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Law Firm Marketing Plan Template: The 90-Day Launch Framework

January 28, 2026· 21 min read

The managing partner walks into the monthly meeting. Revenue is down. The phones aren't ringing. The question comes: "What are we doing about marketing?"

What follows is usually a scramble. Someone suggests Google Ads. Someone else mentions that competitor who seems to be everywhere on Facebook. A partner volunteers to "work on the website." An SEO company cold-called last week—maybe return that call.

Six months later, you've spent $50,000 on disconnected tactics. Some might be working. You're not sure which ones. There's no measurement system in place. When revenue picks up, you assume marketing helped. When it doesn't, you blame the economy.

This pattern—reactive spending without strategy—is why most law firm marketing fails. Not because the tactics are wrong, but because there's no plan connecting them to business outcomes.

Why Law Firm Marketing Fails (And How to Fix It)

According to industry data, law firms with documented marketing strategies are over 300% more likely to report success than those without. Yet only 32% of small law firms have formal marketing budgets, and even fewer have written plans.

The pattern we see repeatedly:

Reactive spending cycles. Marketing budget spikes during slow periods ("we need leads now"), then gets cut when things pick up ("we can't afford it"). This inconsistency means campaigns never have time to optimize, and you're always starting from zero.

Tactic-first thinking. "We should try TikTok" or "I heard Facebook works for family law" leads to scattered experiments without clear goals. Without knowing what success looks like, every platform seems promising and nothing gets the sustained investment needed to work.

No connection to revenue. Marketing reports clicks, impressions, maybe leads. But how many of those leads became signed cases? What's the actual cost per client? Without this data, budget decisions are guesswork.

The 2026 competitive reality. You're no longer competing with other lawyers who might not be marketing. You're competing against firms using AI-driven intake, sophisticated marketing attribution, and data-backed budget allocation. The gap between strategic firms and reactive firms is widening.

A 90-day marketing plan fixes this by forcing structure. It's short enough to maintain focus, long enough to see results, and includes built-in review points to adjust course.


The 90-Day Framework Overview

Annual marketing plans work when you have a team to execute them. For most law firms, they become shelfware—impressive documents that no one follows.

A 90-day plan works because it matches how business actually operates. According to planning research, quarterly planning allows for regular review and adjustment while being short enough to maintain accountability.

Here's the structure:

Phase Focus Weeks Key Outcomes
Month 1: Foundation Audit, goals, strategy 1-4 Clear baseline, defined goals, selected channels
Month 2: Launch Campaign execution 5-8 Campaigns live, tracking in place, initial data
Month 3: Optimize Measurement, refinement 9-12 Data-driven decisions, refined strategy, 90-day review

The framework follows a simple principle: foundation before action, measurement before scaling.

Too many firms launch campaigns before they know their baseline metrics. They scale spend before they've proven a channel works. They optimize before they have data. The 90-day framework prevents these sequencing errors.


Month 1: Foundation (Weeks 1-4)

The first month is about preparation. No campaigns launch. No money flows to ads. This discipline feels slow when you want leads yesterday, but it prevents the most expensive mistakes.

Week 1: Marketing Audit

Before planning where to go, you need to know where you are. A proper audit takes one week and covers:

Current Channel Review

Document every marketing activity currently running:

Channel Monthly Spend Leads Generated Cases Signed Notes
Google Ads $
SEO (retainer) $
Facebook Ads $
LSA $
Referral marketing $
Networking/events $

If you don't have lead and case data by channel, that's a finding in itself. It means your first priority is implementing marketing attribution.

Website Assessment

Your website is often the first point of contact for potential clients. Audit these elements:

Competitive Quick Scan

You don't need a full competitive analysis in Week 1, but spend a few hours understanding your competitive landscape:

Document this. You'll use it for positioning in Week 2.

Conversion Rate Baseline

Check your Google Analytics (or equivalent) for:

If call tracking isn't in place, you're blind to most conversions. Week 1 is the time to get this setup started.

