Miami law firm marketing that combines SEO, content, paid search, review management, and reputation work into one accountable program. We help Miami firms move past disconnected single-channel tactics into integrated demand generation that produces consistent qualified consultations.
Miami (population 0.45M city / 6.14M metro) is the largest legal market in Florida (and in many cases in its region of the country), with Miami-Dade Circuit Court and U.S. District Court — Southern District of Florida driving the bulk of local litigation activity. Most Miami firms hit a marketing ceiling around the second or third year of running disconnected tactics: one vendor doing SEO, another doing Google Ads, the office manager handling reviews, and a part-time freelancer running social. Each channel produces some leads but no one owns total demand-generation outcomes.
The Miami firms that break past this ceiling — including peers and competitors of firms like Greenberg Traurig, Holland & Knight (Miami), Akerman — treat marketing as a single integrated program with shared measurement, shared messaging, and shared accountability. They run SEO, content, paid search, review management, GBP optimization, and (where it makes sense) social and PR as components of one strategy — not five separate buckets.
In Miami specifically: International / Latin American business gateway. Heavy real estate (luxury, foreign-buyer), maritime, immigration, family, and PI markets. Spanish-language SEO is non-negotiable; substantial Portuguese-language demand also exists (Brazilian community).
Legal-marketing CPC in Miami currently runs USD $30-160. With per-click economics like that, channel integration matters more than in lower-cost markets — every dollar of paid spend that lands on a weak landing page or fails to convert is a multiple of the dollar lost in markets like Winnipeg or San Antonio.
For Miami-based firms specifically — operating against a competitive bench like Greenberg Traurig, Holland & Knight (Miami), Akerman — the program components below are the minimum viable scope. Anything narrower runs into the local-market ceiling within 12-18 months.
**1. SEO foundation.** Practice-area landing pages mapped to the queries Miami legal buyers actually run, technical SEO health, schema markup (Person + Attorney + LocalBusiness for Miami firms), internal linking strategy, content publishing cadence. The largest source of compound, low-CAC legal leads for Miami firms in 2026 — particularly meaningful when paid CPCs in the metro run USD $30-160 and every organic-driven matter compounds margin.
**2. Google Business Profile management.** Categories, photos, services, products, posts, Q&A, review velocity, attribute optimization, service-area definition covering Downtown, Brickell, Coral Gables, Coconut Grove. Drives local-pack visibility — the highest-converting placement on the Miami legal SERP, where pack ranking against established peers like Greenberg Traurig is the difference between consistent intake calls and an empty inbox.
**3. Paid search (Google Ads + Microsoft Ads).** Campaign architecture, negative keyword discipline, landing-page conversion optimization, ad-extension management. With Miami CPC at USD $30-160, paid scales fast but requires substantive content + tracking infrastructure underneath to convert at acceptable cost-per-acquired-client.
**4. Content marketing.** Practice-area-specific blog content, scenario-based FAQ libraries (e.g., procedure at Miami-Dade Circuit Court or U.S. District Court — Southern District of Florida), video content (YouTube + GBP video), email nurture sequences. The retention and trust-building layer that converts top-funnel Miami discovery into hired counsel — and the only marketing asset that compounds rather than depreciating the moment spend stops.
**5. Review and reputation management.** Structured review-request systems, response protocols, third-party-site monitoring (Avvo, Lawyers.com, Yelp, Justia), reputation-defence content. Reviews are one of the highest conversion-rate factors in legal services purchasing — and Miami's sophisticated buyer base researches reviews more carefully than smaller markets.
**6. Conversion infrastructure.** Live chat or chatbot integration, intake-form optimization, after-hours call answering, CRM integration, lead-tracking that follows a lead from impression through retainer signed. Most Miami firms lose 30-50% of leads to broken handoff between marketing and intake — particularly painful when Miami CPC sits at USD $30-160 and the cost-per-lead is already in the upper bracket of North-American legal markets.
**7. Reporting that connects to outcomes.** Monthly reporting against signed-retainer revenue, not "rankings improved" or "traffic increased". The job of marketing for a Miami firm — competing against established peers like Greenberg Traurig and Holland & Knight (Miami) — is to produce signed clients at sustainable cost-per-acquired-client, not vanity metrics in a quarterly slide deck.
