I would venture to guess that the majority of attorneys out there aren't trying to sell their services based on price. Your goal shouldn't be to offer the cheapest services in town for a number of good reasons. However, an issue lawyers face is that most people don't have a good sense of what quality legal services cost. This can lead to sticker shock and lost clients when you discuss your fees with prospects. For this reason, lawyers need to understand the art of price conditioning.
So what exactly is price conditioning?
Dan Ariely at the Irrationally Yours Blog shares with us an interesting psychology experiment:
To get some insight into this process, consider the following experiment: We asked a large number of people to write the last two digits of their Social Security number at the top of a page, and then asked them to translate their number into dollars (79 became $79), and to indicate if in general they’d buy various bottles of wine and computer accessories for that much money. Then we moved to the main part of the experiment and we let them actually bid on the products in an auction. After we found the highest bidders, took their money and gave them the products we calculated the relationship between their two digits and how much they were willing to pay for these products.
Lo and behold, what we found is that people who had lower ending Social Security numbers (for example 32), ended up paying much less than people who had higher ending Social Security numbers (for example 79). This is basically the power of our first decisions: if people first consider a low price decision (would I pay $32 for this bottle of 1998 Cote du Rhone?) they end up only willing to pay a low amount for it, but if they first consider a high price decision (would I pay $79 for this bottle of 1998 Cote du Rhone?) they end up willing to pay a lot more.
Price conditioning is the art of changing the perception of your service pricing. When you first talk to many of your prospective clients, they have a certain price expectation in mind. What price conditioning can do is to raise the expectations of your service pricing to the point where, when you reveal your price, it’s not as much as they expected or at the very least, it’s less of a shock.
Price conditioning involves forshadowing what the potential client might expect a legal service like yours to cost without addressing your pricing specifically. For instance, in a conversation with a prospective client you might mention
"Experienced firms can charge upwards of (fill in the blank with a top end price that is more than you charge) for what you need."
You should also discuss the advantages of hiring your firm while making sure to mention you aren't the cheapest out there nor are you trying to be. Use your service pricing to your advantage to build value. Quality work and expertise takes time and effort. If you sacrifice price, you do so at the cost of the quality of the service you receive. Of course these points need to be addressed in the conversation prior to a discussion of your fees.
The point is to lay the groundwork that legal services aren't cheap and your legal services certainly aren't on the low end. Elegantly working this into conversation, while building the value of your service at the same time, helps to reset the expectations of what your legal services will cost. More importantly, it will help to avoid sticker shock, and might even provide relief, when you do discuss pricing.
Photo by Surat Lozowick
Over the years, law firm prospects have sent us reports from just about all of our competitors. Unfortunately, even today, some law firm marketing agencies still mislead their clients via "reporting." One particularly egregious example comes in the form of ranking reports. Which prompted this LinkedIn post. To my surprise, I received a lot of […]
John Wanamaker supposedly said "Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is I don't know which half." In an an effort to figure out "what half is working," attribution was born. Coupled with a transition from traditional, offline ads to digital media, attribution became the holy grail for analyzing advertising spends. But […]
I recently asked ChatGPT, "What are some of the top personal injury law firms in Chicago?? Actually, first I ask "who are some of the top personal injury lawyers in Chicago?" ChatGPT couldn't handle that one, so I modified the prompt. ChatGPT listed five very well-known firms downtown. Can you guess the other four? That's […]
If you're like me, you have some degree of AI, ChatGBT, Bard, exhaustion. Now don't get me wrong, this is stuff is remarkable and is changing, well, a lot. But before you hook up the ChatGPT API to your WordPress API and crank out 10,000 pages, here are a few things to think about. Let's […]
If you know me, you know my opinions about links and SEO advice from Google. If you don't, here's the TL;DR: Meh, links! Meaning, all things being equal, links still remain a competitive difference maker for ranking. Take Google's SEO advice with several grains of salt. Google has no economic incentive to help your site […]
The best marketing advice I can give you is to be authentic. Of course, you don't find that very helpful in terms of meeting your growth goals. So, you might decide to game the system. As I'm writing this, one of the more popular ways to gain the system is to pay for engagement. This […]
The following post was written by ChatGPT. ChatGPT, developed by OpenAI, is a state-of-the-art language model that can generate human-like text based on a given prompt or context. This technology has the potential to revolutionize the way that businesses, including law firms, market themselves to potential clients. One way that a law firm could use […]
How long does SEO take? When can I expect to see results? What results should I expect to see? These are all reasonable questions that we field from lawyers every day. And, like many legal answers, the answer is: It depends. Yes, I know that's not the answer you wanted. But it's the most honest […]
And how much time should they spend doing it? I recently had the privilege of chatting with Tyson, Jim, and Conrad for an upcoming episode of The Maximum Lawyer Podcast. If you're not familiar with The Maximum Lawyer community, you should definitely check it out. Jim asked a really great question about who should do […]
This is really good advice, let the client see the value before revealing the price.
I also ask clients how much income they will lose if they are banned from driving for 6 months, this sets a benchmark as to the value.
Thanks again for this.
Steve