What Your Law Firm Is Worth: The System Question

Law Firm Valuation: The System Question | Amata Law Office Suites

Law Firm Valuation: The System Question

The Business of Law · Enterprise Value

Most attorneys have built a job that pays well, not a firm that can be sold. Here's the one question that reveals which one you have — and what to do about it.

What determines a law firm's value when it's sold?

Law firm valuation depends on a single factor: whether the firm can run without its founder. A law firm's enterprise value — what a buyer will pay after the founding attorney departs — is separate from annual revenue or profit. Valuation depends on whether the firm has documented systems for marketing, intake, case management, billing, and operations that let the practice continue. Firms with systems sell at meaningful multiples. Firms without systems sell for almost nothing.

A few months ago, the managing partner of a three-attorney family law firm sat down with me at 33 N. Dearborn. Twenty-plus years of practice, $1.2 million in annual revenue, loyal clients. They were ready to step back. They had a buyer interested.

The offer came in: $200,000.

Not because the firm wasn't profitable. It was — last year had been one of the most profitable years of their career. The offer was $200,000 because once the founding attorney walked out the door, the buyer's math was simple: there was almost nothing left to buy.

7.5×
That same firm — same revenue, same client base, same practice area — with systems in place would have received an offer closer to $1.5 million. Seven-and-a-half times more, for the exact same firm.

That's the moment most law firm owners discover something uncomfortable. They don't own a firm. They own a job that pays well. The two are not the same thing.

The System Question

What is the System Question?

If I stepped away for 30 days — not a vacation, an absence — would my firm still function?

If the answer is no, you don't own a firm. You own a job. Your income is real, but your enterprise value is close to zero. A buyer can't pay for a job. A buyer pays for an asset that keeps producing when you're gone.

If the answer is yes — new clients still come in, phones still get answered, intake still happens, work still gets done, bills still go out — you own a firm. You own something that can be sold, transferred, or eventually run by someone else while you collect on what you built.

The difference between those two outcomes is systems.

Two Firms, Same Revenue

What separates a sellable law firm from one that can't be sold?

Two firms. Same revenue. Same practice area. Same number of attorneys.

Firm A

Built around the founder

New clients come from the senior attorney's personal network — referrals from peers, speaking gigs, Bar events. They answer most calls personally. Intake decisions happen in their head.

Mail goes to a P.O. box they check themselves. Billing happens on weekends. There's an assistant who knows where everything is — but everything she knows is in her head too.

The firm has a great year. And another. And another.

Exit offer: $200,000

Firm B

Built as a transferable business

The firm has a marketing engine that runs without the founder — content that compounds, search visibility not tied to the founder's name, referral programs on a system rather than a relationship.

A receptionist screens calls. Intake follows a written checklist. Mail flows to a real address, scanned and routed. Billing runs on a 1st-and-15th cadence handled by admin support.

The firm has the exact same great year.

Exit offer: $1,500,000

When both founders decide to step back, Firm A gets the $200,000 offer. The clients followed a person, not a firm. The pipeline dies with the founder. When they leave, the lights go off.

Firm B gets the $1.5 million offer. Maybe two offers. The buyer can see the engine. They know exactly what they're acquiring — and they can keep it running.

"Same firm, on paper. Seven-and-a-half times the price. That's the System Question, made concrete."

The Five Systems That Create Enterprise Value

What systems make a law firm worth selling?

In my experience over the past 24 years, five systems separate firms with enterprise value from firms with none. They build on each other in this order:

  1. Marketing and client acquisition.

    A documented, repeatable engine that brings in qualified leads month after month — not riding on the founder's personal network, reputation, or speaking calendar. Most law firms have no marketing system at all. They have a website, a referral pipeline that flows through one person, and a vague sense that "things are coming in."

    When the founder leaves, the pipeline leaves with them. A real marketing system is content that compounds, search visibility independent of the founder's name, email and referral programs that run on their own, and a sales process that converts leads predictably. This is the system most attorneys spend the least time on — and the one that, more than any other, separates a transferable business from a personal practice.