Week 2: Goal Setting

With your baseline established, set clear goals for the 90-day period. Use a framework that creates accountability.

SMART Goals for Law Firm Marketing

Each goal should be:

Example 90-Day Goals:

Goal Category Example Goal Why It Works
Lead volume Generate 60 qualified PI leads Specific, measurable, time-bound
Cost efficiency Reduce cost per qualified lead from $150 to $100 Measurable improvement target
Conversion Increase website-to-lead conversion from 2% to 3.5% Clear metric, meaningful impact
Revenue Sign 8 new family law clients at $3,500 avg. value Connects marketing to revenue

Setting Realistic Targets

Your targets should push performance without being fantasy. Consider:

Industry benchmarks can help calibrate expectations. According to 2025-2026 data, cost per qualified legal lead typically ranges from $200-$500 depending on practice area and market. Personal injury in competitive markets can exceed $500-$1,000.

Week 3: Channel Selection

This is where strategy decisions happen. Based on your audit, goals, and budget, which 2-3 channels will you focus on?

The Core Principle: Do fewer things well.

Research consistently shows that most small businesses don't fail because they picked the wrong marketing channel—they fail because they picked too many. Spreading a $5,000 monthly budget across five channels means nothing gets enough investment to optimize.

Channel Selection Matrix:

Factor SEO Google Ads LSA Facebook Content
Time to results 6-14 months Immediate Immediate 2-4 weeks 6-12 months
Typical CPL $100-300 long-term $200-800 $50-250 $30-150 Low (time investment)
Best for Sustained growth Immediate leads Local visibility Awareness, specific demographics Authority building
Minimum budget $2,000/mo $1,500-3,000/mo $500-1,500/mo $1,000/mo Staff time

Selection Criteria:

  1. Urgency vs. sustainability. If you need cases in 30 days, paid channels come first. If you're building for the long term, SEO and content matter more.

  2. Practice area match. PI performs well on LSA and paid search. Estate planning does better with content marketing and referrals. Family law responds to Facebook targeting.

  3. Budget reality. If your total budget is $3,000/month, you can't do everything. Pick one primary paid channel and one organic effort.

  4. Competitive landscape. If all competitors are on Google Ads with huge budgets, LSA or Facebook might offer better ROI.

For most law firms just starting organized marketing, a solid starting configuration is:

Week 4: Budget Allocation

With channels selected, allocate your budget using the 70-20-10 framework:

Category % of Budget Purpose
Proven/Primary (70%) $3,500 of $5,000 Channels most likely to produce cases based on your audit
Emerging (20%) $1,000 of $5,000 Secondary channel you're testing
Experimental (10%) $500 of $5,000 New tactic or creative test

Budget by Practice Area:

Month 1 Checklist:


Month 2: Launch (Weeks 5-8)

With foundation in place, Month 2 is execution. Campaigns go live, tracking is confirmed, and you start generating real data.

Week 5: Campaign Setup

Google Ads Launch Checklist:

If Google Ads is in your plan:

  1. Account structure

    • One campaign per practice area (PI, family law, criminal)
    • Ad groups organized by intent ("car accident lawyer" separate from "PI lawyer")
    • At least 3 ads per ad group for testing
  2. Keyword strategy

    • Start with high-intent terms: "[practice area] lawyer [city]"
    • Include negative keywords from day one (free, DIY, how to)
    • Use phrase match or exact match; avoid broad match initially
  3. Landing pages

    • Each ad group should land on a relevant page
    • "Car accident lawyer" ads should land on car accident page, not homepage
    • Clear CTA, phone number, contact form above fold
  4. Tracking

    • Google Ads conversion tracking installed
    • Call tracking numbers in place
    • UTM parameters on all destination URLs

Local Services Ads Setup:

If using LSA:

  1. Complete lawyer verification (background check, bar verification)
  2. Set service areas and practice areas accurately
  3. Upload professional headshot
  4. Set budget based on lead volume targets
  5. Configure business hours for when leads arrive

