There's a LinkedIn group called Legal Blogging that has a discussion going about a BusinessWeek article titled Beware Social Media Snake Oil. The dialogue was started by a thought leader in this area, Kevin O'Keefe.
As a matter of disclosure, our agency helps our clients through the social media maze. However, we do disclose that while we can measure results, measuring the primary result with ROI in dollars is difficult. That's because too often our clients don't track all their business leads that come as a direct or indirect result from public relations or a social media campaign.
For fun, I went to YouTube and searched for videos on "social media for lawyers." At the top of this was this:
Talk about irony, this "expert" video is a talking head that gives nothing more that few tips. And it does not make clear the ROI. This video reminds me of what I see being sold to lawyers: social media utopia for business development.
Talk about irony, this "expert" video is a talking head that gives nothing more that few tips. And it does not make clear the ROI. This video reminds me of what I see being sold to lawyers: social media utopia for business development.
The PR laugh for me is that lawyers, highly skilled and skeptical professionals, sometimes fall for these "snake oil" sales pitches. Why? Not because they are not intelligent, but because in recent years their business has been down like other professional services company and they are desperate and feel that social media is the sure shot short cut cure.
Thanks for referencing my post Tom, even if it is to snakes and lawyers.
ReplyDeleteNo question there's a ton of folks holding themselves out as experts on social media. Lawyers who woud never outsource their networking with prospective clients and referral sources to a bunch kids offline for whatever reason are willing to have kids who have never seen the inside of a law firm do their networking when it comes to the net,