
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In this episode of The Kennedy-Mighell Report, Dennis Kennedy and Tom Mighell discuss recent commentary on the last decade of blawging, the current state of blawging, and the future of online interaction and marketing for lawyers. They discuss whether legal blogs are still popular, how the online landscape has changed for legal professionals, and what might be replacing the personal law blog. Tom notes that due to podcasts, social media, and general writing exhaustion, individual lawyers are updating less often or have stopped all together. Dennis talks about how there are more law firm and group blogs that are SEO optimized and targeted for marketing. They both agree that blawging is not dead, but has changed remarkably in the past ten years. Special thanks to our sponsor, ServeNow.
5
1010 ratings
In this episode of The Kennedy-Mighell Report, Dennis Kennedy and Tom Mighell discuss recent commentary on the last decade of blawging, the current state of blawging, and the future of online interaction and marketing for lawyers. They discuss whether legal blogs are still popular, how the online landscape has changed for legal professionals, and what might be replacing the personal law blog. Tom notes that due to podcasts, social media, and general writing exhaustion, individual lawyers are updating less often or have stopped all together. Dennis talks about how there are more law firm and group blogs that are SEO optimized and targeted for marketing. They both agree that blawging is not dead, but has changed remarkably in the past ten years. Special thanks to our sponsor, ServeNow.
85 Listeners
20 Listeners
14 Listeners
361 Listeners
30,845 Listeners
59 Listeners
26 Listeners
31 Listeners
22 Listeners
116 Listeners
136 Listeners
8 Listeners
53 Listeners
463 Listeners
455 Listeners
9 Listeners
37 Listeners
34 Listeners
198 Listeners
86,708 Listeners
111,917 Listeners
14 Listeners
47 Listeners
88 Listeners
9,207 Listeners
58,143 Listeners
32 Listeners
38 Listeners
46 Listeners
3 Listeners