A five-phase execution framework for solo and small law firms that want to generate real inquiries from LinkedIn, not just followers.
LinkedIn is the highest-concentration platform for the referral sources, business clients, and professional contacts that solo and small law firms are trying to reach. The attorneys who use it well generate a consistent stream of inbound inquiries, referrals, and visibility without a paid ad budget. The attorneys who use it poorly post sporadically, collect connections without purpose, and conclude that LinkedIn does not work for lawyers.
This playbook is an execution framework, not a strategy overview. Each phase contains specific actions, sequenced in the order they should be completed. Work through them in order. Shortcuts in the early phases create compounding problems in the later ones.
| What this playbook producesA fully optimized LinkedIn presence, a defined target audience and connection strategy, a content system that demonstrates expertise without consuming the attorney's time, and a direct outreach sequence that generates conversations without sounding like a pitch. Firms that implement all five phases consistently report meaningful increases in referral introductions and inbound inquiries within 60 to 90 days. |
Table of Contents
- Phase 1: Profile Foundation — Build a profile that converts visitors into connections
- Phase 2: Audience Architecture — Define and build the right network deliberately
- Phase 3: Content System — Establish authority without writing a post every day
- Phase 4: Direct Outreach — Start conversations that lead to referrals and inquiries
- Phase 5: Pipeline Management — Track, follow up, and convert connections into clients
| PHASE 1Profile FoundationBuild a profile that converts visitors into connections before you do anything else |
Every other phase in this playbook depends on your profile doing its job. When someone receives a connection request from you, the first thing they do is click your profile. When someone finds your content and wants to know more, they click your profile. A weak profile kills the conversion before it starts.
Complete every item in this phase before moving to Phase 2.
1.1 Headline
Your headline is the single most visible line on your profile. It appears in search results, connection requests, comment sections, and anywhere your name shows up on LinkedIn. The default is your job title. Change it.
A converting headline names who you help and what outcome you help them achieve. It does not list your credentials. It does not say 'Attorney at Law.'
| Weak headline vs. strong headlineWeak: Attorney at Law | Smith & Associates Strong: I help Phoenix small business owners resolve trademark disputes and IP claims | Trademark Attorney |
1.2 About section
Write the About section in first person. It should be three to four short paragraphs covering: who you work with, what problems you solve, how you approach your work, and a clear call to action at the end. This is not a bio. It is a positioning statement written for the person reading it, not for other attorneys.
- Open with your client type and their situation, not your credentials
- Include a sentence about your geographic focus if you serve a specific market
- Name two or three specific problems you solve in plain language
- Close with a direct CTA: 'If you are dealing with X, send me a message or connect and I will respond within one business day'
1.3 Featured section
The Featured section sits below your About section and is one of the most underused spaces on attorney profiles. Use it to link to your most valuable content assets: your best blog post, a guide from your website, a press mention, or a resource that demonstrates your expertise directly.
- Add two to three items maximum
- Each item should have a clear title and a custom description
1.4 Experience and credentials
Each role in your experience section should have a two to three sentence description that describes what you did in that role in terms of outcomes, not responsibilities. Bar admissions, law school, and any relevant certifications or recognitions should all be filled in completely. LinkedIn uses this data to surface your profile in relevant searches.
1.5 Profile photo and banner
Your photo should be a clean, professional headshot with a neutral or simple background. No courthouse stock photos, no team shots cropped down, no casual photos. The banner image, the wide strip behind your photo, is valuable real estate most attorneys leave blank or fill with a generic gradient. Use it to display your practice area, city, and a one-line value statement. A Canva template is sufficient for this.
| Phase 1 completion checkBefore moving to Phase 2: your headline names who you help, your About section ends with a CTA, your Featured section has at least one link, your profile photo is professional, and your banner communicates your practice area and market. |
| PHASE 2Audience ArchitectureBuild the right network deliberately, not randomly |
Most attorneys connect with anyone who sends a request and send requests to people they vaguely know. The result is a network of 800 connections that has no concentration of the people who can actually send referrals or become clients. LinkedIn's algorithm also surfaces your content to your connections first. If your connections are not your target audience, your content reaches the wrong people.
Phase 2 is about building a network with intention.
2.1 Define your three connection tiers
| Tier | Who They Are and Why They Matter |
|---|---|
| Tier 1: Direct referral sources | Professionals who regularly encounter your ideal clients and can refer them directly. For a trademark attorney: accountants, brand designers, startup accelerator managers, IP consultants. For a family law attorney: therapists, financial advisors, real estate agents handling divorce sales. |
| Tier 2: Professional peers | Attorneys in complementary practice areas who can refer overflow or out-of-scope matters. A criminal defense attorney connects with DUI specialists, family law attorneys, and immigration attorneys. Build reciprocal relationships here. |
| Tier 3: Potential direct clients | Business owners, executives, HR directors, or individuals in your target demographic depending on your practice area. Connect selectively; this tier requires more personalized outreach and takes longer to convert. |
2.2 Connection request volume and cadence
LinkedIn limits connection requests. Do not send more than 20 per day and aim for 10 to 15 as a sustainable daily cadence during the build phase. Every request should include a personalized note. Generic connection requests get ignored at a significantly higher rate and damage your acceptance rate, which affects how LinkedIn treats your account.
| Connection request note template (Tier 1 — referral source)Hi [Name], I noticed you work with [type of client] in [city]. I am a[practice area] attorney here and often come across clients who needexactly the kind of help you provide. Would be good to be connected. |
Keep notes under 300 characters. Do not pitch in the connection request. The goal at this stage is acceptance, not conversion.