SEO Foundation:

If SEO is part of your plan:

  1. Technical audit complete (site speed, mobile, crawlability)
  2. Google Business Profile optimized (categories, services, photos, posts)
  3. Core practice area pages reviewed for keyword targeting
  4. Monthly content plan created (blog topics aligned with keywords)

Week 6: Tracking Verification

Before scaling any spend, verify tracking works end-to-end:

Call Tracking Test:

  1. Call each tracking number yourself
  2. Verify call appears in call tracking dashboard
  3. Confirm source attribution is correct
  4. Check that call recording works (if enabled)

Form Tracking Test:

  1. Submit a test form
  2. Verify form submission registers in analytics
  3. Check that UTM parameters flow to CRM
  4. Confirm lead source is captured in CRM record

Conversion Tracking Test:

  1. Click an ad, submit a form
  2. Verify conversion fires in Google Ads
  3. Check conversion appears in Google Analytics

Document what's working and what needs fixing. Launch issues are much cheaper to fix in week 6 than week 12.

Week 7: Initial Optimization

After 2-3 weeks of data, make your first optimizations:

What to look for:

What NOT to do yet:

This is optimization, not transformation. Make incremental adjustments based on early signals.

Week 8: Content and Authority Building

While paid campaigns generate immediate leads, invest time in organic growth:

Content priorities:

  1. Practice area deep dives: Comprehensive guides for your main services
  2. FAQ content: Answer questions prospects actually ask
  3. Local content: "[City] [practice area] guide"
  4. Case study frameworks: (Without revealing client identities)

Google Business Profile:

Month 2 Checklist:


Month 3: Optimize (Weeks 9-12)

Month 3 is where your 90-day plan pays off. You now have real data to guide decisions instead of guesses.

Week 9-10: Performance Analysis

With 4-6 weeks of campaign data, you can now do meaningful analysis.

Core Metrics Dashboard:

Build or update a simple dashboard tracking:

Metric Week 5 Week 6 Week 7 Week 8 Trend
Website visitors
Form submissions
Phone calls
Qualified leads
Consultations scheduled
Cases signed
Cost per lead
Cost per qualified lead
Cost per signed case

Channel Performance Comparison:

Channel Spend Leads Qualified Cost/QL Cases Cost/Case
Google Ads
LSA
Facebook
Organic $0

This is where marketing attribution becomes critical. You need to connect leads to signed cases to know actual cost per acquisition.

What Good Performance Looks Like:

Based on industry data:

If your numbers fall significantly outside these ranges, that tells you where to focus optimization efforts.

Week 11: Strategic Adjustments

Based on your analysis, make strategic decisions:

If a channel is working (positive ROI):

If a channel is underperforming:

If you don't have enough data:

Common Week 11 Decisions:

Week 12: 90-Day Review and Next Quarter Planning

The final week is about assessment and forward planning.

90-Day Review Meeting Agenda:

  1. Results vs. Goals: How did actual performance compare to 90-day goals?
  2. Channel Performance: Which channels met expectations? Which didn't?
  3. Budget Efficiency: What's our actual cost per signed case?
  4. Key Learnings: What do we now know that we didn't know 90 days ago?
  5. Next Quarter Goals: Based on this data, what are our Q2 goals?
  6. Budget Adjustments: How should budget allocation shift?
  7. New Experiments: What should we test in the next 90 days?

Quarterly Review Template:

Metric 90-Day Goal Actual % of Goal Next Quarter Target
Total leads
Qualified leads
Signed cases
Total marketing spend
Cost per signed case
Marketing ROI

Planning the Next 90 Days:

Your Q2 plan should:

  1. Double down on what worked. If Google Ads produced 60% of cases at good ROI, it gets more budget.

  2. Cut what didn't. If Facebook produced clicks but zero cases, either restructure dramatically or reallocate.

  3. Graduate from emerging to proven. Move channels that proved themselves from the 20% bucket to the 70% bucket.

  4. Add new experiments. Keep testing with that 10% bucket. What's the next channel to evaluate?

  5. Raise the bar. If you hit your goals, next quarter's targets should be higher. If you missed them, either lower targets to realistic levels or increase investment.

