Lawyer websites by Joseph Leonard

A lawyer who relies on referrals doesn't need a website - wrong!

When a lawyer says, “I don’t need a website—I rely on referrals,”  they’re not seeing the full picture.

Referrals are great—but they don’t replace a website. They actually make it more important. Moreover, nowadays, others are hesitant to refer a lawyer who has no website.

  • Referred Clients Still Google You

70% of potential clients will try to “check you out on the Internet” before contacting you.
I they don’t find the information that they are looking for, they will find someone else.  LINK

Almost every referred client does the same thing:

They got your name from a friend, co-worker, accountant or another lawyer.

They Google you to learn more

They decide if they should contact you or not

If they find no website (or a poor one), it creates doubt:

“Is this lawyer still practicing?”
“Can they handle my case?”
“Where are they located?”
“How can I contact them?”
“Why does everyone else have a site but not them?”

You don’t hear about the lost cases—because they never call.

Why have a website even when you depend on referrals?

A Website Protects Your Reputation.

Referrals put your reputation on the line before you ever speak to the prospect.

A simple website:
Confirms you’re legitimate
Shows what you handle (and what you don’t)
Sets expectations about who you help

Without that, people fill in the blanks themselves—and that’s risky.

Referrals aren´t consistent

Referrals fluctuate. People forget to refer. Good referral sources retire or move.

A website creates a stable, controllable source of new inquiries—so you’re not dependent on anyone else remembering to refer you.

It Filters Out Bad-Fit Clients

A good website doesn’t just attract calls—it pre-qualifies them. It helps prospects self-select by explaining your focus and clarifying pricing or process. Answering basic questions up front means spending less time on wasted calls and getting better cases.

You Don’t Need a Fancy Website—Just a Clear One

I’m not suggesting a big marketing website. Just something that confirms who you are, why you can help, where you practice, and how to contact you. Even a modest, well-structured site works harder than no site at all.

Referrals send people to search engines. Your website decides whether they contact you.

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