  2. Client intake.

    A written process for how a lead becomes a client. Who answers the call. What questions get asked. How the consultation runs. How the engagement letter goes out. Not "the senior partner decides" — a documented checklist someone else could run.

  3. Case management.

    How matters move from intake to close. Workflow, document templates, deadlines, client communication during the case, billable hours recorded in real time — not reconstructed from memory at the end of the month — and knowledge stored somewhere other than the founder's head. A new associate should be able to step into a matter and produce work that looks like the firm's work, not their own.

  4. Billing and accounts receivable.

    A recurring cycle that runs without the attorney pulling all-nighters every quarter. Invoices go out on schedule. Collections happen consistently. AR doesn't quietly balloon. The cash that the marketing engine created actually arrives in the firm's account.

  5. Firm infrastructure.

    Defined staffing roles, not just bodies. A real address that survives the founder's absence. A paralegal who can be replaced because their job is documented. Office or virtual office presence that signals the firm exists as something separate from the founder. The firm survives turnover, vacations, illness, and time.

If you've built four or five of these, you have a firm. If you've built one or two, you have a well-paying job. Most attorneys haven't built any of them on purpose. They've built them by accident, partially, in their head.

Why This Is So Hard to Build

Why is this so hard for solo and small firm attorneys?

Because building systems feels like overhead. Every hour spent documenting a process is an hour not billed. Every dollar spent on a receptionist, a marketing engine, or fractional admin is a dollar that didn't go to the founder's draw. The math, in any given month, looks bad.

But the math over a 20-year career is different. The family law partner who never built systems left $1.3 million on the table at exit — the difference between the $200,000 offer they got and the $1.5 million they could have had. That's a steep price for "saving" a few thousand a month on infrastructure for two decades.

The trade isn't between investing and saving. It's between investing now and walking away with nothing later.

How Amata Fits Into This

In full disclosure — this is our business. Amata has supported more than 1,800 Chicago-area law firms since 2002, and several of the systems above are exactly what we provide.

Our live reception team answers calls during business hours, screens leads, and routes urgent matters — so calls don't go to voicemail when you're in court. Our fractional admin and paralegal staff handle intake checklists, billing cycles, and the unglamorous work that builds enterprise value. Our office and virtual office plans give your firm a real address that survives a founder's absence.

The marketing system — the first and most important one — is the hardest for most attorneys to build alone. It's also what we built the Amata Marketing Lab around. Each month, we host workshops for Amata clients on exactly that: how to design and operate a marketing engine that brings clients in consistently, without the founder being the engine.

We don't build the marketing system for you. But we teach the system, and we provide several of the operational pieces that make it possible to focus on building it. The firms that built systems sold their firms. The firms that didn't, closed them.

Going Deeper: Erin Guthrie on the 1958 Lawyer Podcast

For attorneys who want to take this conversation further, this week's episode of the 1958 Lawyer podcast features Erin Guthrie, Managing Director at The Exit Factor's Chicago-Downtown office, on exactly this topic: how law firms are valued.

Erin works directly with business owners on exit strategy and firm valuation. She brings the practitioner's view of what buyers actually look at when they make an offer, what creates a multiple, what kills a deal, and how attorneys can build toward a meaningful exit. If the System Question is the diagnostic, Erin's episode is the deep dive on what each system is actually worth.

1958 Lawyer Podcast

Episode #45 — Erin Guthrie on How Law Firms Are Valued

A practitioner's view of what buyers actually look at, what creates a multiple, and what kills a deal — from the Managing Director of The Exit Factor's Chicago-Downtown office.

Find the show at amatacorp.com · Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts

The System Question isn't about today's revenue. It's about what's left when you decide you're done. The firms that answer it well are worth something. The firms that don't, aren't. That's the real win.

For more on building the systems and infrastructure of a Chicago law practice, see our Law Firm Marketing Guide for Chicago & Illinois Attorneys.

