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Tracking the right KPIs ensures law firms' marketing efforts drive leads and cases. Many agencies use vanity metrics, but real success comes from SEO, paid ads, and LSAs. Measuring traffic, conversions, and cost per lead optimizes growth and prevents wasted spend.
By Anete Lazdina | on Feb 7, 2025
If your law firm is investing in marketing without proper tracking, you’re likely throwing money down the drain.
Many agencies know that most lawyers don’t understand what to track.
So they use “vanity metrics” to make campaigns look successful and to cover up failures.
But your marketing dollars aren’t working for you if those metrics don’t translate into leads and signed cases.
That’s why it’s crucial to hold them accountable using key performance indicators (KPIs)—the only way to measure real success.
So, in this guide, we’ll break down the essential KPIs for lawyer lead tracking through SEO, paid ads, local SEO, and Local Service Ads (LSA), ensuring your firm isn’t fruitlessly spending money but actually growing.
A key performance indicator is a measurable value that shows whether your marketing efforts are effective.
Think of it as keeping score in a football game. You wouldn’t watch a game without knowing the score, and you shouldn’t run a marketing campaign without knowing your numbers.
They can tell you things like:
Here’s some simple examples of KPIs your law firm should be tracking:
Tracking KPIs provides clarity on whether your marketing investment is actually working. Without them, you’re just spending money blindly.
It’s up to you to hold your agency accountable!
“Vanity metrics” are things like traffic and keyword rankings. These metrics are easy to manipulate – if you’re not signing cases, the marketing is NOT working!
KPIs alone aren’t enough—you also need targets. A target is a specific benchmark that determines success and gets everyone on the same page. It gives you a goal to work toward and allows you to measure progress.
For example:
Targets make your KPIs actionable. Instead of just tracking numbers, you can work towards improving them.
SEO is about optimizing your firm’s visibility in search engines like Google. It’s a long-term strategy that drives organic traffic to your website.
Here’s what you should be tracking to know if your SEO strategy is working for your law firm.
What It Is: Organic traffic refers to the number of visitors coming to your website from unpaid search results on Google.
Why It’s Important: More organic traffic means more potential leads, but not all visitors are valuable. Tracking organic traffic helps ensure you’re attracting potential clients, not just random visitors.
How to Track It:
What It Is: Engagement metrics measure how visitors interact with your website. This includes metrics like:
Why It’s Important: High engagement means visitors are interested in your content, while low engagement may indicate issues with relevance or usability. Tracking engagement helps improve user experience and increase conversions.
How to Track It:
For key pages (like practice area pages), track actions like clicks on calls to action, form submissions, and live chat interactions to measure conversion potential.
Deeper analysis: a blog post is an informational type of page. So things you may want to measure include:
A practice area page, like your car accident page, has a sales objective. Yes, you want to inform users about your service with such a page and ensure they’re doing all of the above.
But you also want them to contact you about their car accident.
So, you should measure whether users click the calls to action on the page. Are they calling your firm, engaging in a live chat, or filling in your form?
Understanding engagement metrics helps you improve user experience and increase conversions.
What It Is: Conversion rate measures the percentage of website visitors who take an action, like calling your firm, submitting a form, or using live chat.
Why It’s Important: A high conversion rate means your website is successfully turning visitors into leads. Low conversion rates suggest issues with your messaging, design, or user experience.
How to Track It:
What It Is: Keyword rankings show where your website appears in search results for specific terms.
Why It’s Important: Higher rankings for the right keywords (e.g., “car accident lawyer near me”) increase visibility and lead potential. Rankings alone don’t guarantee leads, but they’re essential for long-term SEO success.
How to Track It: Use Google Search Console, Ahrefs, or SEMrush to monitor rankings. Track baseline rankings early and measure progress over time. Focus on month-over-month trends rather than daily fluctuations to assess long-term SEO growth.
Local SEO is all about optimizing your visibility in Google Maps and the map pack. It’s not your website that will show up in these features—rather, it’s your Google Business listing.
While it’s good practice to fill out all the information you can in your listing, most people won’t spend time checking it out. They’ll likely pay attention to your reviews first and if your firm meets their criteria, then they’ll call you.
So the metrics to track are different compared to website SEO.
What It Is: This metric tracks how many people call your law firm directly from Google search results, especially on mobile devices.
Most people search for legal services on mobile devices. Which means they are able to call directly from Google search results.
For instance, imagine being involved in a vehicle accident on a freeway. You’re stranded on the side of the road looking for help. One of the first actions people take is to search Google for a car accident lawyer near them.
Why It’s Important: Many legal clients search for help in urgent situations, like after a car accident. If your firm appears in search results, you have a higher chance of capturing these leads.
