- Joined
- Mar 4, 2006
- Messages
- 74
- Reaction score
- 4
- Location
- Highland Park, IL
- Website
- www.Landfill7.com
First things first. I took a long break from this board to study for the Illinois Bar. I found out last week I passed!
So now I am thinking of practice areas and one came to mind from a prior experience with our house catching fire several years ago. I ended up negotiating our insurance claim and learned many valuable lessons on where your power is when the insurance company seems to be holding all the cards.
There are several options. Negotiate it yourself, hire a public adjuster, or hire an attorney (me). I was a do-it-yourselfer and that worked for me but after paying with sweat and blood, I imagine there are others who would be better off with representation.
What I am thinking about, and the point of this post, is publishing a self-help guide for others who are do-it-yourselfers. I will make this an honest effort. In other words, it will be truly helpful and not just a way to throw everything in randomly to create fear and drive people into my arms.
What I want your advice for is how to market this book(let). One option is to mass print and distribute for free to fire departments and insurance brokers to give to homeowners who they come in contact with. This sets me up as an authority and casts a wide net for my legal services but is expensive.
Another method is to make it available free on a website and let the search engine method carry it to the needed parties. This is less expensive but not as efficient at getting it into the homeowners hands. The last thing the homeowner is likely to do in the first crucial weeks after the fire is to look for this information. On the other hand, I would not distribute the book outside Illinois for free in physical form since it would not benefit my legal practice. The web distribution would therefore be a way for those people to get this information.
Finally, I could publish it for sale. My target market would maybe be fire departments although I am not sure if their mandate goes beyond putting out the fire. Maybe a social service organization but again, the occurrence of fires is pretty random so I doubt many would order these books in advance. When we had our fire the only ones reaching out to us were vulture-like public adjusters.
Any thoughts are welcome.
Steve
So now I am thinking of practice areas and one came to mind from a prior experience with our house catching fire several years ago. I ended up negotiating our insurance claim and learned many valuable lessons on where your power is when the insurance company seems to be holding all the cards.
There are several options. Negotiate it yourself, hire a public adjuster, or hire an attorney (me). I was a do-it-yourselfer and that worked for me but after paying with sweat and blood, I imagine there are others who would be better off with representation.
What I am thinking about, and the point of this post, is publishing a self-help guide for others who are do-it-yourselfers. I will make this an honest effort. In other words, it will be truly helpful and not just a way to throw everything in randomly to create fear and drive people into my arms.
What I want your advice for is how to market this book(let). One option is to mass print and distribute for free to fire departments and insurance brokers to give to homeowners who they come in contact with. This sets me up as an authority and casts a wide net for my legal services but is expensive.
Another method is to make it available free on a website and let the search engine method carry it to the needed parties. This is less expensive but not as efficient at getting it into the homeowners hands. The last thing the homeowner is likely to do in the first crucial weeks after the fire is to look for this information. On the other hand, I would not distribute the book outside Illinois for free in physical form since it would not benefit my legal practice. The web distribution would therefore be a way for those people to get this information.
Finally, I could publish it for sale. My target market would maybe be fire departments although I am not sure if their mandate goes beyond putting out the fire. Maybe a social service organization but again, the occurrence of fires is pretty random so I doubt many would order these books in advance. When we had our fire the only ones reaching out to us were vulture-like public adjusters.
Any thoughts are welcome.
Steve