legal nirvana: building successful relationships online
DESCRIPTION
In this presentation, you will discover how Lewis Silkin and their Sitecore partner Reading Room focused on two key digital objectives. First, Reading Room looked to grow Lewis Silkin’s reputation, visibility and web traffic through thought leadership (content) and multi-channel engagement (web, social, search and events). Converting interest into action with personalised content and goal centred design, and building relationships with prospects (in-house counsel and senior decision makers) and ongoing engagement. Through both of these objectives above, the intent was to develop the brand idea of a rather more human law firm through design, user experience and engaging clients and prospects in dialogue.TRANSCRIPT
Legal Nirvana
Sam Booth – Reading Room
Mark Grant – Lewis Silkin
Digital success in the B2B marketplace is notoriously hard to track
Professional services companies offer an even bigger challenge
Crowded market place
Confusion
Lack of differentiation
Success is hard to quantify…
And even harder to track
Management are focused on core business activity
Often not seeing the value in digital activity
Reading Room and Lewis Silkin set work out what success would like
and have started on a journey to achieve success (or as close to Nirvana as we can get)
• Commercial firm – with real specialisms
• 5 years in the ‘Sunday times Top 100 Companies to Work for’ Listing
• Established in 1952; 60 partners and over 300 staff, with offices at Clifford’s Inn, London, Oxford and Cardiff
• Member of two global Alliances
Who are Lewis Silkin?
• Main specialisms in employment, brand management and real estate and regeneration
• A ‘rather more human law firm’
• Strong brand (pre 2012 – offline stronger than online)
Who are Lewis Silkin?
• Public facing website built on Sharepoint in addition to intranet and extranet.
• Whilst the website held the brand to a certain extent it was flat, cold and not dynamic; difficult to update
• Outside of the website the digital presence was poor
• The competition were gaining ground
• Clients in the sector were asking......
What was the situation?
• Develop a digital strategy that brings on line presence up to speed with off line
• Demonstrate value add
• Do it quickly
The business challenge was clear
• Promoting the brand
• Supporting new business activity
• Growing the profile of teams and individuals
• Servicing / growing existing client accounts
• Recruitment (trainee and ‘laterals’)
• Protecting reputation
What could be achieved?
From a text based website
Transformation not redevelopment
To engaging media, interactivity & engagement
Transformation not redevelopment
From desktop access
Transformation not redevelopment
To multi-device, multi-platform
Transformation not redevelopment
From one-size fits all content
Transformation not redevelopment
To content that adapts
Transformation not redevelopment
From anonymity and equality of service
Transformation not redevelopment
To personalised adaptive messaging
Transformation not redevelopment
From another face in the crowd
Transformation not redevelopment
To being a rather more human law firm
Transformation not redevelopment
From waiting for people to arrive
Transformation not redevelopment
To motivating people and reaching out to people wherever they are
Transformation not redevelopment
We developed a digital transformation strategy with Lewis Silkin
So what did we do?
Legal sector founded on ‘traditional’ service principles
• Credibility, expertise and personal connections
• These principles are mirrored in the way digital works
Focus on Reputations & Relationships
• Pro-active participation and engagement
• Multiple co-ordinated channels to maximise impact benefit
• Listening and monitoring against success metrics
Digital Strategy:
Co-ordinated Communications
website
blog
social
An effective digital Strategy will requirethe co-ordination of a number of channels
Essential elements of the digital communications mix:
• Company, people, expertise (Website)
• Approach, thinking, personality (Blog)
• Relationship building, personalised content (Newsletter)
• Communities centred on service areas (Linkedin / Twitter)
• Content repositories, supports SEO (Slideshare / Youtube)
Co-ordinated Communications
• Digital requires a conversational approach
• CRM is not just about technology
• Requires a holistic change in approach
• Social dialogue is key to building relationships
• Offer multiple channels for clients to connect
• Talk to clients in the way that suits them
• Tailor communications to the platform
Building Relationships
• Sitecore allows us to personalise the
content and target different client
sectors.
• Media want a different updates, news
and social content compared to the
social housing clients.
Building Relationships
• We used Sitcore to deliver a corporate site and
blog, incorporating social media content and surfacing the
latest personalised content.
• We are now in phase two considering tying in the Sitecore
email marketing capability to utilise that capability and
provide further tailored experiences
What did we do?
Measurement: Objectives / KPIs
We needed to agree clear objectives & measurable KPIs
• Support new business
– lead generation (email enquiries, dedicated phone number)
• Grow reputation / influence
– attendance at events, social mentions, search ranking
– email signups, social follows, Linkedin group members
• Facilitate client relationships
– regularity of interaction (all channels)
– engagement (clicked link in email, posted comment, attended event)
– Source of traffic (email, blog, tweet, linked in group)
Measurement: Monitoring
We also need a means of monitoring them
• Web analytics
– track interactions as well as page views
– report on sources of traffic and segment
– user journey monitoring & goal tracking
• Email tracking: opens, clicks, social shares
• Social Tracking: track reach of social activity
• Conversation Monitoring: track social mentions
• CRM: capture individual interactions with clients
We built “the journal”, to encourage the
profession to engage, comment, debate and
argue… something lawyers are very good at.
We ran a social media “road show” explaining
the basics of twitter, linked in and blogging and
took it around the business
Changing internal behaviour
Governance: Management
• Teams and individual staff need to own their content
– Responsible for accuracy and timeliness
– Proud of it – would happily recommend
– Easy to author and maintain
• Social media champions
– People follow individuals more than organisations / teams
– Need key staff to become social champions, volunteers not forced labour
– Need ground rules / acceptable use policy; a framework for creativity
– Workflow would stifle totally – must be based on trust
Analytics show real
improvements.
Engagement is up with
bounce rates reducing
from over 60% to 25%
Spending longer on site
engaging with more
content
The path to enlightenment
Mobile usage on the site
has increased massively –
vindicating the mobile first
approach
People are engaging on
mobile devices not just
bouncing
The path to enlightenment
A couple of anecdotal examples of how the strategy has been realised
The path to enlightenment
• Much closer than before………
• Other firms adopting Sitecore so need to stay ahead!
• Real engagement from the business
• More to do – marathon not a sprint
Have we reached Nirvana?
Questions?
Thank you