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SIGN UP BELOW TO DOWNLOAD A FREE COPY OF THE E-BOOK, THE LAWYER YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO BE: INSPIRATION FOR NEW LAW SCHOOL GRADS AND PRACTICING LAWYERS.    SIGNING UP ENTITLES YOU TO A CHANCE TO WIN ONE OF TWO FREE COPIES OF SOLO BY CHOICE.   SIGN UP TODAY! USE A WORKING EMAIL SO THAT WE CAN CONTACT YOU IF YOU WIN
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Sign up by May 15, 2008 to download the ebook and enter the drawing for a free copy of Solo by Choice.  Winners will be chosen randomly and notified by email.

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With law school commencements coming up, Solo by Choice makes an ideal graduation gift for any new lawyer, whether they plan on starting a practice right after law school or are considering it somewhere down the road. Solo By Choice offers a road map to new grads getting started and offers advice on how practicing lawyers employed by firms, government or in-house can lay the groundwork for opening a successful practice later on.

Solo by Choice: How to Be the Lawyer You Always Wanted to Be

Solo By Choice is dedicated to every lawyer who ever wanted to run the show but worried that going solo was career suicide … every lawyer who wanted to solo but didn’t know how to set up the office and make it work … every lawyer who never set foot in a courtroom but dreamed of one day practicing law their way. In short, this book is dedicated to becoming the lawyer you always wanted to be.

Solo By Choice has more than 300 pages of solid, practical advice on these topics: Making the Great Escape … Getting Started … Setting Up Office … Selecting Practice Areas … Handling Clients … Billing & Fees … Generating Revenue … Outsourcing … Marketing in the Digital Era … FAQ’s on starting a firm from BigLaw, government, law school … and Part-Time Options for parents.

To buy the book, click here.  Update (3/21/08) Currently, the book is in stock on Amazon, as well as Barnes and Noble.com.  Copies can always be obtained directly from the publisher at www.decisionbooks.com.

For updates on the book, be sure to visit the Author’s Cut/Pocket Part series.
To access the online versions of the forms listed in the book, visit Soloformania.

The latest press on Solo by Choice and Carolyn Elefant:

Balancing Act: Carolyn Elefant Wants to Be the Voice of Solo Lawyers, Debra Bruno, Washington Legal Times (3/24/08)

Article Excerpt:

Nonetheless, it’s not just the work-life balance that Elefant cherishes in her work. A recent blog post describes the joy of going it alone: “There’s nothing quite like those first few months of getting a law firm off the ground: the heady feeling of building something that doesn’t exist, the thrill you experience the first time you introduce yourself to ‘your client’ and the wild optimism you feel once you take charge of your destiny.”

That is perhaps Elefant’s main message. Going solo isn’t just about taking control of your career. It’s about taking charge of your life.

Despite Economy, Author Says Now Is Time to Go Solo, Thomas Adcock, New York Law Journal (3/7/08)(subscription only).
Article excerpt:

"In the past 10 years or so, more and more large-firm lawyers are thinking seriously about leaving and taking a piece of their practice with them – not poaching or stealing clients, but maybe taking those not able to afford large-firm rates, or else clients conflicted out due to firm mergers," said the "Solo by Choice" author. "There have always been lawyers who’ve done that, but now because of technology it’s easier for younger associates to do it."

Ms. Elefant’s said her notion is buttressed by data in a recently released study of 4,000 law school graduates conducted by the American Bar Foundation and Harvard Law School’s Program on the Legal Profession that show apparent dissatisfaction among young lawyers at commercial firms.

The study found that large firms lose up to half their associates within as few as four years, though not because of dismissals or layoffs; nearly two-thirds of the defections are the result of associate choice.

"In these recessionary times," said Ms. Elefant, who has worked at a mid-size commercial firm as well as a federal agency, "it makes sense for law firms who have to lay people off to watch where their associates go, and how they might build their own practices. If they were treated well, former associates might call in their firms on matters they can’t handle alone – or even go back to their firms after they’ve had valuable court experience."

Speaking of valued ex-associates, Ms. Elefant added, "I know of small firms and solos making a good practice just taking conflict clients."

 
What they’re saying about Solo by Choice….

Scott Greenfield, Simple Justice:  Solo by Choice blew me away.  As I read it, I became deeply concerned that I didn’t have enough glowing adjectives at my command to capture just how fantastic this book was, and how much I recommend it to anyone who has even a twinkle in their eye about the possibility of breaking out of the grind.  If I wasn’t already a solo, I would become one after reading this book, it’s that thorough, balanced and persuasive.

Margaret McCaffery, Law Marketing Portal: Solo by Choice: How to be the lawyer you always wanted to be, by Carolyn Elefant (Seattle: DecisionBooks; 2008), contains 300 pages packed with down-to-earth, well organized advice on everything from making the decision to set up your own law firm, to deciding if and when to expand your solo practice. There are appendices on everything from writing a business plan to creating a forms library, that invaluable shortcut provided for you in a big firm.