Ready to start building a firm, not just a practice?

The Amata Marketing Lab Workshops are free monthly sessions for Amata clients on building the systems that create enterprise value. Not yet a member? Reach out to learn more.

Contact Us to Learn More
Free for Amata clients · Monthly sessions · Built for Chicago attorneys

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a law firm's enterprise value?
A law firm's enterprise value is what a buyer would pay for the firm after the founding attorney departs. It is separate from annual revenue or profit. A profitable firm that depends entirely on the founder has high income but low enterprise value. A firm with documented systems for marketing, intake, case management, billing, and operations has both.
Can a solo law firm actually be sold?
Yes, but only if it has been built as a transferable business rather than a personal practice. Solo firms with a documented marketing engine, intake process, established phone and reception system, and real staff infrastructure can be sold to other attorneys or absorbed by larger firms. Solo firms that depend entirely on the founder's personal network and judgment generally cannot be sold for meaningful value.
What is the difference between a law firm and a job?
A law firm functions when the founding attorney steps away. A job does not. The diagnostic is the System Question: if the founder takes a 30-day absence, does the firm continue to bring in new clients, serve existing ones, answer calls, manage intake, and bill work? If yes, it is a firm. If no, it is a job with the founder's name on the door.
What systems make a law firm valuable?
A law firm's value depends on five core systems: marketing and client acquisition, client intake, case management, billing and accounts receivable, and firm infrastructure (staffing and place of business). Each one must be documented enough that someone other than the founder can execute it. Firms with four or five of these systems sell at meaningful multiples. Firms with one or two do not sell at all.
How long does it take to build a sellable law firm?
Building a sellable law firm takes most attorneys five to ten years of intentional effort. The investment is steady — building a real marketing engine, outsourcing reception, hiring or contracting admin support, documenting case management — and the return is concentrated at the end, when the firm is sold or transferred. Attorneys who start in their first five years of practice exit far better than attorneys who wait until retirement is close.
Ron Bockstahler, Founder & CEO of Amata Law Office Suites
About the Author

Ron Bockstahler

Founder & CEO, Amata Law Office Suites

Ron Bockstahler founded Amata Law Office Suites in Chicago in 2002 after seeing a clear gap in the market: solo attorneys and small law firms have little to no purchasing power or economies of scale. They need the same operational infrastructure as large firms — but without the cost of building it themselves — to effectively compete. What started as back-office printing and copying for Chicago attorneys grew into the city's most comprehensive law office suite community. Amata was chosen as the in-house printing partner for the American Bar Association and is an official Chicago Bar Association partner organization. More than 1,800 Illinois law firms and attorneys have called Amata home. Ron and the Amata team remain deeply invested in the Chicago legal community and its charitable organizations.

SEO for Law Firms: Google Visibility Foundations for the AI Search Era

SEO for Law Firms: Google Visibility Foundations for the AI Search Era | Amata Law Office Suites

SEO for Law Firms: Google Visibility Foundations for the AI Search Era

Marketing Mastery · Search & Visibility

Most law firm websites are built for a Google that no longer exists. Here's what changed, what still works, and how solo and small firms are pulling ahead.

What is SEO for law firms in 2026?

SEO for law firms in 2026 is the practice of structuring a firm's website and content so it appears in both traditional Google search results and AI-generated answers from tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews. It combines classic search engine optimization — keywords, technical health, local listings — with answer engine optimization (AEO), which structures content so AI tools can lift it verbatim when answering user questions.

Most law firm websites were built for a Google that no longer exists.

Ten years ago, getting found online meant accumulating backlinks, stuffing keywords, and hoping the algorithm noticed. Five years ago, it meant publishing long blog posts and building local citations. Today, it means something different — and most attorneys haven't caught up.

The firms that have caught up are pulling ahead. Not because they outspent anyone. Because they understood the shift.

This is a Marketing Mastery deep dive on what's changed, what still works, and how to get your firm found in the search landscape attorneys are actually living in now.

