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Content Strategy · Personal Injury
The Legal Content Diagnosis: Why Most Law Firm Websites Are Invisible and Unconvincing at the Same Time

Most law firms have two content problems running in parallel — their site doesn't rank, and when it does, it doesn't convert. These aren't separate issues. They're symptoms of the same root failure: a content strategy that was never actually built.

Content Strategy . Personal Injury · Communications
What I Bring to Legal Content That No Amount of Legal Training Can

The objection sounds completely reasonable: shouldn't legal content be written by someone who actually knows the law? Here's why that logic, while intuitive, is quietly costing law firms clients, and why the outsider perspective might be the most valuable thing your content has been missing.

Personal Injury · Damages
How Pain and Suffering Damages Are Calculated - And Why the Insurer's Number Is Almost Always Wrong

Insurance adjusters use two formulas to put a dollar figure on your suffering. But they also control how those formulas are applied — which means their opening offer is rarely a fair one. Here's what you need to know before you sign anything.

Content Strategy . Personal Injury
Why Your Practice Area Pages Aren't Converting - And What Actually Fixes It

Most law firm practice area pages fail not because of SEO, but because they're written for the firm, not the frightened person doing the searching. Conversion starts when you fix that.

COntent Strategy · PI Content Architecture
Why Most Personal Injury Firm Blogs Fail to Convert - And What the Content Actually Needs to Do

Most PI firm blogs rank. Very few convert. The problem isn't traffic - it's that the blog was built to attract visitors, not persuade them. Here's the structural failure most firms never diagnose, from someone who writes this content every day.

Personal Injury · Premise Liability
Slip and Fall vs. Premises Liability: What's the Difference - and Which One Is Your Case?

These two terms get used interchangeably - but they're not the same thing. One is a category of law. The other is a specific type of claim within it. Understanding the difference determines how your case is filed, what you must prove, and what you can recover.

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