Month 3 Checklist:


Marketing KPIs: What to Track and Why

Without measurement, marketing is guessing. Here are the KPIs that matter for law firms:

Lead Metrics

KPI Definition Why It Matters Target Range
Total leads All inquiries received Top-of-funnel volume Depends on capacity
Qualified leads Leads meeting your criteria Actual opportunities 30-50% of total
Cost per lead (CPL) Spend ÷ total leads Efficiency measure $100-$500
Cost per qualified lead Spend ÷ qualified leads True acquisition cost $200-$800
Lead source breakdown % from each channel Attribution clarity Varies

Conversion Metrics

KPI Definition Why It Matters Target Range
Website conversion rate Form submissions ÷ visitors Website effectiveness 2-5%
Lead-to-consultation rate Consultations ÷ qualified leads Intake effectiveness 50-70%
Consultation-to-case rate Cases ÷ consultations Close rate 30-50%
Overall conversion rate Cases ÷ total leads Full-funnel efficiency 5-15%

Revenue Metrics

KPI Definition Why It Matters Target Range
Cost per signed case Spend ÷ signed cases True ROI driver Varies by practice
Marketing ROI (Revenue - spend) ÷ spend Overall effectiveness 5:1 to 10:1
Marketing efficiency ratio Revenue ÷ spend Simplified ROI 5x-10x
Lifetime value Total revenue per client Long-term view Practice-dependent

How Often to Review

Frequency What to Review
Weekly Lead volume, cost per lead, any alerts
Monthly Full KPI dashboard, channel performance, budget pacing
Quarterly Strategic review, goal assessment, budget reallocation

The Complete 90-Day Marketing Plan Template

Here's a condensed template you can copy and customize:

Executive Summary (fill in)

Firm: [Name] Plan Period: [Start Date] - [End Date] Total Budget: $[Amount] Primary Goal: [One sentence]

Current State Assessment

Marketing spend (monthly): $[Amount] Lead sources (current):

Baseline metrics:

90-Day Goals

  1. [Goal 1 - SMART format]
  2. [Goal 2 - SMART format]
  3. [Goal 3 - SMART format]

Channel Strategy

Channel Role Monthly Budget Goal
[Primary] Lead generation $[Amount] [X] leads
[Secondary] Support/awareness $[Amount] [X] metric
[Experimental] Testing $[Amount] Learn [X]

Monthly Milestones

Month 1:

Month 2:

Month 3:

Success Criteria

This plan is successful if we:

  1. Generate [X] qualified leads at under $[Y] each
  2. Sign [X] new cases from marketing channels
  3. Achieve [X]:1 marketing ROI
  4. Have clear data showing which channels work

Building a Sustainable Marketing System

The 90-day framework isn't a one-time exercise. It's a repeatable cycle:

Quarter 1: Build foundation, launch, learn Quarter 2: Scale what works, cut what doesn't, test new experiments Quarter 3: Refine and optimize based on 6 months of data Quarter 4: Annual review, set next year strategy, adjust for market changes

Each quarter builds on the last. Your first 90 days will have imperfect data and learning-curve mistakes. Your fourth 90-day cycle will run with proven channels, documented processes, and predictable results.

The Compounding Effect

The gap between firms that plan and firms that react widens over time:

Reactive firm (Year 1):

Planning firm (Year 1):

By Year 3, the planning firm has compounded improvements. They've cut wasteful spend, doubled down on winners, and built brand presence that reduces acquisition costs. The reactive firm is still cycling through agencies.


Next Steps

If you've read this far, you understand why planning matters. The question is whether you'll actually do it.

