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Do You Have The “Time” To Be An Entrepreneurial Lawyer?

A great question.  Many lawyers fail to see themselves as entrepreneurs. The truth is, solo and small practitioners are entrepreneurs, but most are not operating like one. So how should entrepreneurial lawyers think?  As a successful entrepreneurial lawyer, I have learned the The Key Essential element to thrive is managing our time. 

Bigstock-Time-Is-Money-Concept-74046667When you think of the most successful people; Bill Gates, Warren Buffet, or those with major responsibilities such as the President of the United States, they get it all done in the same time we have; but they are using their time differently. Most attorneys I have worked with over the last 15 years struggle with having enough time to get it all done. 

That's why on Thursday March 12th at 4PM EST and then again at 7 PM EST, I will share real time effective strategies that have lead to my success.  It's called, Having the Time to Have it All – Three Time Strategies to Get a Practice with Purpose and Profit”.

In this one-hour webinar I will share the time strategies I utilize in my practice that grew it twenty-fold over the last seventeen years. I will also help eliminate misconceptions on time that holds you back from having the practice you're capable of having and keeps you working late night after night, day after day.

Should you attend?  If you are struggling with a work-life balance, struggling with how to run a law "business," or feel you do not have enough time in your day to get all the work done, then this webinar will be a great use of your time. If you are struggling with how to hire the best people and have inconsistent marketing and cash flow, this webinar is for you!  What is the opportunity?  Simply stated, the opportunity is for those attorneys who want to provide estate planning, asset protection, Medicaid, veteran's benefits, special needs, and tax planning to clients who need these services to protect what they've worked a lifetime to earn and to preserve the dignity they deserve.

What's required to implement the information will share? To become an entrepreneurial attorney you must have a strong work ethic, really enjoy what you do and be passionate about helping people.  You must also be a lifetime learner and really value relationships.  That’s it!  These are the essential elements that you’ll need to have on your calendar.  I will show you how you can and still get your work done. Click here now to register for this time saving webinar. 

Even if you only utilize ONE of the three time breakthrough strategies, it will move you forward toward your quest to have the time to have it all. I look forward to sharing.

If you are already a Lawyers With Purpose member, you already have access to the information.  Please let us know if you have any questions and we can definitely point you in the right direction!

See you there,

David J. Zumpano, CPA, Esq.

Practicing Attorney, just like you &

Founder of Estate Planning Law Center, & Lawyers with Purpose LLC

 

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Essential Things For Your Bottom Line

Are you tracking your closing rate?  You should be, if only for self-evaluation.  Your Pipeline Focuser™ will quickly show how many prospects became clients at each of your Initial and Vision Meetings™ If your closing rate average is lower than 70% you should investigate further.

Bigstock-Bottom-Line-Blackboard-Means-N-62902642A low closing rate is not always attributable to the attorney’s lack of skill in the Initial or Vision Meeting™ Sometimes the prospect just isn’t qualified to move forward. While it would be great if your staff could weed out those unqualified prospects before you invest your time in meeting with them, if they attended a workshop and you promised a complimentary Vision Meeting™ then you don’t have much choice.

However, if your closing rate is low and your prospects are largely not qualified, then consider investing time to improve your skills.  

On the LWP member website, in the Vision Meeting™ folder (located in the Estate Processes tab), there are four videos designed to help you “close the deal.” Two of them deal specifically with boosting your closing rate by using the Vision Clarifier™. 

Are you using the Vision Clarifier™? It’s the tool that visually demonstrates the solution to issues identified in the audit. If you’re skipping this tool, then you’re not visually demonstrating your recommended solution(s).

During the workshop, the attorney tells stories that are memorable, colorful and interesting.  Using a PowerPoint presentation, the attorney is able to anchor stories that are easily visualized by attendees. Adding props such as the little red wagon and the dollar bill maintains interest in the illustrations.