Channel mix should follow buyer behaviour, not vendor preferences. Competitive context: paid-search CPC for legal head terms in Miami runs USD $30-160, and the largest local firms competing for organic share of voice include Greenberg Traurig, Holland & Knight (Miami), Akerman, Carlton Fields. Miami's competitive bench includes Greenberg Traurig, Holland & Knight (Miami), Akerman on the firm side, with paid-search CPCs running USD $30-160 for the highest-value heads. Real channel guidance for Miami firms by practice:
**Personal injury in Miami:** Heavy paid search + GBP + reputation management. Buyers move fast (often within 24 hours of injury) and decision is heavily reputation-driven. Content matters less, response time matters more. Miami-specific note: at USD $30-160 CPC, weak landing pages bleed budget faster than in lower-cost markets — this is one of the highest-stakes categories on paid.
**Family law / divorce in Miami:** SEO + content + reviews. Buyers research extensively (often 30-90 days before contacting counsel) and value depth + empathy in pre-purchase content. Paid search supplements but doesn't lead. In Miami, Florida family-law statutes (covering equitable distribution, custody, support) create state-specific content opportunities that generic content libraries miss.
**Criminal defence in Miami:** GBP + paid search + reputation. Speed matters (often hired within hours of arrest). Content is less important than visibility + trust signals at the moment of need. In Miami specifically, criminal-defence marketing should reflect awareness of Miami-Dade Circuit Court procedures and the local DA / prosecutor office's approach.
**Immigration in Miami:** SEO + content + multilingual content. Buyers research over weeks/months, often in multiple languages, and value detailed scenario-based content. Heavy referral component. Miami's demographic mix drives specific multilingual content priorities.
**Estate planning in Miami:** Content + email + SEO. Buyers self-educate before contacting counsel; content depth matters most. Nurture sequences convert well over 6-12 months. Miami estate-planning content should reflect Florida probate code, intestacy rules, and any state-specific estate-tax thresholds.
**Real estate in Miami:** GBP + referral marketing + SEO. Heavy referral component (mortgage brokers, realtors). Marketing programs that integrate referral-source nurture outperform. In Miami's Downtown, Brickell, Coral Gables markets, neighborhood-specific landing pages produce meaningful incremental lead lift.
**Business / corporate in Miami:** Content + LinkedIn + SEO + thought leadership. Long sales cycles, sophisticated buyers, peer-validated decisions. Pure performance marketing under-performs; thought leadership and BD integration over-perform. In Miami, peer-firm benchmarking (against the firms named above) drives measurable share-of-voice gains for firms that publish substantively in their corporate practice area.
For firms practising in Miami (population 0.45M city / 6.14M metro, primary venues Miami-Dade Circuit Court and U.S. District Court — Southern District of Florida), every practice area below has its own buyer journey, competitive set, and marketing approach — they're not interchangeable engagements with a generic playbook. Components a full Miami law firm marketing engagement typically includes (and we deliver):
- **Personal injury firm marketing in Miami** — practice-area-specific positioning, content, and lead-generation infrastructure for personal injury firms in the Miami market. - **Family law and divorce firm marketing in Miami** — practice-area-specific positioning, content, and lead-generation infrastructure for family law and divorce firms in the Miami market. - **Criminal defence firm marketing in Miami** — practice-area-specific positioning, content, and lead-generation infrastructure for criminal defence firms in the Miami market. - **Immigration firm marketing in Miami** — practice-area-specific positioning, content, and lead-generation infrastructure for immigration firms in the Miami market. - **Estate planning and wills firm marketing in Miami** — practice-area-specific positioning, content, and lead-generation infrastructure for estate planning and wills firms in the Miami market. - **Business and corporate firm marketing in Miami** — practice-area-specific positioning, content, and lead-generation infrastructure for business and corporate firms in the Miami market. - **Real estate firm marketing in Miami** — practice-area-specific positioning, content, and lead-generation infrastructure for real estate firms in the Miami market. - **Bankruptcy and insolvency firm marketing in Miami** — practice-area-specific positioning, content, and lead-generation infrastructure for bankruptcy and insolvency firms in the Miami market. - **DUI / impaired driving firm marketing in Miami** — practice-area-specific positioning, content, and lead-generation infrastructure for DUI / impaired driving firms in the Miami market. - **Employment firm marketing in Miami** — practice-area-specific positioning, content, and lead-generation infrastructure for employment firms in the Miami market. - **Tax firm marketing in Miami** — practice-area-specific positioning, content, and lead-generation infrastructure for tax firms in the Miami market. - **Intellectual property firm marketing in Miami** — practice-area-specific positioning, content, and lead-generation infrastructure for intellectual property firms in the Miami market.