2.3 Search strings for targeted connection building
Use LinkedIn's search function with specific filters to find the right people systematically. Useful search combinations for legal referral building:
- '[profession] [city]' — e.g., 'accountant Chicago' filtered to 2nd degree connections
- '[industry] founder [state]' — for business attorneys targeting startup clients
- 'HR director [company size filter]' — for employment law attorneys
- '[complementary practice area] attorney [city]' — for peer referral network building
Build a running list of 200 to 300 targeted profiles before you start sending requests. Work through the list systematically rather than searching fresh each day.
| Phase 2 completion checkBefore moving to Phase 3: you have defined your three connection tiers, written a connection note template for each tier, built a list of at least 150 targeted profiles to connect with, and begun sending 10 to 15 requests per day. |
| PHASE 3Content SystemEstablish authority through consistent, purposeful content without burning time |
Content on LinkedIn does two things for attorneys: it demonstrates expertise to the people already in your network, and it expands your reach to second and third-degree connections when your network engages with it. You do not need to post every day. You need to post consistently, with content that is actually worth reading.
The firms that get this wrong either post too rarely to build momentum, or post frequently with content that looks like AI-generated filler. Both are conversion dead ends.
3.1 The three content types that work for attorneys
| Content Type | What It Is and When to Use It |
|---|---|
| Observation posts | A specific thing you noticed in your practice, a pattern in the cases you see, a change in law or regulation that affects your clients. Two to four short paragraphs, no jargon, ends with a practical takeaway or a question. Post one of these per week. This is your highest-reach format. |
| Process explainers | A plain-language walkthrough of something your clients regularly ask about. 'What actually happens after you file a trademark application.' 'What the first 30 days of a divorce case look like.' These build search visibility and demonstrate real expertise. Post one every two weeks. |
| Referral trigger posts | Content explicitly designed to remind your referral network that you exist and what you do. A brief case outcome (anonymized, bar-compliant), a common scenario you see, or a type of client you are currently helping. These keep you top of mind with Tier 1 connections. Post one per month. |
3.2 Post structure that performs
LinkedIn's algorithm rewards posts that generate early engagement. The first two lines of your post are visible before the 'see more' cutoff. They need to create enough tension or curiosity that someone clicks through.
| High-performing post opening structureLine 1: A specific, unexpected statement or observation.Line 2: The tension or implication that makes someone want to read more. Example:Most trademark applications get filed with the wrong class of goods.The attorney finds out 18 months later when the USPTO rejects registration. [Then: 3-5 short paragraphs explaining the issue and what to do about it][Close: One practical takeaway or a question to invite comments] |
3.3 Content rules that protect credibility
- Never publish AI-generated content without substantive editing. Generic legal content damages authority rather than building it.
- Do not use performative empathy openings. 'As attorneys, we know how hard it can be...' reads as filler and signals inauthenticity immediately.
- Avoid credential narration. 'With 12 years of experience, I have seen...' is a credibility substitute, not a demonstration of it.
- Every post should have a specific, usable takeaway. If someone reads it and learns nothing actionable, it did not earn the publish.
The same content quality standards that apply to LinkedIn posts apply to website content. The FAQ writing guide on the Wiscripts blog covers the specificity principles that make legal content worth reading in any format.
| Phase 3 completion checkBefore moving to Phase 4: you have written and scheduled your first four posts covering at least two content types, set a recurring calendar reminder for your weekly post, and reviewed each draft against the content rules above. |
| PHASE 4Direct OutreachStart conversations that lead to referrals without sounding like a pitch |
Phase 4 is where most attorneys either stop or get it wrong. Direct outreach on LinkedIn works when it is genuinely conversational and genuinely relevant. It fails when it is templated, premature, or visibly self-interested.
The goal of outreach at this stage is a conversation, not a conversion. You are building a referral relationship or a professional acquaintance, not closing a case. Keep that framing at the front of every message you write.
4.1 The outreach sequence
Wait until a connection has been in your network for at least five to seven days before sending a first message. Let them see one or two of your posts first. Warm connections convert on outreach at a significantly higher rate than cold ones.
- Day 7 after connecting: Send a brief, non-commercial opening message. Reference something specific about their work.
- Day 14 to 21: If they respond, continue the conversation naturally. If they do not respond, send one follow-up. If no response to the follow-up, stop.
