http://www.lloydward.com/contact-us.html Kimberley Doom on The Business Spotlight Dallas Attorney with Lloyd Ward & Associates tells about having a civil divorce. Hosted by Patrick Dougher of Doer Success Marketing.
Lloyd Ward & Associates
12655 N. Central Expressway
Suite 1000
Dallas, TX 75243 Phone: 972-361-0036
Fax: 972-361-0039
Patrick Dougher at http://boostyourbusinessimage.com/
The studio http://uanetwork.tv/
Rest of the Transcription at: http://www.patrickdougher.com/kimberl...
Transcript: Patrick: Awesome. Welcome back on the show, Marc.
Marc: Thanks, Pat.
Patrick: Marc Harty, PR specialist, MainTopic Media is your company.
Marc: Yes.
Patrick: Your website again, Marc.
Marc: www.MainTopicMedia.com or www.30MinutePR.com.
Patrick: That's because you're that guy that has the tools to help somebody really get themselves out there.
Marc: Yeah. I wanted to approach this like a potential client would. So what I did is I Googled you. I actually didn't Google you. I Googled Lloyd Ward and one of the things that I saw was a five-star review for you personally for a particular case.
So my question is what's happening right now, people are making decisions online -- it's not just restaurants like where to go to eat -- it's making key decisions particularly with professional services like a law firm. Is that something you envision your firm doing more of -- being more proactive in terms of getting those positive client relationships or things out there into the Internet or the media?
Kimberly: Absolutely. That's what we do. I get a lot of clients who are grateful. "What can I do?" that kind of thing. "How can I repay you?" I always ask "Just go online and give me a great review." Because I myself am one of those people who research things that way. It really does make a difference.
Marc: Excellent.
Patrick: One of the other things that you're really known for, Marc, is reputation management for any attorney. Are there keys that they should begin to implement?
Marc: Absolutely. With the risk of this sounding a little bit self-serving, recently, Google made a lot of changes and it made it very difficult. It's the term "search engine optimization." Just when you think you know what the game plan and the rules are, Google changes it. So now you've got to be reactive. One of the things that not only will work now but today, tomorrow, next year is what we're doing right now: video. Google owns YouTube. Do you think they have a self-interest in seeing that videos are going to be ranked accordingly?
http://youtu.be/aUQh1soj9lA