The Problem
They don't know what Texas attorney advertising rules require. They write SEO content that would make a bar ethics committee wince. They build intake forms that capture leads but never follow up. They design websites that look sharp but bury your practice areas where Google can't find them. And every conversation starts with you explaining things that should be obvious — what a contingency fee is, why you can't guarantee results, why your disclaimers say what they say.
Every vendor engagement starts with a crash course in how law firms work. You explain ethics rules, billing models, intake procedures — and still get deliverables that miss the mark.
Studies consistently show law firms lose 40–60% of potential clients because of slow response times and broken intake processes. That's not a marketing problem — it's a systems problem.
Most legal SEO agencies write thin content, target the wrong keywords, and ignore the local signals that actually win cases. You're paying $2,000/month for a report that doesn't move the needle.
What I Do
The Difference
I know the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct. Attorney advertising requirements, testimonial rules, fee disclosure standards — I build to these standards by default, not because you reminded me.
No content mills. No keyword stuffing. Practice area pages written by an attorney who understands the subject matter — which means they rank better and convert better.
Of all people, you know how clients feel about unpredictable billing. Every Rheme engagement is fixed-fee with a clear written scope of work before anything starts. You know exactly what you're getting and exactly what it costs.
No managing a web designer, a separate SEO agency, an automation consultant, and a marketing strategist who don't talk to each other. One relationship. One person who holds the full picture.
The legal credential is the differentiator. The technical capability is not in question. Two decades building websites and technology systems means you're not the project I'm learning on.
Sharing client information, intake data, or case details with a vendor is a real ethics concern for law firms. You don't need to explain why confidentiality matters. I already treat it accordingly.
FAQ
Book a free 30-minute discovery call. We'll talk through what your firm needs, what's holding you back, and whether I'm the right fit.