Most lawyers hesitate to start a newsletter for the same reason: the list is too small.
Twenty subscribers doesn’t feel impressive. It might even feel a little embarrassing. When people picture email marketing, they imagine thousands of contacts, polished templates, and complicated automation.
But that mindset misses the real point of email.
A list of twenty people who already know you is far more valuable than a list of two thousand strangers who don’t. And if you wait until your list feels “big enough,” you’ll miss the period when building the habit matters most.
The best time to start sending a monthly email is when your list is small.
Small Lists Are Normal at the Beginning
Every email list starts small. The lawyers with hundreds or thousands of subscribers didn’t start there. They started with a handful of contacts—often just past clients, friends, and professional connections.
The difference is that they started early and stayed consistent.
If you begin sending a monthly email now, those twenty subscribers will turn into fifty. Then one hundred. Then more. But that growth only happens if you begin.
Waiting until the list grows first usually means the newsletter never gets started.
Email Keeps You Top of Mind
Legal work is not something most people think about every day. Someone might hire you once and then go years without needing another lawyer.
That doesn’t mean the relationship disappears.
A short monthly email keeps your name in front of people who already trust you. It reminds them what you do and what kinds of problems you help solve.
When a friend, coworker, or family member asks if they know a lawyer, the name that appears in their inbox every month is much easier to recall than someone they haven’t heard from in years.
You Don’t Need Fancy Content
One reason lawyers delay newsletters is that they think every issue has to be packed with ideas and polished writing.
It doesn’t.
A simple format works just fine:
- A short introduction (two or three sentences)
- A link to a recent blog post or article
- One quick tip or answer to a common question
- Your contact information
That’s it.
If you can write an email that takes two minutes to read, you’re doing it right.
Email Builds Trust Over Time
Trust rarely forms from a single interaction. It builds gradually as people see consistent signals that you’re thoughtful, reliable, and clear.
A monthly email creates those signals.
Each issue reinforces the same message: you’re still here, still helping clients, and still paying attention to the issues people face.
This steady presence helps prospects feel more comfortable contacting you later. They’ve seen your name before. They’ve read your explanations. They feel like they already know how you communicate.
That familiarity lowers hesitation when they finally need legal help.
Small Lists Often Perform Better
Large email lists can be unpredictable. Many subscribers never open messages. Others signed up years ago and forgot they were on the list.
Small lists behave differently.
When your list contains people who actually know you—past clients, referral partners, colleagues—the open rates are usually higher. The responses are more personal. You may even get replies thanking you for the information.
Those interactions are far more meaningful than sending a newsletter to thousands of people who ignore it.
It Strengthens Your Other Marketing
Email also helps reinforce other marketing efforts.
When you publish a blog post, your newsletter gives it an audience. When you post something helpful on social media, the email can link to it. When someone joins your list through your website, the newsletter keeps them engaged.
Instead of relying on one channel to do everything, your marketing starts working together.
That’s when it becomes more effective.
Growth Comes From Consistency
The most important factor in email marketing isn’t design, list size, or writing style.
It’s consistency.
If someone subscribes today and receives an email every month for the next year, your name will become familiar in a way that sporadic communication never achieves.
Twenty subscribers today can become two hundred over time—but only if the newsletter already exists.
A small email list isn’t a weakness. It’s a starting point. The lawyers who benefit from email marketing years from now are the ones who begin when the audience is still small.