Each can run as a standalone engagement or as a component of a multi-practice firm's overall marketing program. For firms competing against established peers in Miami like Greenberg Traurig and Holland & Knight (Miami), practice-area depth is what separates serious mandates from generic ones.
Pricing benchmarks below are calibrated to the Miami market specifically — population 0.45M city / 6.14M metro, CPC USD $30-160, Florida state bar environment. Smaller markets can run programs at the lower bound of each band; coastal-tech metros typically run at or above the upper bound. Miami sits near the upper end of North-American legal markets, which informs the bands below.
**Foundation program (single-practice, solo to 3 lawyers in Miami):** USD $3,500-7,500/month. SEO + GBP + reviews + light content. Scales single-practice firms past the "good leads but too few" stage. Typical Miami foundation client: a 1-3 lawyer firm in a single practice area, competing for Miami local-pack and long-tail organic placement.
**Growth program (multi-practice, 4-10 lawyers in Miami):** USD $7,500-18,000/month. SEO + GBP + reviews + content + paid search + monthly strategy. Builds multi-practice lead-generation engines. Typical Miami growth client: a 4-10 lawyer firm with 2-4 practice areas, opening a second office or pushing into a higher-CPC vertical (e.g., personal injury at USD $30-160).
**Scale program (10-25 lawyers in Miami):** USD $18,000-45,000/month. Full integrated demand-generation program with senior strategist, dedicated content team, paid-media management, conversion-rate optimization, and quarterly business reviews. Typical Miami scale client: a multi-practice firm competing directly with peers like Greenberg Traurig and Holland & Knight (Miami) on share-of-voice in the metro.
**Enterprise program (25+ lawyers in Miami):** USD $45,000-150,000+/month. Multi-office, multi-practice firm marketing with dedicated account team, custom analytics, BD integration, and partner-level strategic time. Typical Miami enterprise client: a regional firm with offices across Florida (potentially extending into adjacent provinces / states), competing nationally as well as locally.
Monthly programs typically run on 90-day initial commitments (we want to earn the renewal, not contract you in) with quarterly business reviews thereafter. Miami engagements specifically include state bar (Florida Bar) advertising compliance review on all client-facing copy at no additional cost.
These are the seven failure patterns we see most often in audits of Miami firms — every one is fixable, but they tend to be expensive in lost lead volume before they get diagnosed. With Miami CPCs running USD $30-160, every one of these mistakes costs noticeably more here than in a small-market equivalent.
**1. Hiring three vendors instead of one program.** Three vendors produce three reports, three opinions on attribution, and three sets of priorities. One integrated program produces shared measurement and unified accountability — particularly important for Miami firms operating in a competitive metro of 0.45M city / 6.14M metro where vendor sprawl quietly erodes velocity.
**2. Spending on Google Ads with broken landing pages.** Most Miami firms spend 60-80% of their Ads budget on traffic that hits a generic homepage or contact-us page. Per-practice landing pages with conversion-optimized layouts can 2-4× cost-per-acquired-client without changing ad spend — at Miami click prices, this is often the single highest-ROI fix in the program.
**3. Ignoring intake.** Marketing produces leads; intake converts them. Miami firms with weak intake (slow callbacks, untrained intake staff, no after-hours coverage) lose 30-50% of marketing-generated leads to competitors who pick up the phone. In a market where peers like Greenberg Traurig have institutional intake teams, sloppy intake is a structural disadvantage.
**4. Treating reviews as optional.** Reviews are one of the highest conversion-rate factors in legal services. Firms with under 25 substantive reviews convert at meaningfully lower rates than firms with 75+ reviews, regardless of ad spend or rankings. Miami buyers — operating in a metro of 0.45M city / 6.14M metro where peer firms like Holland & Knight (Miami) have hundreds of substantive reviews — apply this filter aggressively.
**5. Buying directory placements as the marketing strategy.** Avvo, Lawyers.com, Justia paid placements have a place in a marketing mix but they are not a marketing strategy. Firms that rely on them as primary lead sources are renting visibility on someone else's platform — when those platforms shift business models, leads stop. In Miami specifically, Florida state bar directories and regional legal directories matter alongside the major US-centric ones, and a directory-only strategy ignores the largest pool of Miami demand.
**6. Reporting on "rankings" and "traffic" instead of "clients signed".** The only marketing report that matters at the partner level is leads → consultations → signed clients → revenue. Anything else is process metrics. Demand reporting that connects to outcomes from the start. In a competitive Miami market with USD $30-160 CPCs, vanity-metric reporting actively hides the real performance question: are we acquiring Miami clients at sustainable cost or aren't we?
