Most solo attorneys publish when they remember to. Here is why that is costing them visibility and what a one-hour fix looks like.
Ask most solo attorneys how they decide what to publish on their website and the answer is some version of the same thing. When I have time. When something interesting comes up. When a client asks me a good question.
The problem with that approach is not that the content is bad when it does appear. It is that it appears in bursts and then disappears for weeks or months at a time. Google notices. So does every potential client who visits your site, sees a blog section with three posts from eight months ago, and quietly concludes that the practice is either quiet or not paying attention.
A content calendar fixes this. Not by forcing you to write more than you have time for, but by converting an unstructured intention into a committed plan with specific topics, specific dates, and a realistic output level already decided in advance. The planning takes about an hour. The benefit compounds for months.
| Why consistency beats volumeOur Legal Content Marketing Performance Benchmarks found that firms publishing two to three focused pieces per month consistently outperform firms publishing sporadically at higher volume. Google rewards publishing cadence as a freshness signal. A content calendar is the system that makes that cadence possible without relying on memory or motivation. |
1. What a Content Calendar Actually Does for a Solo Firm
A content calendar is not a complicated document. At its most basic it is a list of topics matched to publication dates, with enough lead time to write each piece without it becoming urgent at the last minute. For a solo attorney it probably covers one to three months at a time and includes ten to fifteen topics at most.
What it does is remove the two failure modes that kill solo firm content programs: decision fatigue and timing pressure. When you sit down to write without a plan, the first ten minutes go to figuring out what to write about. When a publication date arrives without a finished piece, it either gets skipped or rushed. A content calendar eliminates both problems before they happen.
It also does something less obvious: it forces you to think about your content library as a whole rather than as individual posts. When you plan ten pieces at once you can see the gaps, the topics you keep writing about and the practice area questions you have never addressed, and you can balance the calendar in a way that a post-by-post approach never produces.
2. What Happens Without One: A Scenario
Rachel is a solo family law attorney in Nashville. She knows content is important. She publishes when she can, which averages about one post every six to eight weeks, usually after a client asks her something she realizes she has never written about.
The posts are good when they appear. Specific, clearly written, genuinely useful to someone going through a divorce in Tennessee. But because there is no system behind them, the blog has seven posts spread across fourteen months with three-month gaps between some of them.
A competitor two miles away has twenty-two posts published over the same period on a consistent schedule. The competitor's posts are not better. Several of Rachel's are more specific and more useful. But the competitor ranks for eleven local family law queries that Rachel does not appear in at all, simply because the volume and cadence of publishing built topical authority that Rachel's sporadic output never accumulated.
Rachel's content is not failing because she is a bad writer. It is failing because good content without a delivery system produces a fraction of the results that the same content on a consistent schedule would generate.
3. How to Build Your Content Calendar in an Hour
This is a four-step process. Set a timer for 60 minutes and work through each step in sequence. Do not overthink any of it. A working calendar built in an hour outperforms a perfect calendar you never finish planning.
Step 1: Audit your existing content (10 minutes)
Open your website and list every piece of content you have published: blog posts, practice area pages, FAQ sections, anything. Note the topic and the date published. This tells you two things: which topics you have already covered (and may not need to revisit for a while) and how long ago your most recent content appeared. If your last post is more than 60 days old, your first calendar entry should be something short and specific you can publish within the next two weeks.
Step 2: Generate 20 topic ideas (20 minutes)
Do not filter yet. Write down every possible topic that comes to mind across these four categories:
- Questions clients ask you in initial consultations that you answer the same way every time
- Mistakes you see potential clients make before they hire an attorney
- Process questions: what happens after you file, how long something takes, what a client should expect at each stage
- Comparison questions: do I need a lawyer for this, what is the difference between X and Y, when does it make sense to settle versus fight
Twenty topics should take about 20 minutes if you are not editing yourself. For a solo family law attorney in Nashville this list might include: how long does an uncontested divorce take in Tennessee, what happens to the house in a Tennessee divorce, do I need a lawyer for a simple divorce, what is the difference between legal separation and divorce in Tennessee, how is child support calculated in Tennessee, what should I bring to my first consultation with a divorce attorney. That is six topics from one category alone.