- Day 30+: For Tier 1 referral sources who have engaged, move toward a specific ask: a 15-minute call, a referral exchange conversation, or an introduction to a mutual contact.
| Day 7 opening message — Tier 1 referral sourceHi [Name], good to be connected. I noticed you work a lot with[type of client / industry]. I handle [practice area] for a similarclientele and occasionally come across situations outside my scopewhere I end up referring out. Would be useful to know more aboutwhat you focus on in case the right situation comes up. |
| Follow-up message if no response after 7 daysHi [Name], just following up on my last message. No pressure at all.If it is useful to be connected for referrals down the line, happy tokeep in touch. Otherwise, no worries. |
4.2 Rules for outreach that protects your reputation
- Never pitch your services in a first message. Not even subtly.
- Never send the same template to multiple people without meaningful personalization. One specific reference to their actual work is the minimum.
- Never follow up more than once on a cold message. Two messages with no response is a clear signal.
- Never ask for a referral before you have had at least two substantive exchanges.
- Keep all messages short. Four to six sentences maximum for opening messages.
4.3 Outreach volume targets
| Week | Target Activity |
|---|---|
| Week 1 of Phase 4 | Send Day 7 messages to all connections who have been in your network 7+ days |
| Week 2 onward | Send 5 to 8 new Day 7 messages per week as new connections mature |
| Ongoing | Follow up with non-responders once, then move on |
| Month 2+ | Begin scheduling 15-minute calls with Tier 1 connections who have responded positively |
| Phase 4 completion checkBefore moving to Phase 5: you have sent opening messages to your first batch of matured connections, have a follow-up reminder system in place (a simple spreadsheet or CRM tag), and have not pitched your services in any first message. |
| PHASE 5Pipeline ManagementTrack activity, follow up consistently, and convert relationships into clients |
LinkedIn without a tracking system is networking without memory. Conversations get buried, follow-ups get missed, and warm relationships go cold because no one remembered to stay in touch. Phase 5 turns the activity from Phases 1 through 4 into a managed pipeline.
5.1 The minimum viable LinkedIn CRM
You do not need expensive software. A spreadsheet with the following columns is sufficient for a solo attorney managing up to 150 active LinkedIn relationships:
| Column | What to Track |
|---|---|
| Name + LinkedIn URL | Direct link to their profile for fast access |
| Tier | 1, 2, or 3 as defined in Phase 2 |
| Connection date | When you connected |
| Last contact date | Date of your last message or interaction |
| Last contact type | Connection note / Day 7 message / follow-up / call / referral sent / referral received |
| Status | Cold / Engaged / Active referral relationship / Client |
| Next action + date | What you need to do next and when |
Review this spreadsheet once per week. The weekly review takes 15 minutes and prevents warm relationships from going cold through neglect.
5.2 Staying visible without messaging constantly
Between direct messages, your content keeps you present in your connections' feeds. Beyond that, three low-effort visibility habits compound over time:
- Comment meaningfully on posts from Tier 1 and Tier 2 connections once or twice per week. A specific, substantive comment keeps you visible without a message.
- Congratulate connections on role changes or work anniversaries with a brief personal note, not the default LinkedIn button. Two sentences is enough.
- Share or reference a connection's content occasionally if it is genuinely relevant to your audience. This builds reciprocity without asking for anything directly.
5.3 Tracking what the system is producing
Monthly, record the following numbers in a separate tracking row:
- New connections added that month
- Outreach messages sent
- Conversations initiated (reply received to a Day 7 message)
- Calls or meetings booked from LinkedIn
- Referrals received with LinkedIn as the source
- New client matters where LinkedIn was a touchpoint in the acquisition path
These numbers tell you where the system is working and where it is leaking. If conversations are high but calls are low, your transition from message to call needs work. If referrals are high but client matters are low, the referral quality or your intake process may be the issue. Our guide on law firm website conversion covers the intake side of that equation in detail.
| Phase 5 completion checkYou have a tracking spreadsheet set up and populated with your active connections, a weekly review habit scheduled, and you are recording monthly pipeline numbers. The system is running. |
What to Expect and When
| Timeline | What Typically Happens |
|---|---|
| Days 1 to 14 | Profile completed, first 30 to 50 connections sent, first two posts published |
| Days 15 to 30 | Connection acceptance rate stabilizes, first Day 7 messages going out, early replies coming in |
| Days 31 to 60 | Content beginning to gain traction in the feed, first referral conversations starting, pipeline spreadsheet active |
| Days 61 to 90 | First calls or meetings from LinkedIn, referral relationships forming, one to three new matters attributable to LinkedIn activity in most cases |
| Month 4 onwards | Compounding returns as content library grows, network becomes denser, and referral relationships mature into consistent sources |
| The honest caveatThese timelines assume consistent execution across all five phases. Attorneys who complete Phase 1 and 2 but post sporadically and never do Phase 4 outreach will see minimal results. The compounding returns of this system come from the combination of a strong profile, a targeted network, visible content, and direct relationship-building working simultaneously. |
About Wiscripts
Wiscripts manages LinkedIn for solo and small US law firms, including profile optimization, content production, and direct outreach. If you want this system implemented and managed without the time investment, reach out at mail@wiscripts.com or visit wiscripts.com.
This playbook reflects Wiscripts' experience managing LinkedIn acquisition for solo and small US law firms. Timelines and outcomes vary by practice area, market, network starting point, and execution consistency.

