May 2008

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Here’s a proposition: all blawgers not yet on Twitter should tweet … starting now. Don’t hang about.

Why? Let’s not get hung up analysing the possible benefits. If you’re a blawger, you’re already part-persuaded. Twitter is another communication channel / networking tool that’s worth trying. And the more who try, the quicker we’ll realise the potential benefits for the lawyering community.

So, set up an account on Twitter now and follow a handful of others. For some suggestions, try me and those I follow, law.librarian contributors and Legal Voices.

Then tweet a bit: post some thoughts, reply to some who you follow. See what happens.

Plus – important – pipe your blog feed into your account using Twitterfeed. That way every time you post to your blog, the title plus optional excerpt plus link is posted to your account. That’s good for your blog readers who are on Twitter and good for exposing your blog to new readers.

PS. I promise not to twitter on incessantly about Twitter, but with the bit between my teeth, expect a few more in the short term

Twitter for lawyers

I’d call Twitter instant messaging with legs – the legs being the attractively light-touch networking functions provided by Twitter and fleshed out as you please by third party Twitter applications.

As to how lawyers can best take advantage of it, you can do no better than read Steve Matthews’ post on Lawyer Marketing With Twitter (“It’s a big dinner table conversation with peers that you get to choose.”)

Kevin O’Keefe and Connie Crosby also weigh in with useful perspectives.

Tweeting status updates (“What are you doing?”) dominates. If you’re not one for chat, Twitter may not immediately appeal. But there’s no compulsion to chat obsessively; you can gain value by following others, just tweeting sufficiently to keep yourself visible; and/or tweet news, developments, links etc. But immediacy and personality are the key it seems; without that you’re off the radar.

For a flavour of legal tweets, see Steve Matthews’ Legal Voices – an aggregation of tweets from Twitter users in the legal industry.

Doug Cornelius has published a great set of slides which he used in his recent presentation on An Attorney’s Perspective on Web 2.0 and Enterprise 2.0.

Have a walk through the slides and see if you can parrot what he was saying.

Hey, who said markets don’t work?

Ironically, the music companies are now abandoning DRM because it worked too well. Apple wouldn’t license its version to rivals – so the best-selling iPod drove the iTunes store to its present position, where it is the third-largest music retailer in any form in the US. Rosenblatt says that record labels “have been desperate to find a viable competitor to Apple and iTunes”. Industry sources suggest that Apple’s iTunes store has more than 70% of the UK download market, and growing. “The record companies don’t like dealing with Apple, because Apple is in a position where it can dictate the economic terms and dictate the business models,” says Rosenblatt. “What’s going to draw people away from iTunes? One answer is to get rid of DRM.”

Go on, hum it:

According to an email received (as a valued subscriber) from FreePint (highly recommended):

In June 2008, VIP Magazine will be publishing a special focus on legal products. The issue will feature:

  • LexisNexis and Westlaw: Comparing the Big Two head-to-head in an in-depth research review
  • CCH from Wolters Kluwer: A close look at a tax and accounting product with legal compliance advantages, from a well-known publisher

Plus editorial commentary, analysis of the latest news in the content industry, and more.

FreePint subscribers have the “opportunity” to pre-order a copy and receive it as soon as it’s published mid-June. Individual issues of VIP are GBP 54 + VAT.

So, drinks are free, but you have to pay for the lunch.

Not being one to jump too readily onto a bandwagon, I only yesterday signed up on Twitter. With the benefit of that vast experience, I won’t yet wax lyrical about it. But I’m not about to diss it either – far from it. It’s clearly a useful tool for you to do with what you will. Once you figure out the architecture (which takes all of a few minutes), you can see the potential.

What could I get out of it? I asked Goog why people tweet and why people use twitter. Here’s a couple of snips that made sense to me:

David Armano – Twitter Love + Hate

What was once initially designed to answer the question “what are you doing?”, has turned into a free-form communications service where people are having bursts of shorthand conversations, sharing links and information in rapid-fire fashion.

Sharon Sarmiento – The Top 5 Ways Smart People Use Twitter

To be honest, my first impression of Twitter was that it was for folks who had way too much time on their hands who narcissistically wanted to broadcast every random thought that crossed their brains. While this may be true in some instances, there are also some very smart, professional, forward thinking people whom I respect who are using Twitter intelligently.

Sharon suggests smart, professional, forward thinking people are/could be using it for:

  • marketing and communication
  • microblogging
  • business networking
  • breaking news and getting scoops
  • streamlining your electronic inboxes

ReadWriteWeb has crunched the numbers and analysed what people say when they tweet.

And me? Well for now I’m tweeting to find out about tweeting.

