how it works. 

What Is Organic Social Media?

While an ad and an organic post can look very similar to a casual user, they’re fundamentally different. Organic social media is everything you post without a budget behind it. This applies to posts that aren’t boosted or have an ad spend. These raw, unpaid posts are on your timeline and appear in people’s feeds. That includes text updates, photos, videos, stories, event announcements, and other links. 

These posts show up in the feeds of people who already follow you, or have engaged with you often enough that Facebook thinks they still care. For many law firms, organic posts serve as their foundation for digital branding, and for good reason. These posts display personality, voice, and credibility. 

Organic social media is not about pushing an ad but building something stronger: recognition, trust, and relevance. A post about a recent court win, a brief “did-you-know” about your practice area, and a 30-second clip explaining DUI consequences are small but consistent bricks in a wall that your audience learns to recognize.

If you post only when you have something to promote, you’ll have already lost the storyline. Organic social media requires ongoing maintenance, visibility, and a long-term commitment to consistent posting.

Who Is Seeing My Posts?

This is something that many marketing companies won’t tell you: Maybe about 2-6% of your followers are seeing your organic posts. That’s it. Unfortunately, this isn’t a glitch or something you can work around because it’s how Facebook is designed to work. 

Although algorithms change, at the time of this posting, Facebook’s algorithm favors personal connection over brand voice. That means that friends, family, group content, and viral engagement have priority. And very few law firms can expect to go viral by posting educational content. 

The good news is that organic social media is far from pointless. Organic content—especially posts that educate, showcase testimonials, or highlight your team—shows you’re present, engaged, and credible. It also fuels retargeting. Facebook tracks who interacts with your posts or visits your profile, enabling you to build retargeting audiences without incurring any costs. The more consistently you post, the more quietly—and effectively—you build a pool of people primed for follow-up ads.

Content + Paid Ads = Your Growth Formula 

If you consistently post and feel you have maxed out your referral pipeline, it may be time to pair your organic strategy with smart, targeted advertising. Spotlight Marketing & Branding helps law firms create content that earns trust and builds ad campaigns that get seen. Whether you’re ready to expand your reach or refine your message, we can help you achieve both.

When it comes to Facebook ads, you could have the cleanest copy, the most eye-catching creative, and even a perfect funnel, and still fail. Why? Because it didn’t get in front of the right people. However, Facebook’s ad platform gives you a tremendous amount of autonomy over who sees your ads, and more importantly, the type of client you work with. 

Facebook is one of the most powerful platforms for reaching future clients, but it must be paired with a precise strategy. Let’s discuss how to choose the right audience for your ads. 

Leveraging Demographic-Based Audiences

One of the reasons Facebook is a fantastic advertising platform is its vast information and data. As a result, you can target individuals based on age, gender, income bracket (derived from behavior and zip code), and educational level. 

It’s easy and somewhat enticing to run a Facebook ad and select your target audience as you go, but this would be a mistake. This type of targeting is most effective when you already have a clear understanding of your client profile. Who are the individuals or organizations that require your services? For example, a family law firm targeting divorce cases does not need to reach everyone—their ads need to be seen by people who married, aged 30-50, living within a 15-mile radius of the law firm. 

Casting a wide net may be appealing, but this would be counterproductive. You don’t want to be everyone’s solution. Narrow down the type of people who would or will be looking for you, even if they don’t need your services yet. (You can nurture this relationship through newsletters, social media posts, informative blogs, and educational videos until they do.) The tighter your filters, the more relevant you will be. Relevance drives clicks and conversions, which in turn lowers your costs. 

Using List-Based Custom Audiences

It’s essential to note that you’re not entirely reliant on Facebook for data. You can build a custom audience with CRM exports, newsletter lists, email subscribers, past clients, and anyone else you have a connection with. Upload your lists into Facebook Ads Manager, and Meta will securely match the data to user profiles (using hashed data) to create a private audience tailored just for you.

Segment your list before you upload it. Create separate audiences for cold leads, warm leads, and past clients. You can retarget people who almost hired you. Re-engage your best clients. Promote a new service to people who opted in two years ago but haven’t interacted since. Your own data is often your most valuable.

What About Lookalike Audiences?

Your custom audience is an opportunity to build a wider one. Facebook’s Lookalike Audience feature finds people who resemble the ones in your original list. It’s pattern recognition at scale. You give Meta the blueprint, and it scans for similar profiles.