At the subsequent Vision Meeting™ the attorney continues educating prospects in a one-on-one setting by connecting the workshop stories to the Estate Planning Audit™ and then demonstrating solutions with the “Vision Clarifier™, leading directly to the firm fee schedule.

This is where the “rubber meets the road.” The bottom line truly is do you believe in the solution you are recommending? Are you able to clearly see the value? If you are, you won’t hesitate when it comes to quoting your fee.  That printed fee schedule you worked so hard to develop will boost your confidence and demonstrate to the prospect that you are not pricing based on his/her assets. You really do have set fees.

I invite you to track your own numbers.  If prospects walk out of your office, “wanting to think about it,” the odds begin to dramatically decrease that they will become clients anytime soon. Being able to properly demonstrate the benefits of your proposed plan in that first meeting is a priceless skill. Putting in the time to hone and improve this skill will have exponential impact on your bottom line.

If you want to learn more about the Lawyers With Purpose Client Enrollment Process™, join us in Charlotte, NC, February 3rd-5th for our Practice With Purpose Program.  There are only a few seats left so register today!

Nedra Catale – Coaching, Consulting & Implementation, Lawyers With Purpose

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Start At The End And Work Backwards

To make sure I get things done, I create long lists, checking them off, and take my calendar out and schedule everything working backwards from where I currently am.  

Perhaps that's why I am so sold on LWP's project planning tools.  The project planners are built with the end project in mind, and help you and your team work backwards.  

Bigstock-Vector-illustration-of-turn-si-45373129 (1)Any major project that you are contemplating — RMS, a Maintenance Program, a marketing plan — should begin with the Idea Focuser.  Is this project worthwhile?  What will be the benefit?  What is the expected outcome and how will it impact the practice? Without a clear vision of the goal, you and your team will find it difficult to implement change.

Next comes the Implementation Focuser.  The Implementation Focuser should ideally be used in a team session to identify areas of responsibility and anticipate and plan for potential roadblocks.  The Implementation Focuser helps to break down the project into smaller steps and allocate responsibility and deadlines for each step.

If you're a Lawyers With Purpose member, these tools can be found in the Firm Resources Tab, in the Planning and Goal Setting Folder (if not, contact us so we can tell you more about them).  

So, what's needed to successfully implement a new project?

1.  A clear idea of the benefit of the project.  What, exactly, is the anticipated outcome and why is this important?  What will be the return on investment?  After the anticipated work and cost of the project, what will be the payoff?

2.  What will the finished project look like?  Before the project is begun, every team member should have a clear view of all of the details of the finished project.  What is the goal?  What will success look like?  How will it work?  Who will be responsible for the continued well-being of the project once it is completed?

3. Anticipate the roadblocks, and allocate responsibility and deadlines.  Plan for the bumps in the road. 

4. Schedule weekly project reviews.  This doesn't have to be an additional meeting.  This can be covered during your weekly team meeting.  But, be aware that responsibility without accountability will get you nowhere.

5. Celebrate milestones and completion of the project.  Acknowledge team contributions and mark the date. Mark the date so that, going forward, you can track the impact your new project has on the successes of your firm.  You may want to have before and after numbers in order to measure the success of the project.

If you and your team are contemplating the implementation of big projects in 2015, be sure to document your projects, and include your CC&I coach in the planning process.

If you would like to know more about Lawyers With Purpose and the tools we have to offer to help build and grow your estate or elder law practice, join us in a few weeks in Charlotte, NC, for our Practice With Purpose Program.  We still have a few spots left so register today!

Nedra Catale – Coaching, Consulting & Implementation, Lawyers With Purpose

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Congratulations To Douglas Ocker, LWP Member Of The Month

What is the greatest success you’ve had since joining LWP?