What Changed in Law Firm Search

What changed in law firm search in 2025 and 2026?

The single biggest change is this: people stopped clicking through to websites.

When a prospective client searches "how do I form an LLC in Illinois" or "do I need a lawyer for an uncontested divorce," they increasingly get the answer directly from Google's AI Overview, ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Claude — without ever clicking a link. Industry studies in 2025 estimated that more than half of all Google searches now end without a single click to a third-party site.

For law firms, that means the old goal — rank on page one — is necessary but no longer sufficient. The new goal is get cited in the answer itself.

What is Answer Engine Optimization (AEO)?

Answer Engine Optimization (AEO) is the practice of structuring website content so AI-powered search tools can identify, quote, and cite your firm as the source of an answer. Where traditional SEO optimizes for being found, AEO optimizes for being quoted. It relies on direct-answer paragraphs, structured FAQ content, schema markup, and citable claims. AEO is sometimes called Generative Engine Optimization (GEO). The terms are interchangeable. The principles are the same.

The SEO Foundations That Still Matter

What SEO foundations still matter for law firms?

Before chasing what's new, get the basics right. Four foundations still drive most law firm visibility:

  1. Technical health. Your site needs to load in under three seconds, work on mobile, and be crawlable by search engines. Google has indexed mobile-first since 2019. Slow, broken, or desktop-only sites do not rank.

  2. Local SEO and your Google Business Profile. For most attorneys, the local map pack — the three businesses Google shows on a map for "lawyer near me" searches — drives more qualified leads than the rest of search combined. A complete, current Google Business Profile with reviews, accurate hours, photos, and weekly posts is non-negotiable.

  3. Keyword-aligned page structure. Each service page should target one primary search intent. A page titled "Chicago Estate Planning Attorney" should rank for that phrase. A homepage trying to rank for everything ranks for nothing.

  4. Schema markup. Schema is structured code that tells search engines what your content actually is — an attorney, a service, a price, a review, a FAQ. Without it, search engines guess. With it, they know.

These four foundations were true in 2020 and are still true today. They are the floor, not the ceiling.

SEO vs. AEO: The Key Differences

How is AEO different from traditional SEO?

The shift can be summarized in one comparison:

Traditional SEO Answer Engine Optimization (AEO)
Optimizes for ranking Optimizes for being quoted
Rewards backlinks and domain authority Rewards content structure and clarity
Built for human readers scanning pages Built for AI engines extracting answers
Goal: get the click Goal: get cited in the answer
Long-form blog posts win Direct answers and FAQ blocks win

Both still matter. But AEO is where the leverage is right now — because most law firms have not adapted, the rules are not yet crowded, and well-structured content from a small firm can outrank a giant firm's content that is technically thorough but poorly structured for AI extraction.

Six Moves Law Firms Can Make Right Now

How do law firms optimize for AI search engines?

Six practical moves, in order of impact:

  1. Add a direct-answer paragraph at the top of every page. Forty to sixty words. Plain language. Answer the central question of the page in the first paragraph, before any branding or storytelling. AI engines lift this verbatim.

  2. Use questions as your section headers. "What does estate planning cost in Illinois?" gets quoted. "Our Estate Planning Approach" does not.

  3. Build a FAQ block on every service page — with FAQPage schema. Five to ten genuine questions with two-to-four-sentence answers. Schema markup tells the AI engine these are answerable Q&A pairs.

  4. Anchor your content with specific, citable claims. Numbers, dates, statistics, named studies. AI engines prefer to cite sources that sound authoritative — and authority sounds like specificity. "We've helped Illinois families since 2003" beats "We have years of experience."

  5. Write comparison content. "X vs. Y" pages get cited heavily. For law firms, that means "Solo Attorney vs. Big Law for Estate Planning" or "Mediation vs. Litigation in Illinois Divorce." AI engines lift comparison content because users ask comparison questions.

  6. Add speakable schema for voice search. A growing percentage of AI search happens through voice — phones, Alexa, Google Assistant. Marking the key answers on your page as speakable tells voice assistants which lines to read aloud.

