Jan
1
Written by:
John Clark
1/1/2009 5:18 PM
Should you put a link to LinkedIn on a biography page of a law firm website? That was the question posed recently on the Legal Marketing Association (LMA) listserv by Gail Lamarche Director of Marketing at Henderson, Franklin, Starnes & Holt.
I opined that, for professional services firms such as this law firm, the attorney biography page is the best thing we have as a “money page” on the website. Therefore, driving visitors away from the money page was, strategically, a bad idea. Moreover, it seemed if there were really content on LinkedIn that was valuable to the site visitor, then that information should be on the bio page. And if it wasn’t there, the bio page was somehow deficient.
Smug I was in the righteousness of my response. But I got an earful of dissent from LMA listserv contributors. The arguments are worthy of consideration:
Jayne Navarre, LawGravity, presented these points persuasively:
- Branding – The LinkeIn link is like a hip badge of Web 2.0 awareness
- Connections – LinkedIn provides a transparent view to an attorney’s connections, arguably a value to any prospective client
- Authoritative - Access to the LinkedIn Questions & Answers provides additional proof of the attorney’s authority
Heather Milligan, Director of Marketing at Barger Wolen emphasized that LinkedIn:
- Human - helps make the attorney “dynamic, human, liked”( in case we have any residual concerns about their humanity) and helps the attorney pass the “known, liked & trusted” test of prospective clients.
- Dimensional - And in rebuttal to my “bio is deficient” comment, Heather notes that to maintain a certain appearance consistent with other bios and the overall website, “the firm bio is controlled for content, style, etc….(while) LinkedIn is the perfect place where an attorney can bring together their outside interests and professional careers, making them more human and likeable.
- Connections - Perhaps the most valuable feature, LinkedIn is fundamentally a connecting tool that might serendipitously reveal a third party connection to the site visitor which presents all kinds of opportunity for real introduction.
It’s not a slam dunk either way. The answer to Gail’s original question seems to be, “It depends.” The circumstances dictate the strategy. I’ll give it a nod of possibility and something worth trying. Yes, I know, “first I was against it, now I’m for it.” Thanks to the enlightenment of my marketing peers.
But I’ll have this last (never!) word. Think doubly hard about sending your site visitor from the most valuable conversion page of your site to an information wasteland. Don’t do it unless the LinkedIn profile to which you are sending visitors:
- provides a rich set of business connections
- demonstrates some effort to contribute authoritatively to the online Q&A discourse
- otherwise expands on the website attorney bio page
- (if possible) provides a path back
And whatever you do, measure the results. Professionals keep score.
Author: Sonny Cohen, Duo Consulting
Duo Source Blog