Here's your immediate action plan:

This week:

  1. Print the Month 1 checklist
  2. Schedule 2 hours to complete your marketing audit
  3. Pull your baseline numbers (website traffic, current leads, current spend)

Next week:

  1. Draft your 90-day goals
  2. Assess which channels fit your budget and practice
  3. Make channel selection decisions

Week 3-4:

  1. Finalize budget allocation
  2. Set up or verify tracking systems
  3. Create your launch plan for Month 2

The firms that succeed with marketing aren't the ones with the biggest budgets—they're the ones with the clearest plans. A $10,000/month budget with strategy beats a $20,000/month budget without one.

Start with the audit. The rest follows from there.


Irfad Imtiaz is Director of Technology at My Legal Academy and Co-Founder & CTO at Ranql. He has helped 400+ law firms implement marketing and technology systems that drive predictable growth.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How long should a law firm marketing plan be?

For most law firms, a 90-day (quarterly) marketing plan is ideal. It's short enough to maintain focus and accountability, but long enough to see meaningful results and gather data for optimization. Annual plans often become shelfware because they're too long to track effectively. The 90-day framework allows for regular review and adjustment, matching how business actually operates. Each quarter, you build on the previous quarter's learnings.

What should be included in a law firm marketing plan?

A complete law firm marketing plan should include: a marketing audit (current spend, results, website assessment, competitive scan), SMART goals tied to revenue outcomes, channel selection (2-3 primary channels based on budget and practice area), budget allocation using the 70-20-10 framework, a tracking system for attribution, and a KPI dashboard. The plan should also include monthly milestones, success criteria, and a quarterly review process.

How much should a law firm spend on marketing?

Marketing spend depends on your growth stage. Established firms with strong referral networks typically spend 2-5% of revenue. Steady growth firms spend 7-10%. Aggressive growth firms invest 10-15%, and firms entering new markets may need 15-20%+. Data shows high-growth law firms spend approximately 16.5% of revenue on marketing versus 5% for no-growth firms. More important than the total is how you allocate it—use the 70-20-10 framework: 70% to proven channels, 20% to emerging channels, 10% to experiments.

Which marketing channels work best for law firms?

The best channels depend on your practice area, budget, and timeline. For immediate leads with budget, Google Ads and Local Services Ads work well. For long-term sustainable growth, SEO delivers the highest ROI (average 526% over 3 years) but takes 6-14 months. Facebook works well for specific demographics (family law, estate planning). The key principle is to do fewer things well—pick 2-3 channels and invest enough in each to optimize properly rather than spreading budget too thin.

How do I measure if my law firm marketing is working?

Track these core metrics: cost per lead ($100-$500 typical), cost per qualified lead ($200-$800), lead-to-consultation rate (50-70% target), consultation-to-case rate (30-50% target), and overall marketing ROI (5:1 to 10:1 target). The critical metric is cost per signed case—not just cost per lead. Review weekly (lead volume), monthly (full dashboard), and quarterly (strategic assessment). You need proper call tracking and CRM integration to connect marketing spend to actual signed cases.

What's the biggest mistake law firms make with marketing?

The biggest mistake is reactive spending without strategy—increasing budget during slow months, cutting it when busy, trying different tactics without tracking results. This pattern means campaigns never optimize, you're always starting from zero, and you have no data to guide decisions. Other common mistakes include spreading budget too thin across too many channels, not tracking leads through to signed cases (only measuring clicks or calls), and judging SEO results too early (it takes 6-14 months).

How do I set marketing goals for my law firm?

Use the SMART framework: Specific (what exactly you want to achieve), Measurable (a number you can track), Achievable (realistic given your budget and market), Relevant (connected to revenue, not vanity metrics), and Time-bound (by end of quarter). Example: 'Generate 60 qualified personal injury leads at under $150 each by end of Q1.' Set 3-5 goals for each 90-day period. Base targets on your baseline metrics, available budget, typical cost per lead in your market, and your intake capacity.

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