How to Track It: Use Google Business Profile Insights to monitor call volume from your listing. This helps measure how well your local SEO efforts are converting searchers into potential clients.
What It Is: This metric tracks how many people click on your website from your Google Business Profile (Google Maps).
Why It’s Important: More clicks mean potential clients are interested in learning about your firm. Tracking this helps compare the effectiveness of different marketing channels.
How to Track It: Use Google Business Profile Insights to monitor website clicks. Analyzing trends can help optimize your listing and improve local SEO performance
What It Is: This metric tracks the number and quality of reviews on your Google Business Profile and other platforms.
Reviews are one of the most important features of your business listing.
For law firms, if you don’t have a solid reputation that is backed by third-party reviews, you’re going to struggle to close cases.
You should keep tabs on how many new reviews you’ve been getting each week.
Why It’s Important: A strong reputation builds trust and increases conversions. Law firms with more positive reviews are more likely to attract and close new cases.
How to Track It: Regularly check your Google Business Profile for new reviews. Make it a habit to request reviews from past clients, current clients, professional acquaintances, and industry contacts to strengthen your online reputation.
Local Service Ads are pay-per-lead ads that show up for keywords containing a location. This means that you would only pay for these ads when they deliver phone calls to your law firm.
They’re different from regular Google Ads because they use your Google Business listing instead of your website:
The metrics to track are similar to local SEO but with a couple of additional extras.
LSAs are specifically designed to bring in phone calls. If you don’t get calls, you don’t pay for these ads, it’s that simple.
In most cases, since these ads are the first thing people see after they search, it means you’ll often be the first person they call.
You need to be tracking the volume and quality of calls coming through to judge how effective this marketing channel is for your law firm.
We use (and recommend) call tracking software like WhatConverts to help you do this.
Quote: “The good thing with local service ads is that it’s not cost per click, it’s cost per lead.”
— Cesar Cobo
Cost-per-lead is a metric you’ll be able to find inside the dashboard for local service ads. It measures how much you paid (on average) to receive a phone call from the ads.
Google will tell you if they’re charging you for a phone call and it specifically has to meet the criteria of:
This is an advantage over traditional Google Ads. You’re not paying for someone to visit your website and maybe reach out. You only pay when they call.
Because of that, each lead can cost upwards of $100, depending on your practice area, location, and competition levels.
The goal is to find ways to reduce the cost per lead by optimizing your ads strategically. For LSAs, having lots of reviews and a stellar reputation on your Google business listing also goes a long way.
This metric is similar to tracking the cost per lead above, but it draws on your CRM data to record how many signed cases your local service ads contributed to.
It is by far the most powerful metric you can track as it measures performance in the area you care most about—signed cases.
If you don’t already have a CRM set up, we recommend Lead Docket.
It can help you manage your intake process seamlessly. It will also gather and store data about your marketing campaigns.
f you need help setting up your CRM, reach out. We can help you set it up for free along with tracking all the essential marketing KPIs you’ll need – get in touch.
There are two types of ad campaigns you can run on search engines:
Unlike LSAs, other Google Ads link to your website, not your business listing:
The metrics you’ll track are largely the same between the two. However, since all other Google Ads are generally cost-per-click, you’ll need to go about tracking some of these metrics differently.
Cost-per-click refers to how much you spend for someone to visit your website from a Google Ad. You can track this metrics within the Google Ads dashboard for each campaign you’re running.
Although the cost can be significantly lower than the cost of getting a phone call directly from an LSA, in the law industry, ad costs are still relatively high.
For instance, it’s not uncommon for a single click to a personal injury lawyer’s website to cost upward of $200. In general, the higher the value of a potential case, and the more competition in your area, the more it costs.
The disadvantage compared to LSAs is that not everyone who visits your website will contact you. On average, only one out of ten people might call you from your website.
However, you’ll have much more creative and strategic control over which keywords these ads show for. This means you’ll have a higher degree of influence on the costs and will be able to reduce the cost per click over time.
Unlike LSAs, you won’t be able to directly track calls from pay-per-click ads.
Rather, you’ll need to set up your reporting tools to attribute any calls you get from your website to an ad campaign if the caller visits your site after clicking an ad.
It can get complex tracking phone calls without the right tools and setup. Thankfully, we can help you get your reporting and tracking in order, for free.
We offer this to all law firms we work with, as it is an essential bedrock of success.
Without tracking the right KPIs, your law firm is flying blind when it comes to marketing.
Agencies love to show vanity metrics, but real success comes down to cost per lead, conversion rates, and signed cases.
By consistently monitoring KPIs and setting clear targets, your firm can optimize its marketing spend and maximize growth. We can help you start tracking the right KPIs for free.
Using data from your website, our Traffic Projection analysis can accurately forecast how much traffic (and revenue) your website could be getting from Google.