This is how you scale while ensuring your ads are still seen by the right people. You can start with a Lookalike Audience that’s 1% similar to your source list (this means the most precise match). As your budget and performance grow, you can gradually broaden to 2% or 3% to reach more users with slightly looser matching criteria.

The quality of your source list matters. If you upload a list of cold leads, your Lookalike will inherit that. But if you base it on actual clients? You’ll get more people who behave like actual clients. 

Retargeting Audiences

Sometimes, people click on your ad but don’t take any further action. Others will visit your website, leave, or watch a video, and stop it halfway through. People may mistakenly assume that these are lost leads. They aren’t; they’re warm leads. A warm lead is someone who has interacted with your content or firm in some way, but they haven’t yet become a client. They’re in a space where they may take another step toward booking a consultation, but they may need a nudge, i.e., retargeting. 

Retargeting captures warm leads by tracking digital behavior. It watches who’s interacted with your content and then follows up. This is accomplished in several ways: 

  • Facebook Pixel or Meta Tag
  • Engagement Tracking 
  • Audience Building 
  • Follow-Up Ads

You can set retargeting windows based on user behavior—last 30 days, 60 days, 90 days—and deliver fresh content based on what they’ve already seen. Maybe it’s a testimonial. Maybe it’s a short FAQ video. Perhaps it’s just a reminder about a cleaner CTA. If someone sees the same ad six times, it’s not “branding”—it’s noise. Keep the content fresh, relevant, and sequential. Treat retargeting like a conversation, not a billboard.

Ready for Smarter Ads?

Audience targeting isn’t a guessing game and shouldn’t be an afterthought. Spotlight Marketing & Branding helps law firms build ad campaigns that start with precision, not hope. Ready to stop wasting clicks? Contact us to determine if Facebook ads are the right fit for your firm.

Without question, Facebook ads can generate a steady stream of quality leads, but a few caveats go along with that. They are an incredibly effective tool for growth, but that’s not to say they are universally applicable to every marketing strategy. The only way to identify whether they are right for you is by asking yourself a few questions. These answers will also factor into your overall strategy—a fundamental prerequisite to not wasting your budget. 

Most businesses just launch campaigns without defining their goals, knowing who their audience is, or quantifying what a lead is worth. Even more, there are different paid ads platforms that can generate leads for your firm. For example, Google ads capture prospective clients as they search for legal services, while Meta ads (Facebook, Instagram, etc) can reach people before they need you. By answering these three questions, you’ll better understand whether it’s time to incorporate them into your next marketing plan. 

1. What Services Are You Promoting?

Not every service is a good fit for Facebook advertising. Since Facebook operates on an interruptive marketing model, meaning users aren’t actively searching for legal help, the service you promote must catch attention and create urgency.

Legal services like estate planning, family law, and bankruptcy often perform well because they address issues people might not search for immediately but still need solutions. For example, someone who is thinking about divorce might not Google “best family lawyer” immediately, but a well-placed Facebook ad can prompt them to take action sooner.

On the other hand, business law and complex litigation can be more complicated to market on Facebook since business owners tend to seek referrals or use Google searches instead. (Facebook ads can still work for these service areas, but we did want to point out a scenario in which another strategy could be helpful.) If you’re running ads for a service that isn’t an obvious fit, you’ll need a compelling offer—such as a free guide, webinar, or limited-time consultation—to generate interest. Simply running an ad that says “Call for a Consultation” is not enough; the ad must give people a reason to act.

2. Who Are You Trying to Reach?

Facebook’s strength is its detailed audience targeting, but if you don’t define your ideal client, even the best ads will fall flat. Broad targeting wastes ad spending, while precise targeting improves lead quality. When crafting your audience, consider key factors like age, income level, location, and behaviors.

For example, an estate planning attorney may want to target homeowners aged 35+ with children, while a personal injury firm could focus on individuals recently engaged with auto insurance content. Facebook allows you to layer multiple targeting options to get as specific as possible. Here are a few effective ways to narrow your audience:

  • Demographics: Target users by age, location, family status, or homeownership.
  • Behavior & Interests: Focus on people interacting with legal content, insurance companies, or financial planning services.
  • Recent Life Events: Facebook allows you to target people who have recently engaged, divorced, or moved to a new city, making it ideal for family law, estate planning, and relocation-focused firms.

