Pick a Winner: Don't Take on Too Many Social Channels At Once

When lawyers get excited about content marketing prospects, they get really keyed up to add social channels.  And, that’s a great idea.  Because it’s true that, the more social channels you have, the better – since the more places your profile and content exists, the broader your reach becomes. 

 

That being said, you don’t need to add social channels for the sake of adding social channels – especially when you’re getting started. 



Instead, focus on the social media programs you already use.  If you’re active on Facebook, start there.  Or, if you like Twitter best, tweet away.  Even moving forward, if you can identify a primary social channel, that is extremely useful, because you can use it to earmark helpful content from others that you can repost later.  That, and you can also reshare your own content to other platforms, by designing your posts in the one platform that you prefer most.  And, with tools like HootSuite and Buffer, you can schedule posts across social media channels via a single interface. 

 

Ships have anchors; but, so do content marketing programs. 

 

. . .

If you want to talk about your marketing game plan, reach out to us. 

Through a unique partnership between the bar association and Jared Correia's Red Cave Law Firm ConsultingNational Creditors' Bar Association members have access to experienced law practice management consultants at a special discount rate.

To get started, visit Red Cave's NCBA landing page, and start running your law practice like a business.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Top Shelf: How to Maximize Lawyer Staff in a Modern Law Firm

Hiring Percentage: What is the Law Firm Hit Rate for Bringing on Staff?

New or Noob: How Law Firms Tend to Hire