Smartphone users habitually check unread message counts. Canny law firms can leverage that common compulsion by putting unread counts on their own smartphone apps, which are among today’s most effective opt-in marketing tools.
Little wonder, given the increasing popularity of smartphones. John Robinson quotes research firm Gartner’s assertion that 80 per cent of North Americans will carry smartphones by 2014 in Panvista Media Corp.’s white paper Law Firms Going Mobile.
“In the legal space, that number is closer to 100 per cent today,” says Panvista’s marketing and strategy vice-president.
The upshot? Increasing numbers of people will visit your firm’s site from smartphones, and unless you offer either an app or a version of your website that is optimized for the smartphone screen and takes advantage of its hardware, you’ll subject visitors to:
- untold amounts of tedious scrolling and zooming
- not being able to use smartphone-specific hardware like GPS
Today’s mobile platforms
Firms primarily target Apple Inc.’s iPhone and Research in Motion Ltd.’s (RIM) BlackBerry.
Aside from being relatively easy to develop for, increasing numbers of lawyers carry iPhones for personal use in addition to work-issue BlackBerrys.
But RIM remains regnant.
“The Blackberry accounts for more than 75% of legal app pageviews,” Panvista writes in its white paper, “which means that while Blackberries are more difficult to develop for, the return is well worth the extra development challenges.”
“For development purposes, Blackberry has not made app creation an easy process,” the paper explains. “There are currently 32 different (BlackBerry) devices that vendors need to support and optimize apps for. Each of these devices requires a slightly different strategy due to changing screen sizes and hardware setups. App development on this platform is extremely fragile, but the resulting ability to reach a very specific professional audience makes it an attractive marketing opportunity.”
Other platforms, like Google Android and Windows Phone, haven’t been as widely adopted by businesses, so firms aren’t as compelled to develop apps for them (yet). App development could be more difficult (and costly) since multiple phone manufacturers adapt the OS to devices with different hardware, screens and so forth, issues which do not plague generations of Apple’s iPhone/iPod Touch devices.
Mobile apps versus mobile sites
Stuart Wood, chief marketing officer at Torys LLP, notes that the firm will continue to maintain the app (iPhone only) it produced in 2010.
“We’re comfortable with content-heavy marketing,” Wood says of the business reasons for developing the app. “We write things like opinions on recent developments in law, and we’re always experimenting with different ways of sharing that with our clients.”
While Torys sees ever-larger amounts of web traffic coming from mobile devices, that traffic comes from many types of devices, so they’re migrating development efforts to mobile versions of their website. “We experimented with a mobile site that looks like an app,” Wood recalls. “We feel a lot is possible using a mobile version of our website that would make it easier for us to stay current with whatever devices are popular.”
While they may be easier to develop and maintain, mobile websites don’t take full advantage of smartphone hardware. (GPS, for instance, could guide people to a firm’s office in an unfamiliar city.)
Also, site traffic could diminish, according to Panvista data that suggests smartphone owners return to apps more often than they do to websites, and linger longer while they’re there.
What clients want
What does a firm shoehorn into a smartphone app? Things that clients, prospective clients, recruits and referral sources want, like:
- bulletins
- recent developments
- video podcasts
- lawyer profiles (with links that trigger the phone’s email and phone applications)
Sameer Dhargalkar admits that even Norton Rose lawyers use its recently released app to look up colleagues elsewhere in the world. “It starts up quickly, and they always have their phones on them,” says the director of business development for Norton Rose OR LLP. “It’s convenient.”
To improve the likelihood that smartphone users will read a firm’s new content:
- apps can let people choose what to download (e.g. content pertaining to certain practice areas, or published by specific lawyers or offices)
- “app alerts” can show the number of new items waiting to be read within an app, and may exert the same psychological tug on smartphone owners as unread message counts
What does an app cost to build?
Some businesses view app development as a one-time effort. Others work with developers on a subscription basis in which clients get ongoing maintenance, support and any changes necessitated by OS updates for a monthly fee.
Dhargalkar says Norton Rose, a Panvista client, chose the second route so it could budget for and futureproof the app.
Neither Wood nor Dhargalkar would share costs associated with their firms’ apps (though Wood claims “it was not expensive”).
Integrating apps into a firm’s digital marketing strategy
Robinson recommends firms set up digital marketing tools so they need only post content in one place to have it appear on all web properties (e.g. regular web site, mobile-optimized site, smartphone apps) rather than having to post once per platform.
If your firm doesn’t have an app but does publish its website using a content management platform like WordPress, you can find plugins that publish your site in smartphone-friendly formats.
Future of law firm apps
The Law Firm Mobile blog documents emerging and potential trends in mobile apps from law firms. Here are a few to watch for:
- Apps can further both knowledge management and business development. Consider the various “Books of JargonTM” from U.S. firm Latham & Watkins LLP, a series of quick-loading reference “books” on Corporate and Bank Finance, Project Finance and European Capital Markets and Bank Finance.
- Firms may create an app specific to a client that both sides can use to better collaborate on matters.
- Tablets like Apple’s iPad and RIM’s BlackBerry PlayBook offer richer environments than smartphones, so tablet apps may be on the horizon.
This article originally published in Lawyers Weekly.
For a PDF of the original article, click here.