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Why Reputation Management Is a Different Discipline for Lawyers Than for Everyone Else

3rd Jul 2026
Every professional cares about their reputation. For attorneys, the stakes and the rules are different enough that generic reputation advice can actively do harm. A restaurant can respond to a bad review by apologizing and offering a free meal. A lawyer who responds to a client's negative review the same way can violate confidentiality obligations, confirm an attorney-client relationship that should not be confirmed, and hand a disciplinary body a problem that did not previously exist. That gap, between how reputation works for most businesses and how it works for law firms, is worth examining closely, because it explains why so many attorneys handle their online presence badly despite being careful, intelligent professionals in every other respect. The Confidentiality Trap in Review Responses Consider the single most common reputation event a law firm faces: a former client leaves a one-star review. Maybe the case settled for less than they hoped. Maybe they misunderstood the fee agreement. Maybe they are simply angry about an outcome the attorney had no power to change. The instinct, the one every business owner has, is to respond with the firm's side of the story. The client says you never returned calls, so you want to explain that you called seven times and documented each one. The problem is that doing so may require disclosing details of the representation, which most jurisdictions' rules of professional conduct prohibit without client consent, even when the client has publicly criticized you first. Several state bars have disciplined attorneys for exactly this: responding to online criticism by revealing confidential client information. The lawyer felt provoked, responded honestly, and ended up with a bar problem that was worse than the review. A response that would be perfectly reasonable for any other business is an ethics violation for an attorney. This is why reputation management for law firms cannot be treated as a generic marketing function. Every public response has to thread the needle between defending the firm and honoring confidentiality obligations. It requires responses that acknowledge the reviewer, express a general commitment to client service, and decline to discuss specifics, all without sounding evasive to the prospective clients who are reading. That is a specific skill, and it is not one most marketing agencies possess. The Negative Article That Outlives the Facts The second reputation challenge unique to the legal profession involves news coverage. Attorneys operate in public. Cases are matters of public record. Bar complaints, even meritless ones that are quickly dismissed, can generate coverage. And that coverage does not disappear when the underlying matter is resolved. A dismissed complaint, a case that settled without any finding of wrongdoing, or a sensational headline about an accusation that never held up can sit on the first page of Google under an attorney's name for years. Prospective clients see it. Referral partners see it. Opposing counsel sees it. None of them read the follow-up that cleared the matter, because the follow-up rarely got written and almost never ranked as well as the original story. The frustrating reality is that news publishers rarely remove articles. They protect their editorial independence, and once something is published, they treat it as part of the permanent record. Asking a newsroom to take down a story about a dismissed complaint usually goes nowhere. This is a problem NewReputation addresses through a combination of approaches detailed on their negative news article removal service: publisher outreach where a factual basis for correction exists, de-indexing requests in the narrow cases where an article violates search engine policy, and suppression, the practice of building and ranking stronger, accurate content so the damaging article falls to page two and beyond where few people ever look. For an attorney whose name is their entire brand, the difference between a dismissed complaint ranking first and ranking on page three is the difference between losing prospective clients and never knowing those clients existed. Reviews Now Decide Who Gets the Call There is also a purely competitive dimension that has changed rapidly. A decade ago, a personal injury firm competed on billboards, television spots, and the size of its advertising budget. Today, an injury victim searching "personal injury lawyer near me" is shown a map of local firms ranked substantially by review volume and rating. The firm with 300 recent reviews and a 4.8 rating gets the call. The firm with 14 reviews from two years ago, however excellent its actual case results, does not. This has produced a strange inversion where a firm can win nine-figure verdicts and still lose the client-acquisition race to a newer, less accomplished firm that simply understood the review game earlier. The quality of the lawyering and the visibility of the reputation have become almost completely decoupled, and only the second one shows up in a Google search. Closing that gap requires a system: monitoring reviews across Google, Avvo, Martindale-Hubbell, Yelp, and the platforms that matter for legal, requesting reviews from satisfied clients at the right moment in a bar-compliant way, and responding to everything professionally and within confidentiality limits. NewReputation built a practice specifically around this for law firms, described on their personal injury lawyer reputation management service, precisely because the compliance requirements make it a poor fit for general marketing agencies. The AI Layer Makes This More Urgent, Not Less The final shift worth flagging is that the search results page is no longer the only thing that matters. Google's AI Overviews now summarize what the web says about a person or firm at the very top of the page, above the traditional links. AI assistants answer questions about attorneys by drawing on whatever content already exists online. Both systems pull from the same well: the material that is currently published and ranking. That means a negative article or a cluster of poor reviews now shapes not only what a prospective client sees when they scroll, but what an AI tool tells them when they ask "is this attorney any good." The content that exists about a firm has become the raw material for answers the firm never sees being generated. Ensuring that the strongest, most accurate content ranks well is no longer just about the ten blue links. It is about controlling the inputs to the AI systems that increasingly mediate how clients find and vet their lawyers. The Takeaway for Firm Leaders Reputation management is not a vanity project for law firms. It is a compliance-sensitive, revenue-relevant function that sits at the intersection of ethics, marketing, and search technology. The attorneys who handle it well treat it with the same seriousness they bring to any other professional obligation. The ones who ignore it, or worse, who handle it with generic advice that ignores their confidentiality obligations, expose themselves to risks that a restaurant or a plumber never faces. The rules that govern the profession make lawyers uniquely vulnerable to reputation damage and uniquely constrained in how they can respond to it. That combination is exactly why it deserves specialized handling rather than a generic solution. NewReputation is a reputation management and online privacy firm that has worked with individuals, businesses, and law firms since 2019. This article is provided for informational purposes and does not constitute legal or ethical compliance advice; attorneys should consult their jurisdiction's rules of professional conduct regarding online communications.  

Lawyer Monthly is the go-to digital destination for legal professionals seeking the latest industry updates, expert commentary, and practical guidance. Whether it’s corporate law, litigation trends, or the evolving legal landscape, Lawyer Monthly keeps its readers ahead of the curve.


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