The four chapters on marketing are some of the most positive prose I’ve read about the topic, even by veteran, trained marketers. Messages like “Marketing makes you a better lawyer” and “Marketing gives you more control over your practice” are music to the ears of those of us who believe that even the best law firm marketing departments are wasting their time if their lawyers don’t actively engage in business development.

Chuck Newton, Third Wave Law Firm[Solo by Choice] is a detailed road map, and really an inspirational road map, for anybody who wants to succeed in the solo practice of law.  I would think it is a must read either wanting to or needing to take this journey.  There does not seem to be a detail or consideration not covered.  When I graduated from law school we had Jay Foonberg’s How to State & Build a Law Practice, which was broader in scope in many ways.  But, Solo by Choice seems to be the guide for the new ages.  It is heavily steeped on example and in the new trends.

Sheryl Schelin, The Inspired Solo: [N]o one book can answer all the questions an attorney will have in facing this most profound career choice. And Foonberg’s [of How to Start and Build a Law Practice] experience as a solo who’s been in practice for a long time is very different than that of someone like me, for instance, who did it in the 21st century; mine will likewise be different than someone who launches a practice in 2010. It’s just the way things are, as technology in particular and the world in general drastically change the landscape for entrepreneurs of all stripes. Part of the value I find in Carolyn’s book [Solo by Choice] is its timeliness; she addresses topics such as websites and blogs both as marketing tools and as assets to be planned for and divided in the event of a split from a firm.

Susan Cartier Liebel, Build a Solo Practice LLC: EVERYONE will find something in this book they knew little or nothing about or were totally misguided about when it comes to practicing as a solo or seeking out resources to get them started on their mission to improve their practice….In conclusion, regardless the stage in your professional career, this is a no-brainer.  You must buy this book for a myriad of reasons, but also because it is a good reference book filled with great information aggregated in one easy to read collection and a necessary tool for your solo practice.

Tom Kane, Legal Marketing BlogOf course, near and dear to my heart, she has 48 pages devoted to practical, down-to-earth legal marketing ideas. Carolyn includes:

  • An overview of lawyer marketing,
  • Traditional marketing ideas (e.g., yellow pages, Martindale-Hubbell, elevator speech, sponsorships, trade groups, public relations, referrals, networking, speaking and writing, and putting on seminars),
  • Internet marketing (and even references this blog, thank you very much), and
  • “High-Impact” marketing, where she covers prospecting, organized networking, niche marketing, and “nontraditional consultations” (or what I would call providing quality service)

This is a must buy in my view. In fact, it would be valuable resource for individual lawyers in any size firm.

Evan Schaeffer, Illinois Trial Practice.com,  How does one go from law school or a big-firm job to a career as a solo? Elefant’s book provides a blueprint. You’ll find out how to reach a decision about whether a solo career is right for you, how to plan for the change, and how to grow and market your new practice. One of the book’s principle strengths is that it draws on personal anecdotes and insights from scores of real-life solos. There are checklists throughout the book and a number of helpful appendixes with tips for buying equipment, setting up a "paperless office," performing on-line research inexpensively, and creating a sample forms library.

Enrico Schafer,  Greatest American Lawyer, I highly recommend that anyone considering solo or small firm practice read this book.  Carolyn has provided detail beyond any expectations.

Dennis Kennedy, Dennis Kennedy Blog,

This question also gives me the chance to single out and praise Carolyn Elefant’s new book, Solo by Choice: How to Be the Lawyer You Always Wanted to Be. I had the privilege of reading a pre-publication version of the book and wrote the following short blurb about it:

Carolyn Elefant’s new book continues the tradition of her MyShingle.com website, which I once called "the perfect example of a great web resource." It’s chock-full of exactly the practical advice I was looking for when I left a big firm to go solo. Highly recommended.

It’s the most current of the books about solo practice.

Craig Williams, May It Please The Court  If you’re a lawyer and those law-school dreams have all but evaporated and you’re contemplating taking the plunge to start your own law firm, perhaps as a solo, perhaps as a group of lawyers who all have these unrealized dreams and want to run your own show, then…

You need this book.  Don’t do anything else to start up a new law firm without reading this insightful guide, Solo by Choice, by Carolyn Elefant.*  Even if you have a long-established solo or small firm, then this book will help you fine-tune your practice in ways you can’t even imagine.  Even if you are in BigLaw or even a government prosecutor, there are a few tips you can pick up to help your practice (see the chapter on Dealing with clients).

Even after starting this firm, WLF | The Williams Lindberg Law Firm five years ago and after more than twenty years of practicing law, I learned more than a few things from this paperback.  You’ll find it more than helpful, I’m sure.  Your investment will yield much in return.

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