Some of you may have seen reference to my idea about a shared marketing campaign in posts on Depoman. I post it here again to reach the widest audience possible. I want your help.
Army of One, that's a marketing campaign that I've always liked. It is effective. I usually have to stiffle some emotions when it comes across my TV. My father was a Marine, not in the Army, but he taught me well about things such as personal integrity, responsibility, accountability, and taking pride in your work.
A little over a year ago, Army of One came to have a new meaning for me. My Depoman family probably knows of what I speak, but I won't go into detail here again for brevity's sake. If you've read any of my posts, you know my thoughts on gifting, non-competes, etc. I considered myself part of an Army of Two.
The saga has continued on over the last year and a half. I've seen evidence online of other people who were an Army of One--their charity in helping me gain knowledge makes me eternally grateful. It's come from all types of sources--forums, NCRA, individual reporters, firm owners, my state association... This sharing of knowledge empowered me and gave me confidence.
I have been campaigning in my area to educate the bar on the pitfalls to gifting in our legal arena for quite some time now. Problem is, this isn't the only problem I face, WE face. And while my Army of One approach has been successful in small doses, I want an Army of Thousands to tackle our problems. As independent reporters and small business owners, we can't match dollar for dollar the large advertising budgets that the large corporate-owned firms have, but our strength is our numbers. We can outscream the corporations by utilizing our attorney contact to educate the bar.
To this end, I have designed a flyer that touches on a number of topics: unethical gifting, the dangers of ER, illegal contracting, the importance of hiring certified reporters and adherence to a Code of Ethics. This flyer can be easily and economically printed by individual reporters and firms on the equipment we already utilize for our transcripts. It can be printed in color or black and white from a PDF file. Educational pieces that expand on the issues touched on on the graphics page can be printed on the back side, and the messages we choose to include can be changed out very easily. Maybe gifting isn't a problem in your area, but contracting is. Maybe ER is your problem. I think the design has wide appeal to address a number of problems.
As I said in my recent article in the JCR (maybe you missed it, it was short:), the flyer can do the talking for you if you are timid. If you're a big mouth like me, when the attorneys ask questions, I'm grateful for the "face time" and the opportunity to discuss my issues. What's nice about distributing it at a deposition is that it can be placed on the table with your business card, unintrusively. The reality of it is, my clients don't need to hear my message. They've heard it a thousand times already. It's the copy attorney that I want to reach with my message. As I take down the testimony, usually after the very bored defending attorney has read his email on his Blackberry, I will see the attorney pick up my flyer and ACTUALLY READ IT.
If this cause is something that you can lend your good name to, I ask that you contact me at Lisacr99@hotmail.com. You can see a sample of my flyer. If you like the design, I can personalize it with your company contact info on it. It is absolutely and totally free!
Help build an Army of Thousands. Share the idea with your local colleagues. Invite them to email me as well. Make me regret this with an overwhelming response!!!!!!!!!
Once you've viewed my sample or distributed a version of your own, let me know your feedback, your constructive criticism, your ideas.
(If you'd like to volunteer your writing talents to an educational piece, I'd love your help. I work free, but I work slow:) The gifting article is the first only because it was already in place and ready to go. I would ask, however, that any submissions be without author bylines. It's not that I don't want to give credit where credit is due, but I can foresee that some who would otherwise embrace the distribution of our combined message would be reluctant to distribute it with a competitor's name on it.)