I joined LWP in 2013. I felt I lost control of my law firm to my employees, as they had the hammer over my head due to the power of one. How could I replace them if they were the only one knowing how to perform a particular task? LWP was the answer. With video webinars and a systematic process, including spreadsheets and flowcharts, I could train a replacement employee in a few days. So thanks to the LWP system, the hammer was in my hand, not their hand. I no longer have paralegals. This is my greatest success. Practicing elder law is fun again.

DSC_1709What is your favorite LWP tool? 

I do not have a favorite LWP tool. The LWP system is a complete system, i.e. a toolbox. The toolbox holds every tool an Elder Law attorney will ever need. These tools include document preparation tools, marketing tools, law office management tools, video instructional tools, and so on. Just go to the website and open the toolbox for the job at hand. Even the email list serve is an open ended tool for your use. 

How has being part of LWP impacted your team and your practice?

We have a TEAM now, and I love it! Every team member knows their job description, and LWP has a system in place for each team member. We have an attorney and CEO, a Client Service Coordinator, a Marketing Coordinator, a Bookkeeper and Document Preparation person (my wife, Sueanne), and two part-time analysts for VA and Medicaid document preparation.

Life is good!

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The Art Of Surrender

“Let go or be dragged.” ~ Zen proverb

Four weeks ago the LWP partners began our customary quarterly partners retreat at a Hyatt in Atlanta at 9 a.m. sharp. We began the day in customary fashion, after Dave ensured that we had a mealtime plan, by analyzing our quarterly goals. We carefully reviewed who is doing what to reach goal, our money plan from the previous quarter and then where we have nobody leading.

Bigstock-White-flag-old-style-vector-54229970Like all businesses, marketing was where the spotlight shined loud and clear. What I appreciate about our collective skill sets is how quickly we are able to shift from driver mode right into solution mode. We revisited hiring outside consultants, as we have done in the past. It would take at least six months to get them up and running; plus, how do we find someone who understands the dynamic of an estate and elder law firm vs. a hunt and kill mindset at all cost?

At the end of the day we agreed that I would go full-time into marketing. I am naturally the best person to lead this, and the organization needs me to lead it, own it and nurture it.

I’m not going to lie – I resisted. Hard. My control freak showed up immediately:  “I know (control freaks always know best) that X will happen,” “Who’s going to lead Y,” “Who’s going to coach Z,” “We have been making such great progress on Z, I can’t just abandon ’em now.”

I finally GOT IT. I have been working with team members for 17 years, hearing the exact same words when their attorneys ask them to step up and replace themselves. I never fully understood what the root of the resistance was. Now I get it.

The hesitation does not stem solely from fear and the unknown aspects of change. It’s not just fear of what’s next and whether the team member can actually pull it off. Sure, the uncertainty is a big piece, and fear of failure has a giant room at the inn as well.  But in all honesty, the biggest piece comes down to leaving with a feeling of abandonment – abandoning the team, the clients and what you have taken personal pride in developing and perfecting. It’s the essence of, “I said I would do this and I gave it my all and now I’m leaving the baby. Do they have all they need to make certain this doesn’t nosedive?”

So we resist, we justify that “they need me” and we attempt to control the situation, instead of investing in how we are going to become the next, better version of ourselves and create a better version of the business. Dang it, there it is again, that 2mm shift.

But if we can detach from the logistics of how what we are currently doing will get done, and anchor to how we are going to step into our new role/world/life, the art of surrendering begins.

As soon as I got on the plane, I got to work. I looked at what I am doing non-marketing-related and to whom I can responsibly shift it over. I quickly came up with a suggested transition plan. I pulled out our marketing plan, the money plan, and realized not only that I can do this, but that I am very much the best person for the job. I can do this, and I will do this. I sat for the next two hours and 20 minutes while trapped on the plane and mentally surrendered to letting go of what was, to allow the new reality to permeate, and to embrace the sense of excitement, along with a healthy level of challenge.

But I couldn’t do it without detaching first and allowing for the possibility of what’s next to unfold. Yes, I know this is a skill and it must be practiced, daily. And it is never, ever mastered. But like my good friend Candee always says, “You must be willing to try it on.”