From an amusing piece by Jeffrey Goldberg on advice he received on becoming a blogger:

A blogger should only post, when he has “something new to add to something old,” and has “something that no one else has.” Do not “post for the sake of posting. Resist the temptation – and boy is it a temptation – to blog because your audience expects to read something.” This last bit of advice presupposes the existence for me of an audience. On this exact point, another of our fine bloggers, Ross Douthat, offered me this piece of advice: “Don’t check your traffic.”

Regarding news reporting, Scott Karp puts it like this:

Has there ever in the history of niche media been so many news organizations writing about the same thing at the exact same time? … makes you wonder why some news orgs don’t just link to the story that’s already been published and go write about something else that nobody knows about – you know, news.

Following my last post on law firm newsletters having to compete with the best online law news services, it’s worth pointing to two law news sites who fortuitously received gongs last week as the very best in their respective industries:

OUT-LAW.com was awarded the 2008 Webby Award in the Law category. The Webby Awards are “the leading international award honoring excellence on the internet presented by The International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences, a 550-member body of leading web experts, business figures, luminaries, visionaries and creative celebrities”. “Better than the Oscars” according to Vanity Fair. Although OUT-LAW is much more than a news site, I suspect most of its traffic comes via the news section. For news on IT and e-commerce law, OUT-LAW, replete with categorised RSS feeds, cannot be bettered.

Legal Week was named Weekly Business Magazine of the Year at the 2008 PPA awards – “the most coveted in the magazine industry”. Legal Week was praised for its “agenda-setting coverage”, a “ground-breaking redesign” and its success at building a “vibrant online community”. “It’s intelligent, not gimmicky and suits its readership. It demonstrates great knowledge …”

How does your law firm newsletter stack up?

Jordan Furlong on the futility of most law firm newsletters.

Law firms sometimes seem to think their newsletters, print or e-mail, are competing only against other law firm newsletters for clients’ attention. They’re not. They’re competing against every business and industry publication their clients read, usually produced by large publishing companies with decades of experience. Unlike law firms, these companies don’t regard their periodicals as a sideline, a nice marketing tool – they treat them the same way law firms treat their work product, as the lifeline of their businesses. So it’s not surprising that in this competition, law firms are outgunned from the start. …

The bottom line is: if your firm is producing anything that isn’t expected to be, and isn’t held to the standard of being, the very best, either stop doing it, or do it right. You wouldn’t send out mediocre, “good enough” legal work to your clients. Don’t pollute your brand by settling for mediocre, “good enough” client publications.

I’d extend this argument considerably. With the ubiquity of law news and blog sites and the much-discussed move of news reading habits from print to online, law firm newsletters in whatever medium are competing with the best online news and blog services in the UK and often globally, whether these are produced by large or small publishing companies, by large or small law firms or by individuals.

In particular, the multi-topic (small) law firm newsletter must be doomed. In print such newsletters may still have some useful life locally on the reception table and delivered by snail mail to existing customers. But the web savvy will be getting their news from elsewhere – likely way beyond your patch.

To begin to compete, firms must not just report news which is readily available online from numerous other sources, but display real expertise in particular practice areas and engage their readers. This means either more professionally-written, up-to-the-minute, analytical, subject-specific fare such as is produced by the leading publishers and innovative law firms and/or the less formal, more personal, more engaging blog, encouraging conversations with readers.

The former is a tall order for most small- to medium-sized firms; as Jordan points out, this requires condiderably more resources to be invested in their publications.

As to blogging, it will be no surprise that I feel this is the most effective route for the smaller firm. But it is important to recognise that simply blogging news that can be found elsewhere is unlikely to improve your online presence much. I commend those firms that are blogging their news rather than just mailing out print or sending email newsletters, but you are competing with the very best nationally and any first-mover advantage (few firms are doing this) will be short-lived. Law firm blogs need to be focussed (usually on a particular practice area), to have personality (usually meaning it’s not “the firm” but individuals or small groups that should blog) and to be engaging (providing comment and analysis and stirring things up a little) or to deliver some other value that cannot be found elsewhere.

Blogging is low cost and effective. Given the will and the right approach, it won’t be difficult to make your mark.

I was asked to write an article for the Legal Executive Journal (April issue) on the best law blogs. I’m not into “the best” and conferring awards, but I did agree to write a piece on “What makes a good blawg”, mentioning a few of my “blawgs of note”: established law blogs that have made their mark and stood the test of time.

So here it is.

[Full disclosure: Money changed hands.]

Postscript: It continues to astound me how rapid Google is at indexing blog sites. I only just finished this post 5 minutes ago and it’s already reindexed the home page. I know I’m not that important!

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