Can You “Productize” Your Practice?

Published October 9, 2007

We’ve written previously about the trends by which legal services increasingly come to be seen as commodities or products. Truth be told, clients can’t tell the difference among lawyers—once you have your law degree and are called to the bar, you are presumed to be as competent as the next lawyer. Given this attitude, lawyers and their services come to be seen as interchangeable commodities. Commodity items always carry with them commodity pricing, sometimes fixed, often reactive and always pressured to be lower. When we provide legal services, we want them to be seen as unique because of the attorney-client relationship or because of the special skill required to deal with the challenge or because the client has some constraint that only a few lawyers can accept. Yet, when clients increasingly want to see the dynamic shift toward the commodity model, the momentum can be hard to resist.

In my most recent teleseminar for West LegalEdCenter, I suggested that one way to do it is to consider “productizing” your practice, by providing a tangible product that opens the door to the intangible, value-added services you want to offer. For example, an estate planning lawyer might combat do-it-yourself web sites and software by establishing a section of his or her firm web site that is password protected and that has authoritative forms and research that the lawyer has prepared or evaluated. For a flat fee of $100 a “client” could access this material and draw from it at will. However, if the client has a question or problem that the materials do not answer, the lawyer is available to provide personalized counsel, perhaps at a special rate that recognizes the relationship established through the web site. Another example might be a blog that, for a subscription fee, combines the lawyer’s observations on breaking legal or regulatory issues with specialized content and research—again with the option of asking specific questions outside of the access fee.

These offer something that your competitors don’t or can’t, and are new products that your clients need or want. It shows that you offer value and don’t just represent cost. And it enables you to focus your practice on its most professionally and financially rewarding work.

Our future topics include other ways to enhance “The Business of Law”® and your practice, including “Moving Your Office,” “Cash Flow Management,” “Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity,” and “Marketing Within Ethical Bounds.” For information on these and other tools to improve profitability and professionalism see our web site, www.lawbiz.com.

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Audience type: Administrators, Associates, Large Law Firms, Small Law Firms, Sole Practitioners