Why This Is Good News for Solo and Small Firms

Why is this good news for solo and small firms?

For two decades, SEO favored firms with money. Bigger marketing budgets bought more backlinks, more content, more agency time, more authority. A solo attorney rarely outranked a 50-attorney firm, no matter how skilled.

AEO changes that math. AI engines do not care how many backlinks a page has. They care whether the page contains the cleanest, clearest, most directly quotable answer to a specific question. A thoughtful solo who writes a 500-word direct answer to "what does an uncontested divorce cost in Illinois" can be cited by ChatGPT and Perplexity over a giant firm that wrote a 4,000-word generic divorce overview.

This is the first time in the history of legal search that small firms have a genuine structural advantage. The firms that move first will own the answers in their practice area for years. The firms that wait will spend the rest of the decade trying to catch up.

"This is the first time in the history of legal search that small firms have a genuine structural advantage."

The Amata Marketing Lab Workshops

This is what's behind the new program we just launched for our community.

This month we kicked off the Amata Marketing Lab Workshopsfree monthly workshops for Amata clients, focused, practical, and built specifically for attorneys. Each workshop tackles one topic in depth.

The first workshop, on May 27, covers exactly what this article walks through: how digital marketing has shifted, what AEO and AI search actually mean for law firms, and the specific moves Chicago attorneys can make right now to dominate their practice area online.

Workshops are invitation-only for Amata clients. The May session sold out within days of invitations going out — a clear signal that attorneys are paying attention to this shift.

If you're already an Amata client, watch your inbox for the invitation to next month's session. If you're not yet a member and want access, contact us at [email protected] to learn about Amata membership.

Going Deeper: The 1958 Lawyer Podcast

For attorneys who want a longer, more technical conversation on what's shifting in marketing, the next episode of the 1958 Lawyer podcast features Rick Rivero, CEO of Connections Marketing.

Rick brings a marketer's-eye view of what's actually working in 2026 — the digital strategies firms are using to stay ahead, the spending that's quietly becoming obsolete, and the practical moves leaders should make right now.

1958 Lawyer Podcast

Episode #45 — Rick Rivero on the New Rules of Marketing

A candid conversation with someone who lives this work daily — the digital strategies that are actually working in 2026 and the ones quietly becoming obsolete.

Episode 15 since the show's return in 2025

Connect with Rick on LinkedIn · Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts

For a complete walkthrough of how to market and grow a Chicago law practice, see our Law Firm Marketing Guide for Chicago & Illinois Attorneys.

Want to apply this to your firm?

The Amata Marketing Lab Workshops are free monthly sessions for Amata clients covering exactly these moves. Not yet a member? Reach out to learn about joining.

Contact Us to Learn More
Free for Amata clients · Monthly sessions · Built for Chicago attorneys

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between SEO and AEO?
Traditional SEO optimizes your website to rank in Google search results. Answer Engine Optimization (AEO) optimizes your content so AI-powered tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews can extract and cite your answers directly. SEO chases the click. AEO chases the citation. Law firms need both in 2026.
Do law firms still need a Google Business Profile?
Yes. For most attorneys, the Google local map pack drives more qualified leads than any other search surface. A complete, optimized, regularly updated Google Business Profile is the single highest-ROI marketing asset most law firms have, and AI search engines pull local business data directly from it.
Can a solo attorney outrank a large firm on Google in 2026?
Yes — more easily now than at any point in the past decade. AI search engines reward content structure and clarity over backlink volume and domain authority. A solo attorney who publishes well-structured, direct-answer content in a defined practice area can be cited by AI tools over much larger firms with poorly structured content.
How long does it take to see SEO results for a law firm?
Traditional SEO results typically take six to twelve months for competitive legal keywords. AEO results can appear within weeks, because AI engines re-crawl and re-rank content far more frequently than Google's traditional index. A well-structured FAQ page can be cited by ChatGPT or Perplexity within days of publishing.
Is paid advertising or SEO better for law firms?
They serve different goals. Paid advertising delivers leads immediately but stops the moment you stop paying. SEO and AEO build a compounding asset that delivers leads for years after the work is done. Most successful Chicago law firms use both — paid ads to fill the calendar today, SEO and AEO to fill it five years from now.
Ron Bockstahler, Founder & CEO of Amata Law Office Suites
About the Author

