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Published on Pioneer Solutions Group - St. Louis, Missouri (http://www.pioneersg.com)

Creating a Legal Website

By wjr
Created 06/16/2008 - 18:41

 While I was creating the website for a law firm, I did some research on the various elements in many legal websites.  I thought I might share some of that research with you.  Some of it is obvious, some not so obvious judging from the various sites I looked at.

The Header

 

The header, or a form of the header should appear on every page.

The header should be able to stand alone.  It must answer the questions, who, what, how, and where.  It can do this graphically or with words.

 

The two headers on this page provide you with excellent examples:

Who and What?  Notice that the firm name and purpose of the firm are clearly displayed.  Their tag-line clearly identify these firms as personal injury attorneys.  The images also lead people towards an understanding of what this site is about.  The books, gavel, doctors, and columns are all images associated with justice.

How?  The phone number is clearly identified on both of these sites, however you will also notice that you can contact the firm with the contact us link which presents the user with a form they can fill out which will send an email to the designated firm contact.

Where?  The second header does a much better job of this.  You can tell by the picture of the state, office locations and picture of the desert that they practice in Arizona, and more specifically in Phoenix.

 

 

Here are some examples of menu structures for a law firm.  You don’t have to use all of these, in fact most sites do not have all of these menu items.

 

 

Most of the firm websites I looked at did not have a search built in, this is a must.

 

 

Blocks:

These are the content areas just below the header and navigation.  The main part of the page is a block, the left or right columns contain blocks.  Here are some examples.

 

Video:  This firm has a video that presents the different partners discussing the distinctive of this firm.  

 

 

Information Centers:  This is a characteristic of every findlaw site on the web.  This is basically a visual navigation block.  The end user will click on the broad category and be taken to a section of the website which is dedicated to their particular need.  We call this funneling, it is a way of qualifying the client, and establishing credibility for their specific need.

 

 

 

Affiliations, certifications, and memberships are marks that the average person wont understand but it adds to the credibility of the firm.  

 

 

This firm decided to have a block on their from page to answer the question they are most often asked.


 

Practice Areas navigation block.  Similar to the information centers, just presented in a different way.  This block provides much more granular selection.  This provides for fewer clicks by the client, however you run the risk of being too specific and eliminating your firm in the clients mind.

 

 

Contact block.  They can send you an email directly from the website.  The benefit is anonymous contact, the downside is anonymous contact.  You have no way of verifying the contact details.  Most personal injury firms have this type of form.

 

 

 

Some firms put client testimonials or results right on the front page in a block.  You have to answer questions about how someone goes about selecting a firm like yours.  You also have to identify your target client and gear the site around them.

 

 

This block is an information center block.  It is a way of directing traffic to three distinct practice areas operating off one website.

 

 

News and features.  Just as it sounds.  We can create it so that one of your assistants can input a news story.  You can write your own, or comment on recent rulings, laws, etc.. 


 

Legal resources block is a listing of additional resources the client may consider.  It can be websites, documents, forms...

 

 

Below:  This is a clever way of linking to the contact us form.  This is obviously the question they get asked the most on the contact form, so they just created a block to draw these people in.

 

 

Finally, the footer, which is also a block.  Answers the question of who they are and provides for the copyright.  They also put very specific locations on the page.  They do this for search engine optimization purposes.  By listing a city or some other characteristics of the firm they have a better chance of being pulled up in a search.

 

 

 


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http://www.pioneersg.com/blog/2558