A lot of lawyers put real time and thought into writing client alerts, articles and blog posts. There’s research, drafting and usually multiple rounds of edits before anything is ready to go out.
Once it’s published, it gets shared and then attention shifts to the next thing. That’s understandable. Everyone is busy and there’s always another deadline competing for attention. But it also means a lot of the value in that content never gets fully realized.
A well-written piece should do more than sit on your website or get one post on LinkedIn. It should give you a reason to reach out to the right people, stay visible in a way that feels natural and bring a point of view into conversations that matter. It should help you stay top of mind with clients and prospects and give you something relevant to say when it counts.
The lawyers who get results from their content aren’t necessarily writing more than everyone else. They’re more intentional about how they use what they’ve already created. They treat it as something they can build on, not something they check off a list.
You’ve already done the hard part by writing. Here’s how to turn that effort into real opportunities and business.
- Start by thinking about who should see it before you even publish it. Not in a broad “this applies to everyone” way, but in a very specific way. Which clients would care about this? Which prospects might find it relevant? Who have you been meaning to reconnect with where this gives you a natural reason to reach out? That short list matters more than any broad distribution. It gives you direction and makes everything that follows easier.
- When you send the article, don’t just send them a link to it. A quick note that explains why you’re sharing it makes all the difference. It doesn’t need to be polished or long. One or two sentences that connect the topic to something they’re dealing with is enough. That’s what turns it into a conversation instead of something that gets ignored.
- The same article can also do more than one job. You don’t need to treat it as a single piece of content. Pull out a few of the key points and use them separately. A short post. A follow-up post a few days later with a different angle. A quick summary you can send to someone who won’t read the full piece. Most people won’t engage with long-form content unless you make it easy for them.
- This is also where your network comes into play. There are always people you haven’t spoken to in a while but should stay in touch with. Instead of waiting for a reason to reach out, use what you’ve written. It gives you a way to reconnect that feels natural and relevant.
- It shouldn’t stop with online sharing either. Bring it into your conversations. If you’re on a call or at an event and the topic comes up, mention that you’ve been thinking about it or that you recently wrote about it. You don’t need to make it a big moment. Just work it in naturally. It reinforces your perspective without feeling like self-promotion.
- Your content can also open the door to speaking opportunities. If you’ve written about something timely, there’s a good chance others are trying to make sense of it too. That could turn into a client presentation, a webinar or a panel topic. You’ve already done the thinking. This is just another way to use it.
- Another piece that’s often overlooked is internal alignment. Your colleagues can help extend the reach of what you’ve written, but only if they know it exists and understand how to use it. Sending a short summary or a few lines they can share makes it easier for them to incorporate it into their own conversations.
- You also don’t have to treat the article as something that’s finished once it’s published. If there’s a new development related to the topic, go back to it. Send a quick note or post an update. It shows that you’re paying attention and gives you another reason to engage with the same group of people.
Over time, it’s worth paying attention to what actually leads to conversations. Who responds. What turns into a meeting. Which topics seem to resonate. That’s how you get better at this. Not by writing more for the sake of it, but by understanding what works and building on it.
And while each individual piece matters, it’s the consistency that really adds up. One article won’t define how people see you. A steady stream of thoughtful content over time starts to create a clear picture of what you focus on and how you think. There’s nothing wrong with writing something, sharing it and moving on. But if that’s the default, it’s easy to miss the bigger opportunity.
The lawyers who get the most out of their content aren’t necessarily producing more than everyone else. They’re just more intentional about how they use it. They treat it as a starting point for conversations, not something that gets checked off a list.
If you’re already putting in the time to write, it’s worth taking a few extra steps to make sure it actually leads somewhere that supports your brand and business.
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