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Top 3 Mistakes To Avoid When Hiring Your Law Firm’s Receptionist

Hiring a new receptionist for your law firm can be a daunting task. You need to determine the right kind of receptionist for your firm, your budget to hire, the volume of phone calls you need covered, and many more factors in order to know you’re hiring the best fit.

As with any daunting task, shortcuts are often taken and mistakes are made when many attorneys hire their first receptionist (or second, or third!).

You don’t need to make the same mistakes! We’ve compiled the top mistakes made by attorneys looking for phone coverage and are going to walk you through exactly how to avoid each one.

Three Mistakes To Avoid Making When Hiring A Receptionist

Hiring your next law firm receptionist can take a lot off your plate and help you maximize your billable time. But what should you avoid doing in the process?

Not Doing Enough Research

This first mistake comes down to many attorneys being unaware that there is even anything to research. All answering services are the same, right? Wrong. Just as you would interview an in-house receptionist, you’ll need to interview answering services or virtual receptionists. Your friend who owns a chiropractic practice might have an answering service they swear by, but your law firm’s needs are going to be much different. It’s important to determine exactly what you are looking for in your receptionist before signing on with the first one you hear about.

A few questions to consider:

  • Do they allow you to customize your greeting and intake questions?
  • Do they schedule appointments and sell consults, or do they simply take messages and you will need to call your leads back later to schedule?
  • What are their hours?
  • Do they have a plan that works for your call volume?

 

Hiring In-House Without The Volume To Support It

The next mistake is hiring an in-house receptionist without evaluating the cost, time spent managing this team member, and the true call volume you’re experiencing. Often times, an in-house receptionist becomes a much greater expense than expected because you don’t have the call volume and new clients rolling in to support it. Not to mention that calls are still missed during restroom breaks and paid vacation time – now you’re spending your valuable time backing up this person you are paying so much for.

 

Letting Budget Rule Your Decision

The third mistake to avoid when hiring a receptionist for your law firm is making your choice solely based on the cost of it. To be frank, this mistake can actually end up costing you more money in the end. When it comes to client experience and selling your firm to new clients, your receptionist is the most important factor. You need to have a well-spoken and knowledgeable person on the phone that can answer questions and explain the true value of what your firm provides in order to land new clients. When you go with a budget option – a cheap message-only answering service or your cousin’s best friend’s daughter at minimum wage – you’re only hurting your growth.

 

Have You Made Any Of These Mistakes?

It’s never too late to master your law firm’s phones. If you’ve made these mistakes in the past but want to get your law firm’s phones on track again, register for our upcoming webinar: 30 Minutes To Mastering Your Law Firm’s Phones: Sell more consults, impress your callers, and capture every lead.

Elena, our Growth Solutions Strategist, will be going deeper on how to avoid making these mistakes and how to master your phones – once and for all!

How To Evaluate Your Law Firm’s Phone Performance

 

Law firms live and die by the phones. Unfortunately many of them haven’t quite figured them out.

We called more than 100 firms (one could have been yours!) and only 14.75% of law firms passed our phone process audit. Less than 15% of law firms!

Roughly half of them didn’t answer the phone at all.

Many of the law firms that did answer did so with a generic (forgettable) greeting of “Law Office.”

And more than a handful answered with, “Hello?”

Can you imagine? We thought getting one Hello was bad, but multiple?!

With that said, there are quite a few things not to do when you answer the phone.

Is your law firm committing these phone sins, or would you pass our phone process audit? Let’s find out!

Evaluating Your Law Firm’s Phone Performance

Before you can improve upon your law firm’s phone processes, you first need to know what needs improvement.

 

Is your phone being answered every single time it rings?

If your phone isn’t being answered every single time, you’ve already failed the call audit. Missing potential new client calls is essentially writing your own ticket to the land of lost opportunity because the odds of them leaving a message are slim. Less-than-20% slim. You know those firms we said we called that didn’t answer? Yeah, we didn’t leave a message.

 

Who is answering the phone?

Is it you? If so, we urge you to change that ASAP.

First, because you’re busy and we know that translates into missing some calls. (No shame! You cannot possibly do it all.)

Second, because answering the phone doesn’t make you money. It’s not billable and it doesn’t require an attorney to get it done. Your time is worth so much more!

Third, because getting stuck on an impromptu consultation leaves you with no time to prepare! You’re actually helping your potential clients more by putting someone between you to schedule a consultation that you can prepare for.

 

What is the greeting used to answer the phone?

As mentioned before, a lot of firms flounder their first impression with a poor greeting. “Hello?” is unprofessional and leaves the caller wondering if they called the right number. “Law Office” is used so often that, while it makes it clear the caller reached a law firm, the caller may be confused as to which firm it was that they just called. Additionally, both of those options are less than friendly and can start the call off on a rocky foot.

Our favorite greetings always state the name of the firm, are spoken in a friendly tone, and start the call off with a positive impression.

Looking for something new to try out? Try a greeting like “Thanks for calling My Law Firm, Lisa speaking. How may I assist you?”

 

What information is being captured on every call?

Without a standard process of collecting the same information every time, you’ll probably notice a lot of leads falling through the cracks. It can be easy to forget to ask for their contact information in the moment, but if the same questions are asked on every call, it becomes easier to gather that information for every caller.

At the minimum, we recommend collecting: Name, Phone Number, Case Type/Matter, and Email. This information is important for following up with leads (who probably won’t call you back) and for tracking data in your CRM.

 

Would Your Firm’s Phones Pass The Audit?

If you aren’t sure, register for our upcoming webinar: 30 Minutes To Mastering Your Law Firm’s Phones: Sell More Consults, Impress Your Callers, & Capture Every Lead.

Elena, our Growth Solutions Strategist, will be going deeper on what to do after you’ve evaluated your phones and how to master them – once and for all!

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BettieGram Newsletter Snippit
Take Your Small Law Firm to the Next Level

Take Your Law Firm to the Next Level

Subscribe to BettieGram

Our newsletter shares expert advice & practical articles to elevate your law firm’s success.