**7. Underinvesting in content.** Content is the only marketing asset that compounds. Miami firms that publish 8-15 substantive pieces per month (vs the typical 1-2) build organic moats their competitors can't catch in single quarters — and in a market with 4+ established competitors with years of compounded authority, content velocity is one of the few levers a smaller or newer firm has.
Calibrated to the Miami legal market — population 0.45M city / 6.14M metro, CPC USD $30-160, primary court venues Miami-Dade Circuit Court and U.S. District Court — Southern District of Florida — here's what a serious first 90 days looks like:
**Month 1.** Discovery, audit, baseline. SEO + GBP + competitive audit (mapped against the top 5-7 Miami firms in your practice area, including peers of Greenberg Traurig and Holland & Knight (Miami)), conversion tracking baselined, monthly reporting cadence established, intake-process review, first 2-3 priority landing pages drafted with Downtown, Brickell, Coral Gables sub-geo targeting where relevant.
**Month 2.** Foundation execution. First content batch shipped, GBP optimized for Miami service-area definition, technical SEO fixes deployed, paid search campaigns restructured (if applicable — at USD $30-160 CPC, account discipline matters more than spend volume), review-request system stood up.
**Month 3.** First measurable shifts. Initial ranking gains against the Miami top-5 in your practice area, GBP visibility improvement (typically first appearance in the local pack for at least a subset of your priority queries), first measurable lead-volume changes from the Downtown / Brickell catchments, first quarterly business review with partners — recalibrate plan based on what's working and what isn't, with explicit attention to which Miami channels are out-performing the baseline and which need restructure.
Months 4-9 is where serious lead growth typically lands in the Miami market. Year 2+ is where compound effects (content moats, link authority from state bar / regional bar placements, brand search lift) start to dominate over single-channel tactics.
Industry benchmarks: 3-7% of revenue for established firms, 7-15% for growth-stage firms, 15%+ for firms in active geographic or practice expansion. For a Miami firm doing USD 1.5M revenue, that's roughly USD $45,000-105,000/year on marketing. Spending less typically means slow growth; spending more without an integrated program typically means waste, not faster growth.
Yes — and a serious one, not a brochure. Your website is the conversion endpoint for every other channel (SEO, paid search, GBP, referrals all route through your website). Firms with strong marketing programs and weak websites convert at 30-60% lower rates than firms with strong programs and well-built sites.
In-house: 1 senior marketer at USD $95-160K/year + outside specialists for execution. Best for firms over 30 lawyers with complex, multi-practice programs. Agency: USD $3,500-45,000/month depending on scope. Best for firms under 30 lawyers, or larger firms outsourcing specific functions (SEO, content, paid). Many serious mid-size firms run a hybrid: 1 in-house lead, agency for execution.
SEO is one channel inside a marketing program. SEO drives organic search visibility; marketing also includes paid search, content, reviews, GBP, email, social, PR, BD support, and conversion infrastructure. Most Miami firms outgrow SEO-only engagements within 12-18 months and need a broader integrated program to keep growing.
Three test questions. (1) Show me your monthly report — does it connect to signed-client revenue, or stop at rankings/traffic? (2) Tell me which content was published in the last 90 days and what its commercial intent was — vague answers mean nothing's substantive being built. (3) Show me 3 measurable improvements in conversion rate, lead quality, or signed-retainer count over the last quarter — if there are none, the program isn't producing.
Reasonable industry practice in 2026: 90-day initial commitment (long enough to demonstrate work, short enough to protect against bad fits), then month-to-month or quarterly. Long initial contracts (12 months+) shift risk to the client and almost always favour the agency. Avoid them unless you're willing to bet a year of marketing budget on a vendor you've never worked with.
Yes — US state bar rules vary substantially. Florida's rules cover advertising tone, testimonial use, fee disclosure, and disclaimer requirements. Real Miami marketing programs comply with state bar rules without giving up competitive aggressiveness — generic agencies miss this and create disciplinary exposure for client firms.
Yes, on practice-specific niches and on quality of conversion infrastructure. Smaller firms can't outspend larger competitors on head terms, but they can dominate sub-vertical long-tail (specific scenarios, specific buyer types, specific neighborhoods) where head-firm content is generic. Smaller firms also typically convert leads more responsively (no junior-associate intake gatekeeping), which compounds in close-rate.