Ron Bockstahler

Founder & CEO, Amata Law Office Suites

Ron Bockstahler founded Amata Law Office Suites in Chicago in 2002 after seeing a clear gap in the market: solo attorneys and small law firms have little to no purchasing power or economies of scale. They need the same operational infrastructure as large firms — but without the cost of building it themselves — to effectively compete. What started as back-office printing and copying for Chicago attorneys grew into the city's most comprehensive law office suite community. Amata was chosen as the in-house printing partner for the American Bar Association and is an official Chicago Bar Association partner organization. More than 1,800 Illinois law firms and attorneys have called Amata home. Ron and the Amata team remain deeply invested in the Chicago legal community and its charitable organizations.

The Sales Conversations Solo Attorneys Aren’t Trained For

The Sales Conversations Solo Attorneys Aren't Trained For | Amata Law Office Suites

The Sales Conversations Solo Attorneys Aren't Trained For

Marketing Mastery · Closing Conversations

You went to law school to practice law. Nobody trained you to win sales conversations. Here are the five solo attorneys lose most — and what to do instead.

What is consultative selling for attorneys?

Consultative selling for attorneys is a client-acquisition approach that prioritizes understanding the prospect before describing services or quoting fees. Instead of explaining the law during a consultation, the attorney qualifies the prospect, frames the value of the engagement, and asks for a clear next step. It treats intake as a sale, not a free lesson.

You went to law school to practice law. Nobody handed you a course in selling. But the day you opened your own firm, you became your own rainmaker — and most of your revenue now hinges on conversations you were never trained to have.

Here's the uncomfortable truth: solo and small-firm attorneys lose the same five sales conversations, over and over. Not because they aren't smart, or qualified, or empathetic. Because the instincts that made them excellent lawyers are exactly the instincts that lose them the engagement.

Let's walk through the five.

1

The Free Consultation That Never Closes

What happens

A prospect calls. You schedule a thirty-minute "free consultation." You spend twenty-eight minutes explaining the law, the process, and what their case might look like. At minute twenty-nine they say, "This is really helpful — let me think about it." They never call back.

Why solos lose it

You answered all their questions. There's nothing left to buy.

What to do instead

A consultation isn't a free legal education — it's a qualification conversation. Spend the first ten minutes asking what brought them here, what they've already tried, and what's at stake. Spend the next ten describing how you work and what engaging you looks like. Reserve the last ten for next steps and a clear ask: "Based on what you've told me, here's what I'd recommend. Are you ready to move forward today?"

2

The Price Question You Answer Too Fast

What happens

Three minutes into a call, the prospect asks, "How much do you charge?" You quote a number. They say, "Let me think about it." Silence.

Why solos lose it

Price answered before value is established is just a number. The prospect has nothing to compare it to except other numbers.

What to do instead

Slow down. "Before I can give you an accurate number, I need to understand what you're actually trying to solve." Then build the case for the engagement — the risk of doing nothing, the cost of getting it wrong, the value of getting it right. By the time you give a number, they aren't comparing you to a cheaper attorney. They're comparing you to the cost of the problem.

3

The Referral You Assumed Was a Layup

What happens

A trusted colleague refers a client. You assume it's done. You're casual on the call. The prospect goes elsewhere.

Why solos lose it

Warm referrals close at higher rates than cold leads — but they don't close themselves. A referral gets you the meeting. It does not get you the engagement.

What to do instead

Treat every referral like a real sales conversation. Ask the same qualifying questions. Make the same case. Issue the same ask. The referrer earned you a seat at the table — your job is to earn the chair.