That honestly is the process for giving up control and the art of surrendering. It’s simply one small step (emotions, logistics and movement) at a time. And then you can course a realistic present and a future path and plan. Eventually you find your new normal.  And that’s really the story of growth.

Molly L. Hall, Co-Founder, Lawyers with Purpose, LLC, and author of Don’t Be a Yes Chick: How to Stop Babysitting Your Boss, Transform Your Job and Work with a Dream Team Without Losing Your Sanity or Your Spirit in the Process.

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Building vs. Growing

“The tools that got you out of Egypt are not the same tools that will get you to the Promised Land.” ~ Dan Sullivan

Bigstock-wood-textured-backgrounds-in-a-54493616There is an inherent difference between what it takes to build vs. grow a business.  I see people buying into building when they need growing, and people buying into growing when they need building. In the law firm diagnostic calls I do, I see about 1% of entrepreneurs who need growth. I my personal opinion, those percentages should be more balanced, but buyers haven’t identified the status of the business prior to purchasing, so they just buy from everywhere. I can guarantee you when you call LWP, our sole commitment is to determine where attorneys stand, first and foremost, so we can determine what help they need.

When you’re in the infancy stage of your business, you need to build. Here’s what that looks like:

Building:

  1. Time/focus management
  2. Revenue Focuser
  3. Goal-setting with SMRs
  4. Project Focusers
  5. Team development, training and implementation
  6. Systems and processes
  7. Weekly cash flow tracking and reporting
  8. Lead generation and lead conversion systems
  9. Lead generation and lead conversion tracking
  10. Companywide communication skills that are consistent from initial contact to the closing of the file

Choosing just one of the above will not work long-term. Each piece is very much part of the global puzzle. In my experience, purchasing a lead-generation system is not going to be the magic bullet. Great, maybe it got your phone ringing, but if you don’t have a system to convert  those leads into paying customers, you’ll be quickly saying, “I bought that marketing guru’s X that she was guaranteeing would do A, B and C. And it didn’t. I didn’t get one person to hire me. It was garbage. She’s a crook.” Well, that statement may not be accurate; the product probably did get your phone to ring. But it wouldn’t matter without a system to process, track, follow up with and measure the lead. Where did the initial contact come from? What did we guide the client to do next? (Clients are calling for your guidance on what to do next; you must always have something to enroll them in that will give them that guidance.)

If you’re like most solopreneurs, you need to get money in the door before you can even think of purchasing a system for your client services coordinator, or putting in a time management system. “I’ll look into that after I have cash flow,” you think. So you may purchase a killer “Generate $10,000 a day in 3 easy steps” system. You generate your first $10K, but you pulled a few later nights, not realizing that the extra work is actually the “system” that it’s going to take to make the $10K a day.  Sure, this one piece of the puzzle that you purchased did produce what it promised, but at what cost? If you calculate your hourly rate, your team’s hourly rate and the possibility of shutting down other areas of your business to get this done, you would probably be horrified. (For the fun of it, email me if you would like our “what are you worth” exercise. Send me your completed exercise and I’ll lead a 30-minute analysis call to review your results. Consider it a gift.)

By now, you’re getting the picture. I have attorneys calling me daily saying, “I don’t need all that; I am just getting started and need to build my business first. I just need X.” Sadly, they come back a few months later (hopefully) or years later (more accurate) in a worse spot, with frustrated stories of how they bought this, did this program and “none of them produced what was promised.” This most often is not the complete picture.

What was missing for them was that they didn’t invest the time to lay out the big picture of what it takes to build a business. It is never one precise tool; it is very much an all-encompassing “and.” The “and” is a process that hits all areas of determining your monthly revenue goal and what it’s going to take to get there (how many appointments, what appointments are paying), time management (which days are money days, which are production days, which are project days),  lead generation, relationship management, system,  a team-centric approach to reach goal, etc. You get the point. In my experience, when your business is in the personal services industry, it is next to impossible to build a business without a widespread approach.

