TOPICS
Retargeting for Legal
DIRECT ANSWER
Retargeting (also called remarketing) is the practice of serving targeted ads to people who have previously interacted with your brand — visited your site, watched a video, or appeared in your CRM — using pixel-based tracking or uploaded audience lists. Because these audiences have already expressed intent, retargeting consistently delivers lower cost-per-conversion than cold prospecting campaigns. For Legal companies, this matters because Google CPCs for personal injury and mass tort keywords routinely hit $200–$500 per click, making paid search uneconomical without precise intake funnel optimization.
What retargeting means for Legal
Legal marketing is bifurcated between high-volume consumer litigation (PI, immigration, criminal defense — where paid search dominates and intake speed is the primary conversion variable) and sophisticated B2B practice groups (M&A, IP, employment — where thought leadership, speaking engagements, and relationship CRM drive originations). These two motions require completely different teams, budgets, and measurement frameworks.
For Legal teams the relevant marketing pains are: Google CPCs for personal injury and mass tort keywords routinely hit $200–$500 per click, making paid search uneconomical without precise intake funnel optimization; State bar advertising rules prohibit testimonials, superlatives, and certain guarantees — creative that converts in other verticals is non-compliant in legal; Intake-to-retainer conversion tracking requires CRM integration most small firms lack, making true CAC invisible; Reputation management is critical but attorney review solicitation is ethically constrained in many states. State Rules of Professional Conduct (Model Rules 7.1–7.3) restrict advertising claims, solicitation, and referral fees; vary significantly by state; some states require prior submission of ads to bar for review.
How Retargeting Works: Pixels, Lists, and Audience Segments
Pixel-based retargeting places a small snippet of JavaScript on your site that drops a browser cookie when a visitor lands. Ad platforms (Meta, Google, LinkedIn, and others) match those cookies to users in their network and serve them ads. List-based retargeting — also called Customer Match or Custom Audiences depending on the platform — works differently: you upload a hashed list of emails or phone numbers, the platform matches them to its own user base, and you target that matched audience. List-based retargeting is less dependent on third-party cookies and is therefore more durable as cookie deprecation continues.
Effective retargeting segments audiences by behavior rather than treating all past visitors as identical. A visitor who reached the pricing page is closer to a decision than one who read a single blog post. A lead who downloaded a case study is warmer than one who signed up for a newsletter. Segmenting by recency (visited in the last 7 days versus 30 days) and by page depth (pricing or demo pages versus top-of-funnel content) allows for ads matched to actual purchase proximity.
Running retargeting for Legal with CoMo
CoMo's agents apply retargeting across Google Search (practice-area + location), LSAs (Local Services Ads — Google Screened), Directories (Avvo, Martindale, FindLaw), Referral network development (bar associations, complementary professionals) for Legal companies — tuned to Managing Partner or Firm Administrator at SMB firms; Marketing Director at Am Law 200 firms and run under your approval, alongside every other marketing function.
FAQ
Retargeting for Legal — common questions
What's the difference between retargeting and remarketing?
The terms are often used interchangeably. In Google's ecosystem, 'remarketing' historically referred to showing display or search ads to past visitors, while 'retargeting' became the broader industry term covering any platform. The functional distinction that does matter: pixel-based retargeting targets anonymous cookie pools; list-based remarketing targets known contacts from your CRM. The latter is more privacy-resilient and typically converts at higher rates because the audience is better defined.
How does retargeting differ for Legal companies?
The fundamentals are the same, but Legal marketing carries specific constraints — Google CPCs for personal injury and mass tort keywords routinely hit $200–$500 per click, making paid search uneconomical without precise intake funnel optimization and State Rules of Professional Conduct (Model Rules 7.1–7.3) restrict advertising claims, solicitation, and referral fees; vary significantly by state; some states require prior submission of ads to bar for review.. CoMo adapts execution to that context automatically.
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