In our book Content Rules, C.C. Chapman and I talk a lot about "speaking human"—in fact, it's our Rule No. 4:

Speak human: Communicate your brand mission, values, and philosophy in simple terms, using the language of your customers. Speak in a conversational tone, with personality, empathy, and true emotion. Kill corporate-speak, buzzwords, and other language that makes you sound like a tool.

You know how you love one of your kids more than the others? No, me neither (how is it even possible to do that?). Well, I feel a similar democratic affection for all of our content "rules": It's hard to choose which is my favorite. But I do have special affection for "speak human" (in part because it came under attack early on in the editing process), so I'm especially gratified when I see it in play, especially in unexpected places.

In fact, humanizing professional services marketing has been taken to a whole new level by Chicago law firm Levenfeld Pearlstein—the first law firm (that I know of) to have developed attorney website profiles that incorporate video vignettes of lawyers speaking candidly about their professional philosophies and personal viewpoints—showing off their personalities in a creative and wholly unexpected way.

In one vignette, Steven Bright, a partner in the Banking & Finance Service and the Real Estate & Finance Practice groups, talks about what he was like as a child. In another, Lisa Vandesteeg, an associate in the firm's Litigation, Bankruptcy, and Restructuring and Insolvency Practice Groups, gives a tour of her office. Visitors sometimes tease her for her stockpile of diplomas and awards on the wall, Lisa says before she shows off her proudest professional accomplishment: Her trophy earned for spanking her colleagues in the firm's annual chili cookoff.

In all, about half of the firm's 70 lawyers talk about what their hobbies are, what inspires them, what mistakes attorneys make, what they'd be doing if they didn't go to law school, what their favorite time of year is, where they would go if they could travel in time, and so on.

The firm used an outside production company and spent, in total, roughly $9,500 to create several super-short vignettes (most are around a minute) for each featured attorney. It plans to add video to all of its attorneys' profiles by the end of this year.

"Video isn't exactly groundbreaking, but the way we used it is," Andrea Crews, the firm's director of marketing and business development, told me last week.

Website analytics showed that the attorney profile pages were among the most-visited pages of the Levenfeld Pearlstein website, she said: "Which makes sense: Would-be clients want to know two things, typically: Who are you, and who have you done work for?"

"We saw these videos both as a way to differentiate who we are, and also to start the relationship off right," Andrea said, adding, "They're a way to tell our story."

So what can your company learn from Levenfeld Pearlstein's video profiles?

1. Start with a goal

Most lawyer websites emphasize firm expertise rather than the people behind the law degrees, but Levenfeld Pearlstein emphasizes that its people and their talents are what set it apart from the competition. Accordingly, it wanted to create video profiles that would give a would-be client a sense of who the firm is, before the client ever step foot in the door.

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Three Things Marketers Can Learn From a Law Firm (Yes, a Law Firm) About Creating Awesome Content

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Ann Handley

Ann Handley is a Wall Street Journal best-selling author who recently published Everybody Writes 2. She speaks worldwide about how businesses can escape marketing mediocrity to ignite tangible results. IBM named her one of the 7 people shaping modern marketing. Ann is the Chief Content Officer of MarketingProfs, a LinkedIn Influencer, a keynote speaker, mom, dog person, and writer.