If Lawyers Didn't Exist

I know, the title of this post sounds like the beginning of another lawyer joke, but it comes from a very thought-provoking article from Indi Young on A List Apart titled Look at it Another Way.

Indi suggests several ways we can "step out of our problem-solving role." This is important because:

Whether we’re improving what we make, how we make it, or how we shareit, we normally take the perspective of the creator by default. Wecan’t help it. We’re drawn into decisions about all sorts of details.We love the minutia—solving problems, finding a way around alimitation. We don’t try to see past our own role in the process.

Instead of trying to improve our businesses (or our processes/outputs/etc.) from the inside, she suggests we drop our problem-solving role completely, forget about our business' existing limitations and become the person we serve.

Pretend you and your organization do not exist, and study what this person doeswith all the resources available in her life. For example, what does acitizen need from her town government? She needs a way to get from herhouse to the grocery store, the library, the post office, herworkplace, etc. These could be roads, bike paths, public transit, andsidewalks. She needs utilities like water and electricity to bedelivered to her property. She needs assurance that her property willbe defended from fire, protected from floods, and accessible during adisaster. She wants to feel safe from assault, whether by a human, ananimal, pollution, noise, or disease. This list goes on.

Like governments, lawyers (though some might argue) exist to fulfill a need. Here's a way to identify those needs: Think about your clients for a moment. But, as the article suggests, don't think of them as a “user” of the thing you provide.Instead, "think about how and why they accomplish what they want to get done."

So, who are your clients? What do they look like? Where do they live? What do they need? What do they want to get done?

Most importantly, what wakes them up at 2:00 am the morning before they call your office? Would they say it is because they wanted "estate planning" or because they want to make sure they can "take care of their family" when they die?

Put another way, if lawyers didn't exist, what unmet need would your clients have? And if you were the only one to recognize that unmet need (in a world without lawyers, remember), would you invent your firm as it exists today?

Would your client?

Would Steve Jobs?

Previous
Previous

Beep Beep

Next
Next

Start Clients Off Right With a "Starter Kit"