Lawyer websites by Joseph Leonard

 Your Law Firm Website Isn’t Broken — It’s Just Not Doing Its Real Job

If your law firm website “looks professional” but isn’t generating phone calls or contacts, the problem probably isn’t your logo, colors, or layout. It’s that your website isn’t doing the job it was built for.

A law firm website has one core purpose: convince the potential client to contact you

Everything else—design, branding, photos, copy—exists to support that goal.

Why professional-looking websites still don’t produce leads.

Most law firm websites fail for the same reason: they were designed as brochures, not decision-making tools.
They focus on:

  • The firm’s history
  • Credentials and awards
  • Generic statements like “we fight for you”
  • Long, unfocused pages trying to say everything at once. Meanwhile, potential clients arrive with a specific problem and a lot of anxiety.

If they can’t quickly see that you understand their situation, they leave.

What potential clients are actually asking

Visitors rarely ask:
“Is this a professional firm?”
They assume that already.

What they’re really asking:
“Do you handle cases like mine?”
“Where are you located?”
“Can I trust you with something this serious?”
“What happens if I call?”
“How quickly can you help?”

If your website doesn’t answer those questions clearly and immediately,
they move to another law firm  – no matter how polished it looks.

The 5 elements every lead-generating law firm website needs

1. Clear positioning

Your homepage should instantly communicate:
Who you help
What type of cases do you handle
Can I trust you
Where are you located
How can I contact you

2. Client-focused messaging
Replace firm-centric language with client-centric language.

Instead of:

  • “We have over 20 years of experience…”
    “If you’re facing [specific problem], here’s how we help—and what happens next.”
    A call-to-action

3. Call to action
Many law firms only have a simple Contact Us link in the navigation menu

Potential clients need to be motivate to take action:

Offer clear reassurance near the action (confidential, no obligation, quick response)

4. Trust signals:

Don’t use stock photos, generic testimonials, and unfamiliar award logos with no meaning

Mention instead:

Specific case types handled

Plain-English explanations

Real client outcomes or scenarios

Photos of the actual attorneys and office

  • Pages built around search intent

5. Content:

Each major service should have its own focused page. Don’t lump all practice areas in one page. Potential clients should not be given the impression that you are “Jack of all trades, master of none”. Clients want a specialist.

For best user experience have one page dedicated to each location and practice area. This is great for SEO when someone is searching for “Divorce Lawyers in Miami”. They arrive at one page that search engines have indexed for that exact search.

Don’t try to save money by having a single long page with every topic on it. Visitors will not want to scroll to find the inf0rmation they are looking for and it makes it impossible for search engines to index you with One keyword phrase.

It costs no more to make separate pages.

This improves:

SEO visibility, Message clarity, and Conversion rates

Google prefers focus. So do human visitors.

Why “redesigns” often fail

Many firms redesign their website and see no improvement.

Why?

Because they change how it looks, not how it works.
If your structure, messaging, and calls-to-action don’t change, client lack of action will be the same.

Fewer visitors, less phone calls or contacts

A properly built law firm website doesn’t need massive traffic.

It needs:

The right visitors
Clear messaging
Low friction
A confident next step

When those are in place, even modest traffic can produce consistent inquiries.

  • Wondering if your website is helping or hurting?

If your website:

Gets traffic but few calls
Has a high bounce rate
Requires visitors to “figure it out”
Hasn’t been updated in years

There’s a strong chance it’s costing you cases.

Summary

Ask me to perform a short, free, object audit of your website to suggest improvements that will help you get more clients.

Free Law Firm Website Audit

Find Out Why Your Website Isn’t Generating Phone Calls

If your law firm website looks professional but isn’t producing consistent inquiries, there’s usually a clear reason.

Most firms just don’t know what it is.

That’s what this audit is for.

  • What this audit covers

I’ll review your website exactly the way a potential client does—and identify where trust, clarity, and conversions are breaking down.

You’ll get specific feedback on:

Homepage clarity – Can visitors instantly tell who you help and what to do next?

Does it follow the AIDA and Who, Where, What, How, and Why marketing principles?

Messaging issues – Does the site talks about the firm instead of the client?

Suggestions on improving your banner image and main message.

Conversion blockers – Anything discouraging calls or form submissions

Structure & navigation – Where visitors get confused or lost

Mobile experience – What prospects see on their phone (where most visits happen)

SEO fundamentals – Structural issues hurting visibility and traffic quality

No jargon. No fluff. No generic checklist.

  • What you’ll receive

A short written summary of what’s working and what’s not

Clear, prioritized recommendations

Actionable fixes you can implement (with or without me)

This is not a redesign pitch disguised as an audit.

  • Who this is for

This audit is a good fit if:

Your site gets traffic but few calls

You’re considering a redesign but want clarity first

Your website hasn’t been reviewed in years

You suspect your site is costing you cases

If your site is already converting well, I’ll tell you that too.

  • Why I offer this

Most law firm websites fail quietly.

They don’t crash. They don’t look broken.
They just don’t persuade.

A short audit can reveal issues that cost firms real cases every month.

  • Request your website audit
Why Visitors Leave Your Law Firm Website Without Calling
Why Most Law Firm Websites Don’t Get Phone Calls