Most lawyers think of referrals as something that comes from other lawyers. But your next best referral source might be the business owner across town. Local businesses have clients, customers, and contacts who occasionally need legal help, and most of them would rather refer someone they actually know.

If you want to build a steady stream of referrals, you don’t need to attend every networking event in your city. You just need a system for connecting with the right local businesses and making it easy for them to think of you when the need arises.

Step 1: Identify Businesses That Overlap with Your Clients

Start by figuring out which types of businesses are most likely to have clients who need the services you offer. For example, if you handle estate planning, financial advisors, churches, and accountants are natural fits. If you handle real estate law, realtors and mortgage brokers are obvious connections.

Don’t just think in your immediate field. Think about who your clients interact with before or after they might need a lawyer.

Step 2: Make an Introduction That’s About Them, Not You

When reaching out to a local business, don’t lead with a pitch. Introduce yourself, express interest in their work, and suggest a quick coffee or call to learn more about what they do.

People are more open to connecting when they feel seen, not sold to. Focus the first interaction on understanding their business, their clientele, and what challenges they see.

Step 3: Create a Simple Value Exchange

Once you’ve built a connection, think about how you can add value to their business. Can you offer a resource their clients might need? Can you introduce them to someone useful in your network?

Referrals flow more easily when there’s a two-way street, even if you’re not directly sending them clients right away.

Step 4: Make Referrals Easy

Don’t assume people know how to refer you. Give them a simple explanation of who you help, what problems you solve, and how to contact you. The easier you make it for them, the more likely they’ll remember you.

You can even create a one-page resource or a quick email script they can use when referring someone to you.

Step 5: Stay in Touch

Referrals don’t usually happen after one meeting. Set a reminder to check in with your local contacts every couple of months. Send a useful article, ask how business is going, or invite them to a community event.

The goal is to stay visible without being pushy. That way, when someone mentions needing a lawyer, your name comes up first.

Referrals Start with Relationships

If you want more local referrals, start by building real connections. Focus on understanding the other business, offering help where you can, and making it easy for them to send people your way.

You don’t need to be everywhere in your city, just known by the right people.