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I think I found the nation’s least service oriented law firm.

Over the years, we’ve done a lot of marketing and branding work with law, accounting, and other professional-services firms that wanted to use marketing to leverage their extraordinary client service. *

This firm below isn’t one of them.  

First, I sincerely understand that divorce clients can be… needy.

I handled a couple divorces in my early days as a litigator, and learned that they can be extraordinarily  difficult clients.  Divorce lawyers catch good people at the worst times of their lives. This type of legal work clearly wasn’t for me — I don’t have the patient temperament to deal with their dramas and traumas. I preferred representing CEOs who were arguing about money and would make strategic business decisions based on facts, not emotion.

If you’re suited for divorce and family law, good for you; it’s important work. But if you’re not, perhaps find another line of work.

In an era where firms regularly vow to go the extra mile for clients, this (now defunct) family law firm feels like they wouldn’t even hold the door for their pathetic clients as they walked into court. (Screw you, it’s not my fault your spouse is cheating on you.)

screen-shot-2016-09-18-at-1-53-56-pm

The website simply reeked of “I hate my weak, needy clients.”

It lacks empathy for the stress they’re going through.  I could feel a seething resentment in their “Client Expectations” section, which detailed the many, many things their clients should do to avoid pissing them off so damn much.  Even the “(Realistic or Unrealistic)” subhead is dismissive.

screen-shot-2016-09-18-at-1-55-34-pm

Here’s what their “client-expectations” list really said to me: 

  • Don’t bother me with your stupid little problems after hours or on weekends.
  • I have a life which is more important than you or your petty problems; we don’t check our voicemail or look at email on weekends.
  • Heck, we don’t even work on Friday afternoons. We’re a Quality of Life firm. (MY life. Yours already sucks.)
  • Stop being such assholes.
  • Stop annoying me with your damn questions. I’ll get to you when I get to you.
  • Hell no, I’m not giving you my cell phone number.
  • Don’t complain about our mistakes or typos. Shut up and deal with it.
  • Leave me one damn phone message, and I’ll return your damn call in a day or two, whenever I can damn well get around to it; I’m busy.
  • Don’t you dare stop by without an appointment.
  • We don’t mean what we say in our official court pleadings.
  • Being nice won’t help.
  • I don’t care what your idiot friends or Google said.
  • Things will take as long as they damn well take. Suck it up.
  • Don’t be such a jerk with your kids.

Here’s that same list with screenshots of the original language:

“Don’t bother me with your stupid little problems after hours or on weekends”:

screen-shot-2016-09-18-at-1-55-41-pm

 

“My life is more important than you or your petty problems; we don’t check our voicemail or look at email on weekends.  (If you have an abusive spouse or a missing child, we’ll talk about it on Monday. Maybe Tuesday. Whenever I can get around to it.)”:

screen-shot-2016-09-18-at-12-32-53-pm

 

“Heck, we don’t even work on Friday afternoons. We’re a Quality of Life firm. (MY life. Yours already sucks.)”:

screen-shot-2016-09-18-at-12-33-09-pm

 

“Stop being such assholes”:

dont-insult-us

 

“Stop annoying me with your damn questions. I’ll get to you when I get to you”:

screen-shot-2016-09-18-at-12-32-31-pm

 

“Hell no, I’m not giving you my cell phone number. Your emergencies aren’t my emergencies”:

no-emergency-numbers

 

“Don’t complain about our mistakes or typos. Shut up and deal with it”:

screen-shot-2016-09-18-at-1-55-49-pm

 

“Leave me one damn phone message, and I’ll return your damn call in a day or two, whenever I can damn well get around to it; I’m busy”:

screen-shot-2016-09-18-at-12-23-52-pm

 

“Don’t you dare stop by without an appointment”:

screen-shot-2016-09-18-at-1-56-16-pm

 

“We don’t mean what we say in our official court pleadings”:

screen-shot-2016-09-18-at-1-57-08-pm

 

“Being nice won’t help”:

screen-shot-2016-09-18-at-1-56-25-pm

 

“I don’t care what your idiot friends or Google said”:

screen-shot-2016-09-18-at-1-56-32-pm

 

“Things will take as long as they damn well take. Suck it up”:

screen-shot-2016-09-18-at-1-57-20-pm

 

“Don’t be such a jerk with your kids”:

dont-screw-the-children

 

Yes, divorce lawyers have overwrought clients with boundary issues

It was the hostile tone of the writing that bothered me.  It was the lack of empathy and the implication that the lawyer’s quality of life is more important than the clients’ and their potential distress.  They sounded tired and fed up, like it was long past time for a career change.

Fortunately, that seems to have occurred. The name partner is now a family court judge — where I suspect that she doesn’t work Friday afternoons or weekends.

Client-Service Marketing Tip:

No one will believe you if you claim to be service oriented.

If you want to use service as your brand, you must go to great lengths to prove it. That means you need both (1) a specific, written promise, and (2) a painful repercussion if you fail to meet that standard.  Without both of those, it’s just another hollow claim, mere puffery.

*I developed Winston & Strawn’s detailed “Above Client Expectations (ACE)” TQM program in 1992. We guaranteed our clients’ satisfaction at Ungaretti & Harris in 1994, and St Louis’s Sandberg Phoenix‘s in 2010, with “Seriously Unbelievable Client Service.”

Chicago’s Laner Muchin vowed to return every single client call within two hours.  New York accounting firm Citrin Cooperman vowed to do “Whatever It Takes.” Richmond’s Thompson McMullin admitted, “Client Service. It’s Our Thing.”  That type of service is possible, it’s just really hard.

Here’s the original screen shots from the above firm’s website:

divorce-law-firm-client-expectations

blog-divorce-firm-bad-client-relations-and-contact-informat_-https___web-archive-org_web_201102

All images (c) Pinkus Family Law Firm.