Instagram seems to be the middle ground alternative between young adults and “veterans” of the law business. While Twitter/X seems to be losing steam in the cybersphere, Facebook gets called out for a variety of concerns and Snapchat skews almost too young, TikTok appears to be expanding. Technically, I’m on the edge of Baby Boomer, but identify as Gen X and often act like a Millennial. But as Gen Z starts to age, the likelihood of generating business development opportunities through the TikTok app increases.
Building Your Platform
Lawyers use TikTok as a platform for everything under the sun. “I’m a first-year associate, make $225k per year, and life is really hard.” Believe it or not, there are many of these TikTokers offering up lots of entertaining “sad stories” of life in #BigLaw. My gut reaction is usually “boo hoo” and then I watch another one—almost like a bad soap opera. Lots of tips from one lawyer to another—how to date, how to dress, how to eat—and perhaps you’ll find like-minded attorneys who want to join your network of contacts.
Recently, I suggested to an attorney that his Martindale-Hubbell AV rating was impressive—if you are trying to impress a 70-year-old general counsel. But if you are trying to impress a 40-year-old general counsel, he or she probably could not care less. If you really aim to be a social media influencer, you need to know who you are trying to influence and jump on the bandwagon of marketing resources built for 2024.
You might just use posts to show off the personalities of your attorneys. Or delve very deep into the nuances of a particular practice area. My kid referenced an attorney’s advice on TikTok—"I read the fine print, so you don't have to" like it was coming from RBG herself.
Besides creating short-form video content for TikTok, you can still repurpose the posts for multiple social media channels in the same way you might use a program to simultaneously post other content to LinkedIn, Facebook and Instagram.
Yo! I Want to Be a TikTok Lawyer Celebrity
Here are some easy-to-consider tips for creating your TikTok law marketing efforts:
- Find a niche. Don’t be overly generic. Decide what your TikTok strategy is going to be and build a page of posts that match it.
- Be a personality. You might be over-the-top gregarious (not me) or look serious but be dry-witted (perhaps), but you want to make your presentations memorable to build a following that comes back. And be relatable—nobody wants to hear heavy legalese.
- Blend your TikTok efforts into the firm’s search engine optimization on top of paying attention to the all-important TikTok algorithm.
- Don’t just let your attorneys post to TikTok willy-nilly either. Be sure to have a game plan and strategy for what you want to accomplish. The harder you try to go viral, the less chance you’ll get there. There is a reason for virality, and it is often unexpected.
- Discuss topics that are trending.
- Talk about your practice areas in a way that resonates with the end user.
- Think about the legal issues you’ve tackled today and turn them into a 45-second snippet. Caveat: Nothing that might violate attorney-client confidences.
If you are a social media advertiser, perhaps in areas such as mass torts, class actions or personal injury, put a few bucks into a TikTok ad budget to boost your visibility. You may find opportunities here where you have been priced out on other platforms.
This might sound bonkers to Law Practice readers, but finding a successful influencer to hawk the law firm to their minions is a shortcut to TikTok stardom. Another caveat—follow the advertising ethics rules as they might pertain to celebrity spokespeople, testimonials and the like in your jurisdiction.
Like most marketing tools, there are a variety of products out there to enhance creation and editing of your TikTok videos. Although, sometimes a raw, unfinished look can feel less polished (in a good way). Worry less about “will this go viral” and more if it will feed appropriate app algorithms.
As to who to follow? I’ve seen many articles and presentations touting a variety of lawyers and law firms with followers in the tens of thousands to more than a million. My advice is to jump on TikTok and view/follow those that make sense for your practice. It might be based on geography, practice or simply aspects of lawyer lifestyles. You may look at it more as short videos that happen to appear on TikTok, besides other social media channels. You do you. Because, when my kids say they know who you are from TikTok, you’ve hit the big time!