Beyond cold targeting, Facebook allows custom and lookalike audiences to maximize conversions. Custom audiences let you retarget website visitors, past leads, and people who have engaged with your firm’s previous ads. Lookalike audiences help you reach new potential clients who share characteristics with your best existing clients. The more refined your targeting, the higher quality your leads will be.

3. What’s Your Budget and Target Cost Per Lead?

Facebook ads work best when you have a clear budget and cost expectations. Too many firms launch campaigns without defining what they can afford to spend per lead and client. Without this, it’s easy to burn through your budget without getting a return on investment.

Start by calculating your average case value and conversion rate. If a case is worth $5,000 and 20% of your leads become clients, you must keep your cost per lead within a profitable range. Depending on the practice area, Facebook ads for law firms typically cost $50 to $300 per lead and a cost per client acquisition of between $500 and $3,000. Monitoring these metrics will prevent overspending and help you fine-tune your campaigns for better ROI.

Here’s how to determine your ideal cost per acquisition (CPA):

  • Know Your Average Case Value – If your average client is worth $5,000, that number should guide your ad spend. 
  • Estimate Your Conversion Rate – If 10% of leads become paying clients, you must generate 10 leads to get one client. 
  • Calculate Your Max CPA – If you wanted (for example) a 3:1 return on investment (ROI), your cost per client should not exceed one-third of your case value. For a $5,000 case, your max CPA would be $1,667 or less per client.

Ways to Improve Your CPA: 

  • Use Lead Magnets. Offering something valuable (such as a free consultation or downloadable guide) can lower your cost per lead. 
  • Improve Landing Pages: You’re wasting ad dollars if your website doesn’t convert visitors into leads. 
  • Retargeting Campaigns: Re-engage people who clicked but didn’t contact you.

Tracking key performance metrics like click-through rate (CTR), cost per lead (CPL), and conversion rate ensures you’re not overspending without results. If your CPA is too high, adjust your ad copy, targeting, and landing page before giving up on Facebook ads altogether.

Is Facebook Advertising Right for You?

Facebook ads can be a powerful client acquisition tool if you have a service suited for Facebook, a well-defined audience, and a clear budget strategy. Without these elements, you risk wasting time and money. The most successful law firms on Facebook ads treat it as an ongoing strategy—constantly refining their audience, testing different creatives, and tracking results. 

Need help optimizing your Facebook ads? Spotlight Marketing & Branding can create and manage campaigns that deliver real results. Contact us today to get started!

Once your firm gets past the early hustle, the same question tends to pop up: should you hire someone in-house to handle your marketing, or should you outsource it to an agency? There’s no universal right answer, but there are clear pros and cons to both and your decision should match where your firm is and where you want it to go.

Before you make a move, you need to understand what you’re really buying with either option: time, strategy, consistency, and accountability. How you get those will depend on your setup, budget, and long-term plans.

In-House: More Control, More Commitment

Hiring a full-time marketing employee gives you direct access and quicker feedback loops. You can make changes fast, test new ideas often, and have someone who really learns your voice and goals over time. That’s hard to beat.

But it comes with more management. You’ll need to either train that person yourself or hire someone with experience, which usually means a higher salary. And one person may not have every skill you need (design, writing, video, ads, SEO). You’ll probably still need to outsource some pieces.

Agency: More Resources, Less Oversight

Agencies bring a team approach. Instead of relying on one person, you get access to multiple people with different skills. They can move fast, handle campaigns from start to finish, and usually have solid systems in place.

The tradeoff is that you’re not their only client. Turnaround times may be slower, and unless you’re paying for a high-touch package, you might have to do more of the strategic thinking yourself. Agencies are great for execution, but they still need clear direction from you to be effective.

Think About What You Really Need Right Now

If your biggest issue is consistency—keeping your blog updated, running email campaigns, staying active on social media—an agency can probably help you stay on track without a huge learning curve.

If your main issue is strategy—figuring out your voice, dialing in your audience, building a long-term brand—then an in-house hire may be better. It’s easier to develop that clarity when someone is immersed in your firm every day.

Cost Isn’t Just the Salary or the Retainer

Hiring in-house means paying for benefits, onboarding time, and training. But you own their time. Agencies are usually less expensive, and they may give you quicker results if you know what you want and they’re good at delivering it.

Either way, you’ll need to be involved. Marketing isn’t something you hand off once and forget. Whether you go with an employee or an agency, your involvement will shape the outcome.

Pick the Structure That Fits Your Growth Goals

Some firms start with an agency and later bring someone in-house once they know what works. Others hire in-house first, then bring in agencies later to fill in the gaps. You don’t have to commit to one path forever.

