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Reading a phone screen is a completely different experience from reading a print book, newspaper, or magazine. Your phone is constantly sending you alerts, and the text moves or changes size every time you touch it. Even on a slow news day, your phone is full of enough distractions to make the illustrators of the Where’s Waldo books jealous. Therefore, it takes more than just good writing to hold your readers’ attention in a blog post.


As a lawyer, you are well practiced in writing and public speaking that command your audience’s attention. On a blog, though, you are writing for a different audience. A few of the people who read your blog may be the same people that read your printed correspondence, but even they are reading it in a totally different context. A post from Express Writers offers concrete advice for lawyers who want to write blog posts that will keep their readers engaged all the way to the call to action link at the end of the post.


Use Short Sentences


Court decisions and legal memorandums have dizzyingly long sentences. Therefore, it is no surprise that the sentences in a blog post should be shorter. How short should they be, though? Some content marketers take 20 words as a maximum word count per sentence. Express Writers says that 8 words is the longest sentence you can write without risking that readers will lose their place or misunderstand the meaning. Obviously, many of your sentences will need to be longer than that. Express Writers’ advice is “cut your sentences in half.” In other words, you can often rewrite a long, unwieldy sentence as two separate sentences.


Use the Second Person


The most important word in a law firm blog post is “you.” Make your readers imagine themselves in the place of one of the parties your lawsuits describe. Requiring yourself to say “you” instead of “the plaintiff” or “the defendant” will naturally make you use more conversational language.


Use Distraction-Proof Formatting


Neil Patel is a famous proponent of short paragraphs in online content, but his reasons have nothing to do with readers’ attention spans. He reasons that, on a mobile phone screen, even the most interested reader can lose their place in a long paragraph. Consider also that, when people read their phones, they are surrounded by distractions both from within the phone and from the outside world. Someone who is reading your post on their phone while walking down the stairs to a subway platform will be able to read it more easily if it has large print and short paragraphs with spaces between them.


Consider also that people skim most web content instead of reading it carefully. This is especially true of law-related web searches. If people want to know what the legal limit of blood alcohol content is in your state, make sure they can find that in your post in less than ten seconds. If they can’t, they will click on someone else’s site.


Hire Legal Content Writers


You can count on Law Blog Writers to compose interesting, informative blog posts that stand up well to both skimming for key facts and careful reading.

Investing in an informative, user-friendly website for your law firm is a good use of your law firm marketing budget. If you update your website frequently, such as by posting new content on your blog once a month or more, that is even better. Even if you have the coolest and most authoritative website about your practice area of all the law firms in your city, there is still more to your online reputation. Online marketing, whether by developing an aesthetically and intellectually appealing website or advertising on other sites, there is still more to the picture. Word of screen is the new word of mouth, and the screen of computers and mobile devices can give prospective clients a good or bad impression of your law firm, sometimes before they even lay eyes on your site. In the book Spin Sucks, Gini Dietrich describes the four kinds of online content that combine to form your online reputation; she classifies them using the acronym PESO, which stands for paid, earned, shared, and owned.


P Is for Paid



Paid content is advertisements that you pay for. They can be ads that display above the organic search results on Google, or they can be display ads on other sites. If you paid to have your law firm listed in an online directory, this also counts as online content.


E Is for Earned


Earned content is when a professional media source makes an unsolicited mention of your law firm. For example, when a local newspaper or TV news station mentions your law firm in connection with a news story about one of your cases, this is earned media. (Because almost all print and video news can also be accessed online, it counts as earned content whether it is published online only or also on an old-fashioned medium.)


S Is for Shared


When Internet users, as opposed to professional producers of web content, share links to your site, this is shared content. For example, if a visitor to your site emails a blog post from your law firm’s site to her mother because it talks about a subject they are both interested in (for example, criminal justice reform), or if a client shares his location with his wife on What’s App while he is at your office, that is shared content. It is also shared content when clients post positive or negative online reviews of your law firm.


O Is for Owned


Owned content is your own website. You have complete control over what appears on your site; if you allow comments, you can moderate them. Updating the blog on your website can help boost its organic SEO rankings.


The Best Owned Legal Content Money Can Buy


The best way to get good earned and shared content is to be the best lawyer you can. For the best possible owned content, leave the website content and blog posts to professional content marketers. Contact Law Blog Writers to get shareable, trustworthy content for your law firm’s website.

If you are old enough, you might remember your friends in the 1990s and early 2000s proudly announcing that they had created a web page and inviting you to visit in (by typing in the address verbatim, of course). It was probably just one page, where you would scroll and scroll through pale text on a loud background, while pixelated animations danced at the top. In those days, people used the terms “website” and “web page” interchangeably, and with good reason. Today, most websites, including any business website worth its salt, has many pages. Creating effective practice area content pages for your law firm’s website is an important part of law firm content marketing.



What Is a Content Page?


A content page is a page on the website, where the content does not change often, as opposed to one where the content is updated frequently. On some law firm websites, the home page is a content page with basic information about the law firm, but other sites structure their home pages simply as directories that lead to content pages. Your law firm’s site should have a content page for each of your practice areas. For example, a personal injury law firm might have separate content pages for car accidents, truck accidents, motorcycle accidents, pedestrian accidents, premises liability, and medical malpractice.


Why Are Content Pages Important for your Law Firm’s Website?


Practice area content pages are great for SEO. They naturally use keywords related to your practice area. The more content pages your site has, the greater the chances that a user’s search query will land on one of your content pages, especially since practice area content pages tend to have 1,000 words or more of content. According to Victoria Blute, you should gradually add practice area content pages, making the new ones increasingly specific. For example, if yours is a criminal defense law firm, you can start with just a few content pages, such as DUI, drug crimes, violent crimes, and theft crimes. You can then add pages for cocaine crimes, heroin crimes, methamphetamine crimes, and prescription drug crimes; these should link to the original “drug crimes” pages, but they are also separate pages of their own.


Do You Still Need a Blog If Your Site Has Practice Area Content Pages?


Practice area content pages do not take the place of a blog. Content pages help your SEO rankings because they don’t change, whereas a blog helps your rankings because it gets frequent updates. Also, a blog is the place to talk about current news, but content pages aren’t. Because of the variety of their subject matter, blog posts can connect with many search queries that cannot be reached by your content pages.


Hire Legal Content Writers


Writing content pages for all your practice areas is time-consuming, and your time is better spent working with your clients. Contact Law Blog Writers about drafting high quality content pages for all your practice areas.

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