NextClient in the News
ABA GP|SOLO Technology eReport - September 2005
Product Notes
By Jeffrey Allen
NextClient (www.nextclient.com) offers lawyers a quick, easy, and reasonably priced means of building and maintaining a website. The firm has developed a simple process for the construction of your website. Its staff creates and posts website designs on its server for your review. Once you select a design and contract with them, they remove the design from the server, so that others cannot choose it. Then, using their Custom WebExpress software and the selected design, you build your site. (full article)
LEGAL TECHNOLOGY - March 2005
NextClient: Future of Law Firm Websites?
By Alan Pearlman
During the American Bar Association GP/Solo Section meeting in Beverly Hills, Calif., this past October, I happened to be talking to a colleague who was busy on his laptop. When I asked him what he was working on, he told me he was in the process of updating his Web site. I knew he was not a "techie" by any stretch so I became intrigued. I asked him how he was able to work on his Web site at all, let alone make updates while away from the office. He then showed me a solution he found that allowed him to choose and launch a custom Web site in minutes, and then update it from anywhere he could connect to the Internet. (full article)
CALIFORNIA LAWYER - February 2004
NextClient Offers Website Marketing Solutions
NextClient develops unique, online marketing solutions for lawyers. In July 2000, the company introduced Web Content for Lawyers™, powered by its own proprietary Content Delivery System™ designed to automatically distribute relevant content to subscribing law firm websites. (full article)
LOS ANGELES LAWYER - February 2003
Keeping Your Firm's Online Content Up-to-Date
By Carole Levitt
Once a firm has launched its Web site, the next challenge is to keep the site’s content updated. Clients, potential clients, and other attorneys need a reason to return to the site on a regular basis. Unfortunately, many attorneys view their site as little more than an extension of their firm’s print brochure, and as a result their sites include the same biographies, practice area descriptions, and list of clients and verdicts as the brochure. A Web site, however, can and should be a more dynamic creation. (full article)
LOCALBUSINESS.COM - April 27, 2001
NextClient Allies with LexisONE
By Michael Fisher
NextClient.com Inc. has announced a strategic agreement to offer legal content newsletters to users of lexisONE's Website. LexisONE is a service of Dayton, Ohio-based Lexis-Nexis Group. (full article)
ABA LAW PRACTICE TODAY - January - February 2001
nothing.but.net: Content Syndication Catches On
By Eric J. Heels
Examples of law firm sites incorporating third-party text content, though, are less common. One example is the syndication company NextClient, which is providing generalized information for the clients of its law firm customers. Several law firms have already signed up for NextClient’s newsletter content. (full article)
INTERNET.COM - January 8, 2001
Two University of Maryland Law School Professors Join NextClient
By dc.internet.com Staff
Professors Paula Monopoli and Marin Scordato, two visiting law scholars at the University of Maryland School of Law, have agreed to join NextClient's advisory board. The two professors join other distinguished scholars in guiding NextClient's editorial mission of presenting complex legal topics in a readable format consumers can easily understand. (full article)
LAW OFFICE COMPUTING - December 2000/January 2001
Fresh Content
NextClient.com, which provides Web sites with content, has launched a private-labeled, customizable e-newsletter that a law firm can post on its Web site for current and potential clients. (full article)
ST. LOUIS COUNTIAN - November 21, 2000
Three New Services for Lawyers on the World Wide Web
By Barry D. Bayer
To make an impression, your site needs content. Of course, you'll want to post each lawyer's background and qualifications and brag a little bit about famous cases you've handled. It would also be nice to post little articles about your practice areas, but most lawyers don't have a lot of time for creative writing.
Enter NextClient, a new company that will set up a newsletter in the practice area of your choice an provide five different 300 word articles each week for a $59 monthly fee. (full article)
SAN DIEGO VOICE AND VIEWPOINT - August 3, 2000
Attorneys Introduce, Unique Content Service for Legal Websites
Located in Glendale, California, NextClient.com is in the business of helping attorneys develop and market their practices. This is accomplished by providing consumer-oriented, practice-specific content for legal Web sites. (full article) |