Building a business means implementing some or all of the items listed above. The pieces are up and running, on a consistent basis. There are not peaks and pits in your leads, referrals or paying clients. You’ve removed the revolving door at the entrance to your office for employees. Your business is systematized, with all areas automated and integrated. It is 80% team-led, freeing up the entrepreneur to spend 80% of their time in front of people (synergy referral meetings, existing and prospective client meetings and leveraged speaking events).

Once you’ve built your business, then you start to address the following growth components.

Growing

  1. Actuary referral and client statistics to create target marketing
  2. Elevation offerings for your existing clients
  3. Professional and client advisory boards
  4. Client and referral appreciation programs
  5. Team empowerment and leadership programs
  6. A  three-pronged marketing approach to double your revenue, year after year (and it’s only dependent on you as the business owner)
  7. Tri-annual practice enhancement retreats facilitated by professionals
  8. An annual maintenance program that allows you to be your own bank
  9. An internal lead system that relieves the business owner from operations, team training and law firm management
  10. Operating all areas of your business from an automated knowledge, workflow and CRM program that allows your business to be dependent on reporting and tracking instead of human familiarity
  11. A system for creating an exit strategy for a saleable practice (when you’re ready)

When you’re striving to generate monthly revenue – and that includes keeping the lights on and paying yourself each month, not taking what may be left over – you shouldn’t be in the market for a robust CRM program that will hand you leads that you can’t even follow up with. You need a building a business plan. You need such a plan when you’re striving to remove yourself from day-to-day operations because you have complete confidence that your business is systematized and generating consistent everything. You need it when you’re ready to move on to your next chapter of making certain the profit margin grows each year, but it’s not solely dependent on you to get the work done.

That is what I am most proud of with LWP: our members. So many of them had the presence to see the difference between the two; they had the patience to get through the building phase and the shrewdness to consciously move into the CONTROLLED growth phase (our motto is, do not blow everything up for the sake of growth). I am honored to be on this journey with them.  

Molly L. Hall, Co-Founder, Lawyers with Purpose, LLC, and author of Don’t Be a Yes Chick: How to Stop Babysitting Your Boss, Transform Your Job and Work with a Dream Team Without Losing Your Sanity or Your Spirit in the Process.

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Dangerous Productivity

“In today’s culture – where self-worth is tied to our net worth, and we base our worthiness on our level of productivity – spending time doing purposeless activities is rare. In fact, for many of us it sounds like an anxiety attack waiting to happen. We’ve got to get ’er done! It doesn’t matter if our job is running a multimillion-dollar company, raising a family, creating art, or finishing school; we’ve got to keep our noses to the grindstone and work!  Many of us still believe that exhaustion is a status symbol of hard work and sleep is a luxury. The result is that we are so very tired. Dangerously tired. But the truth is, we can’t handle it. We are a nation of exhausted and overstressed adults raising overscheduled children. We think accomplishments and acquisitions will bring joy and meaning, but that pursuit could be the very thing that’s keeping us so tired and afraid to slow down.”

Bigstock-Silhouette-Of-An-Exhausted-Spo-56076581The above passage is the wisdom of Brené Brown, one of, if not the, most highly referenced of today’s writers and researchers. Brené has spent the past decade studying vulnerability, courage, worthiness, and shame, and her published work is business – and life-altering. I have been studying it for the past three years and working with my business coach on incorporating much of her work into our organization.

Brené calls her syndrome “dangerously tired”; I would like to add “dangerously productive” to that diagnosis. As a follow-through, I am guilty of this. “Just finish up this marketing campaign and then I will close down for the day,” I’ll tell myself. “Muscle through, you can handle it.” “I can catch up on sleep this weekend.” There is a cost for this dangerous productivity. I see it in law firms every day. The challenge is that we trick ourselves that “it’s just this week” when the truth is that this level of muscling through becomes our norm. And if this isn’t our way of being? Then it’s almost worse, because we repeatedly beat ourselves up for not being motivated enough or not working hard enough.