4

The "Let Me Think About It" That Becomes Silence

What happens

At the end of a strong conversation, the prospect says, "Let me think about it." You say, "Sure, take your time." You never hear from them again.

Why solos lose it

"Let me think about it" is rarely a yes-in-waiting. More often it's a polite no, or a question they didn't ask out loud.

What to do instead

Don't fight it. Surface it. "Totally understand. Before you go — what's the part you want to think about?" Nine times out of ten, the answer is a specific concern: price, timeline, confidence in you. You can't address what you don't know. Get it on the table while you still have them on the call.

5

The Discount You Didn't Need to Give

What happens

The prospect pauses on price. You hear silence. You jump in with, "I could probably do it for X." They take it. You leave money on the table — or worse, you signal that your fees are negotiable.

Why solos lose it

Discomfort with silence. Most solos discount themselves before the prospect ever asks.

What to do instead

Let the silence sit. If they raise price directly, respond with a question, not a discount: "What's making the investment feel difficult right now?" Sometimes the answer is real, and you can restructure the engagement — a smaller scope, a payment plan, a phased approach. But you should never discount fees you didn't have to.

What These Conversations Have in Common

Every one of them is a moment where the attorney's instinct — be helpful, be thorough, be accommodating — works against the firm's instinct, which is to close. The instinct to teach beats the instinct to ask. The instinct to be liked beats the instinct to be hired.

"The attorneys who run thriving firms aren't naturally better closers — they've practiced these specific conversations until they go differently."

This is fixable. Sales is a skill, not a personality trait. The attorneys who run thriving firms aren't naturally better closers — they've practiced these specific conversations until they go differently.

A Note on Getting Help

We partner with the Polin Rainmaker Program specifically because Evan Polin teaches a consultative sales framework built for professional services — not a pushy playbook that would embarrass you in front of a client. The next cohort starts June 9, and Amata members receive a discount. If sales conversations are where your firm is leaking revenue, that's the room to be in.

But you don't need a course to start. You need to look at your last ten prospect conversations honestly and ask which of these five you lost — and why. That alone will change your next ten.

For more on building the marketing and client-acquisition engine of your firm, see our Law Firm Marketing Guide for Chicago & Illinois Attorneys.

Stop losing the conversations that build your firm.

The next Polin Rainmaker Program cohort starts June 9. Amata clients receive a discount on enrollment.

View Program Details
Limited cohort size · Built for professional service providers · Discount applies to Amata members

Frequently Asked Questions

Is "selling" really part of practicing law?
Yes. The day you opened your own firm, you became responsible for revenue. Whether you call it selling, business development, or client intake, the conversations that turn prospects into clients are the engine of your practice.
What is the biggest sales mistake solo attorneys make?
Treating consultations as free legal advice. A consultation should qualify the prospect and lead to a clear next step — not give away the answer to their legal problem.
How do I get more comfortable talking about money with prospects?
Practice. The discomfort comes from inexperience, not character. The attorneys who quote fees with confidence have quoted them hundreds of times. Build the reps.
Should I follow up after a prospect says "let me think about it"?
Yes — but surface the real objection on the original call. Following up is fine. Hoping they call back on their own is not a strategy.
Ron Bockstahler, Founder & CEO of Amata Law Office Suites
About the Author

Ron Bockstahler

Founder & CEO, Amata Law Office Suites

Ron Bockstahler founded Amata Law Office Suites in Chicago in 2002 after seeing a clear gap in the market: solo attorneys and small law firms have little to no purchasing power or economies of scale. They need the same operational infrastructure as large firms — but without the cost of building it themselves — to effectively compete. What started as back-office printing and copying for Chicago attorneys grew into the city's most comprehensive law office suite community. Amata was chosen as the in-house printing partner for the American Bar Association and is an official Chicago Bar Association partner organization. More than 1,800 Illinois law firms and attorneys have called Amata home. Ron and the Amata team remain deeply invested in the Chicago legal community and its charitable organizations.