Start by asking yourself what success looks like in the next 6–12 months. Do you want more leads? Better brand visibility? A smoother intake process? Your answer should help guide who you hire and how you work with them.

The best setup is the one that helps you move forward without overwhelming you or draining your time. Make the decision based on what you can support now, not what you think you “should” be doing long-term.

Too many law firms try to market to everyone and end up connecting with no one. It might feel safe to cast a wide net, but it usually leads to underwhelming leads, tire-kickers, or clients who aren’t a great fit. The truth is, not all clients are worth your time and that’s okay.

The goal isn’t to get more clicks. It’s to attract clients who value what you offer, are willing to pay for it, and are more likely to refer others like them. That starts by knowing exactly who those people are.

Look at Your Past Cases

Start by looking at your own data. Which cases have been the most profitable? Which clients were easiest to work with? Where did your strongest referrals come from?

Look for patterns in age, profession, location, income, legal need, or personality traits. Make a list of your favorite clients from the past year and see what they have in common. That’s the base of your ideal client profile.

Define the Problem You Actually Solve

Clients don’t hire you because of your credentials They hire you because they have a problem they want to fix. Identify what that problem is and describe it in plain language.

Instead of saying you handle “probate litigation,” think in terms of what the client is experiencing: “You just lost a loved one, and now you’re stuck dealing with a legal mess.”

When you define the problem from their perspective, it becomes easier to connect with the people who actually need your help.

Get Specific About Where They Are

Once you know who your ideal clients are, figure out where they spend time, both online and offline. What social platforms do they use? What podcasts or newsletters do they follow? Do they attend local events or belong to professional groups?

This helps you decide where to put your energy. It also tells you where to advertise, where to network, and where to show up consistently.

Tailor Your Messaging

Your content should speak directly to your ideal client’s concerns, not just list your services. Use their language. Answer the questions they’re already asking. Show that you understand their situation.

This makes your marketing more effective without having to spend more money. You’re not trying to convince people who aren’t a fit, you’re making it easier for the right people to find and trust you.

Say No to the Wrong Leads

If you keep getting clients who drain your time or push back on fees, it’s not just a sales problem, it’s a targeting problem. When your marketing speaks to the wrong audience, that’s who shows up.

It’s okay to say no. Turning down bad-fit cases frees you up for better ones. It also protects your time, your reputation, and your sanity.

Clarity Attracts the Clients You Actually Want

Being clear about who you serve doesn’t limit your firm, it strengthens it. It makes your marketing more focused and your work more satisfying.

The better you get at spotting your ideal client, the easier it becomes to attract them. And once you do that consistently, growth feels a lot less like guesswork.

Someone visits your website, reads a blog post, maybe checks your about page, then leaves. That doesn’t mean they’re not interested. It just means they’re not ready yet. If you don’t follow up, there’s a good chance they’ll forget about you entirely.

That’s where retargeting ads come in. Retargeting lets you stay in front of people who’ve already shown some interest. These are warm leads—people who clicked once but didn’t convert. And staying top of mind with them can be the difference between getting hired or getting overlooked.

Retargeting isn’t complicated, but it works best when you know what to say, when to show up, and how to guide people toward the next step.

Set Up the Basics

To start retargeting, you’ll need to add a small piece of code (called a pixel) from platforms like Facebook or Google to your website. That pixel tracks who visits, then shows your ads to those same people when they browse other sites or scroll social media.

Start simple. Create an ad that reminds visitors who you are and invites them back. This could be a short testimonial video, a client review, or a message that says, “Still thinking about your legal issue? We’re here when you’re ready.”

You’re not trying to hard-sell. You’re just showing up again with a helpful nudge.

Focus on Value, Not Pressure

The best retargeting ads don’t push, they reassure. Think about what someone needs to feel confident hiring you. That might be clarity, trust, or just one more reason to take action.

Try offering a downloadable checklist, a short FAQ video, or an invitation to a free consultation. Keep the tone calm and helpful. You’re not chasing them down, you’re showing up at just the right time with something useful.

You can even segment your ads by behavior. If someone visited your pricing page, show an ad that addresses common pricing questions. If they read a blog post about divorce, follow up with an ad offering your divorce planning guide.

Retargeting Helps You Close the Loop

Most potential clients don’t act right away. Retargeting gives you a second (or third) chance to earn their trust and win their business.