The following exercise Brené rolls out in her book, titled “The Gifts of Imperfection: Let Go of Who You Think You’re Supposed to Be and Embrace Who You Are,” was a game changer for me personally. And yes, I will be sharing it with the team this week.

STEP ONE – Create a list of specific conditions that are in place when everything feels good in your life (here’s an example of mine):

  1. Starting my day @ 5:00 a.m. with exercise
  2. Being present for & connecting with kids in a.m. before they head off for school
  3. Dedicated 1 hr. Sunday evenings for my “Rock Star Week” planning
  4. Weekly partner meeting to connect on strategic opportunities vs. operations
  5. A scheduled vacation on the horizon to keep me moving to know there is time carved out for play, rest and connection with my family & friends
  6. Operating from my written Marketing Plan with deadlines for the week
  7. Weekly accountability meeting in place for the beginning and end of the week to hold my feet to the fire to stay focused on my goals

STEP TWO – Create your To-Do List (here is one of mine):

  1. Type up notes from partner meeting
  2. Schedule calls with DH & VC
  3. Follow up emails to MO and RD
  4. Call with AM on L/T webinars
  5. Call w/RD about covering for me while I am in China

STEP THREE – Create your To-Accomplish List (Here is a sample of mine right now):

  1. Automated Enrollment Process in Infusionsoft with triggers and chains for each step of the enrollment process
  2. Meet “100 Days to Year End” goal by December 19,2014
  3. Generate 16 initial contacts per week consistently
  4. Replace myself in Operations by October 1, 2014
  5. PPT up & running and generating $22,500 in revenue by December 19, 2014

The most revolutionary part of this exercise was looking at the pieces that must be in place in order to create and traverse (not muscle through) my rock star week.  The other “AH HA” was comparing my To-Do List and my To- Accomplish List. I loathe my To-Do List. It sucks the life out of me. It’s busy work that doesn’t challenge or inspire me. I quickly realized it’s time to delegate my To-Do’s for the week and put my To-Accomplish front and center. I am going to be incorporating this exercise every week in my Sunday planning time and I am going to immediately delegate my To-Do List to allow me to focus on my To-Accomplish List.

Dangerous productivity is not a long-term plan for success, whatever success means for your business. Dangerously productive is so “old school” and has been replaced with intentional laser focus, which in turns eliminates the exhaustion as a status symbol and replaces it with joy and meaning.

Molly L. Hall, Co-Founder, Lawyers with Purpose, LLC, and author of Don’t Be a Yes Chick: How to Stop Babysitting Your Boss, Transform Your Job and Work with a Dream Team Without Losing Your Sanity or Your Spirit in the Process.

 

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Your Family, Your Community, and Your Profession

Your Family, Your Community, and Your PAs professionals who work with seniors and their families, we're in a unique position to serve our loved ones, our communities, and to help the brave men and women who have served our country as well.

UntitledI'm here today to tell you that we really can have it all! A thriving practice with purpose, the seemingly elusive work/life balance, and the satisfaction that comes with knowing that you're doing good for the people around you.

I've prepared a short video for you about how you can achieve the same success in your practice as well…take ninety seconds and check it out. It may be the best thing you do for your practice today!