Step 3: Select and sequence 10 to 12 topics (15 minutes)
From your list of 20, pick the 10 to 12 that are most specific, most likely to be searched by potential clients in your market, and most varied across topic type. Aim for a mix of process questions, comparison questions, and mistake-avoidance posts. Avoid two posts on very similar topics back to back since topical clustering helps SEO but immediate repetition does not.
Assign a rough publication date to each one, spacing them three to four days apart if publishing on your website, or seven days apart if publishing on LinkedIn. For more on the right cadence for each channel, the LinkedIn Client Acquisition Playbook covers LinkedIn post spacing in detail and the same logic applies to cross-posting strategy.
Step 4: Record your calendar somewhere you will actually check (15 minutes)
The format does not matter. A Google Sheet, a Notion page, a column in your practice management software, or a notes app on your phone all work equally well. What matters is that the calendar is visible, accessible, and checked at least once a week. The most common reason content calendars fail is not that the planning was wrong. It is that the plan was made and then forgotten in a folder that never gets opened.
A free Google Sheets content calendar template with columns for topic, target keyword, assigned date, status, and publish date takes about 15 minutes to set up and covers everything a solo firm needs. No project management software required.
4. What a Real 90-Day Calendar Looks Like
Here is a sample 90-day content calendar for a solo family law attorney in a mid-sized US market, built at two posts per month. This is the minimum effective cadence for most solo firm markets based on the traffic data in our content benchmarks research.
| Publish Date | Topic | Content Type | Target Query |
|---|---|---|---|
| April 7 | How long does an uncontested divorce take in Tennessee? | Process explainer | uncontested divorce timeline Tennessee |
| April 21 | What happens to the family home in a Tennessee divorce? | FAQ / Common question | who gets the house in divorce Tennessee |
| May 5 | Do I need a lawyer for a simple divorce? Honest answer. | Comparison post | do I need divorce lawyer Tennessee |
| May 19 | How is child support calculated in Tennessee? | Process explainer | child support calculation Tennessee |
| June 2 | What to expect in your first meeting with a divorce attorney | Process / trust-builder | first consultation divorce attorney |
| June 16 | Legal separation vs. divorce in Tennessee: what is the difference? | Comparison post | legal separation vs divorce Tennessee |
Six posts over 90 days. Each one targets a specific, searchable query. Each one addresses a question a real potential client in Tennessee is likely to be searching. None of them require more than 800 to 1,200 words to cover well. This is a realistic, executable calendar for a solo attorney with two to three hours available per fortnight for content.
Content Calendar Setup Checklist
Use this before you publish your first piece from the new calendar.
- Existing content audited and listed with dates
- 20 topic ideas generated across at least three of the four categories
- 10 to 12 topics selected and sequenced with assigned dates
- Calendar stored somewhere visible and checked weekly
- First piece assigned a publish date within the next 14 days
- Each topic has a target query noted, even if informally
- Topics vary across process, comparison, and mistake-avoidance types
- No two similar topics scheduled back to back
Once your calendar is running, the next layer is making sure each piece is written to actually rank and convert. Our Expert Commentary on why most law firm content sounds the same covers the specific writing patterns that kill differentiation, and our guide to writing FAQs that convert covers the format that produces the strongest results for solo firm websites.
About Wiscripts
Wiscripts builds and manages content systems for solo and small US law firms, including content calendars, SEO strategy, and writing production. If you want a calendar built for your practice area and market without spending an hour on it yourself, reach out at mail@wiscripts.com or visit wiscripts.com.
This post reflects Wiscripts' observations from working with solo and small US law firms on content strategy and publishing systems.

