Lawdingo Makes It Easy To Find And Instantly Consult A Lawyer Online
30 points by OJKoukaz 12 years ago | 15 comments- nirmel 12 years agoI'm looking for any and all feedback. Thanks guys! nikhil, founder - nikhil@lawdingo.com
- latchkey 12 years ago205 attorneys * $92/mo = ~$19k/mo. Not bad.
Why focus just on attorneys? Why not make it more generic for any type of consulting that would fit this type of model? Accounting/CPA/Taxes seems like the next fit.
- nirmel 12 years agoStay tuned for that. I think vertically-oriented sites make more sense than a generic platform. Also to note, not all lawyers are paying.
- nirmel 12 years ago
- rprasad 12 years agoHow do you plan on competing with Avvo, RocketLawyer, and LegalZoom (all of them also offer attorney referral services)? Or are you planning on not competing with them and serving more of a niche market?
- nirmel 12 years agoI think focussing specifically on facilitating the initial consultation means the product can create a better experience for people looking for legal advice - scheduling, video chat, free consultations, and a bunch of other little details. We'll leave the DIY document creation to others.
- nirmel 12 years ago
- latchkey 12 years ago
- hncommenter13 12 years agoAre you or do you plan to be certified by the CA State Bar as a lawyer referral service?
http://rules.calbar.ca.gov/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=mKEKxX4... [pdf]
Note that a lawyer referral service is defined as: "'Lawyer Referral Service' means an individual, partnership, corporation, association, or any other entity, or a service or agency of an entity, which operates for the direct or indirect purpose of referring potential clients to lawyers, whether or not the term 'referral service' is used."
I imagine other states have similar licensing requirements.
- nirmel 12 years agoMy understanding is that the company does not need to register as a referral service, in the same way that Yelp or the Yellow Pages are also not referral services. We're making a point not to recommend any particular lawyers so as not to qualify as the type of service we would need to register for.
- nirmel 12 years ago
- useflyer 12 years agoIt will be interesting to see more ZocDoc-like industry verticals take off.
- derwiki 12 years agoI was just telling my doctor this morning how ZocDoc has made me substantially more likely to book an appointment because I can do it without a phone, and using an interface that was well designed (instead of what hospitals themselves would probably come up with).
- derwiki 12 years ago
- patrickmay 12 years agoA dingo ate my lawyer?
- chpolk 12 years agoGood stuff Nikhil!
- OldSchool 12 years ago'It depends.' Now online.
- rprasad 12 years agoHow do you find a lawyer? Go to your nearest Starbucks and ask for any of the baristas.
In this economy, that's not even a joke... (http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/law_school_by_the_num...).
- westicle 12 years agoI know your comment was facetious, but having completed law school and being a lawyer are not the same thing.
If the barista at Starbucks tried to give you legal advice they would likely be breaking the law themselves.
- notdrunkatall 12 years agoWhich makes this particular idea even better.
- westicle 12 years ago