To your success,

Victoria L. Collier, CELA, Elder Care Attorney, Co-Founder of Lawyers for Wartime Veterans and Lawyers with Purpose, Veteran, author of 47 Secret Veterans Benefits for Seniors and most recent book, Paying for Long Term Care: Financial Help for Wartime Veterans: The VA Aid & Attendance Benefit

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The Perfect Effort Is Not A Fiction

Fall is on the horizon. This only means one thing: movie theatres are back in the rotation for our potential family outings. Last Monday after school it was an unusually rainy, cold day, so I surprised the kids by picking them up and heading to the movies – one of our favorite, favorite things to do. Our first movie of the new season was “When the Game Stands Tall.” This film is based on the true story of the De La Salle Spartans, a high school football team from northern California. It is a moving plot about a team that didn't lose a game, not one single game, for 12 years from the early '90s to the early 2000s.  They ran their record to 151-0. This is not just another movie about football; it tells about a mission to lead boys into manhood and prep them to carry the burdens of the society into which they soon will enter.

Screen Shot 2014-10-01 at 9.21.11 AMThe foundation of the movie is Coach Bob Ladouceur’s unique coaching process, which he called “The Perfect Effort.”“Coaching is about human performance and how to get each player to realize their potential through the actualization of their individual talent,” Coach Lad once said.  “While winning is important – it is why we play the game and keep score – the emphasis is on ʻthe process,ʼ what each player must do that in aggregate leads to victory. The formula for success in team sports is simple.  The implementation of that formula is complex and is the art of human performance.”

“The game stands tall when we display the conduct and actions that not only make our life more productive but also improve our community,” he added movingly.

The Perfect Effort is more about bringing your “A” heart with your “A” game. It is about unwavering perseverance and not being defined by a loss.

Whether it is a football team, an office team, a marketing team, etc., The Perfect Effort process applies wherever you go. The singular success of a 151-0 record was created not because the De La Salle Spartans spent more hours in the gym than any other team. It was not because they fought harder than any other team. The success came from being very clear on what their individual roles were, how to integrate with each member on the team, and the impact of the whole of the process and the team organization – all with integrity and collaboration in mind, never focused on the individual. It was always about The Perfect Effort within the core values of the team first and foremost.

What I love most about movies is how they can deliver powerful messages in 120 minutes that are so relevant to our day-to-day lives. They can break through even if you’ve heard the same messages before, i.e. LWP with our unending stand for embracing of process with a team-centric approach to reaching the goal. Sometimes, most times, it takes a light, fun environment to drive the message across the goal line. 

Molly L. Hall, Co-Founder, Lawyers with Purpose, LLC, and author of Don’t Be a Yes Chick: How to Stop Babysitting Your Boss, Transform Your Job and Work with a Dream Team Without Losing Your Sanity or Your Spirit in the Process.

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What Your Team Really Sees

Don’t you just wish your team would tell you what they really see day in and day out on the front lines? The opportunities they see that your firm’s not slowing down enough to make a path and plan for. The new additions, 2 mm shifts and prospective pools they easily witness but are hesitant to create more work for you, and the team, so they let the chances pass.

Bigstock-black-glasses-on-a-white-backg-40705117“Business as usual” will not work anymore…Take control and position your company for the future!

Do you need to find a way to get money in the door? Your phone to ring more? Build your team? Actually finish a project from ideation to completion?

A major outcome of Intentional Planning is enhanced strategic thinking and massive mindset shifts. Some of the things you will walk away with from Thursday October 23rd of the Practice Enhancement Retreat:

  • Generating of new ideas—ideas that, otherwise, would not be considered.
  • Going beyond the status quo—beyond one’s competitors.
  • Bringing new perspectives and approaches together—and combining them in realistic ways.
  • Identification of critical, high payoff strategies and the prioritization of team efforts accordingly.

Firm Retreats ensure that your Big Ideas and Plans will no longer rest on the shelf or be dependent on solely you as the business owner—teach, show, do, go…grow.

In our experience, it is very difficult (impossible) to carve out time to really work ON the business when the phones are ringing and its business as usual.

Register TODAY as you don’t want to miss out on this strategic planning “Money Plan” day led by Dave Zumpano on Thursday October 23rd at the LWP Practice Enhancement Tri-Annual Practice Enhancement Retreat. Contact Marci Otts at motts@lawyerswithpurpose.com to register TODAY!