Two law firms can rely heavily on referrals and need completely different next steps. One may be happy at its current size, while the other may be hiring, expanding or trying to reach people outside its existing network.
For the first firm, referrals may still be enough. For the second, they may have become a limit.
That is why the question isn’t really whether law firms should replace referrals. For most firms, the better question is whether referrals are still enough for where the firm is going next.
Key Takeaways
- Why most law firms shouldn’t t try to replace referrals
- When staying referral-led is completely reasonable
- When another route to clients becomes necessary
- The difference between referral-only growth and adding another route
- What to check before spending money on marketing
The Honest Answer: Most Law Firms Shouldn’t Replace Referrals
Referrals work for a reason. A client or introducer has already done part of the trust-building before the first conversation even starts.
The person getting in touch often arrives with more confidence in the firm than someone finding you for the first time. That can make the first conversation easier and often leads to a better fit.
So replacing referrals would make little sense for most firms. The goal isn’t to remove a source of good work that already performs well.
The real decision is whether referrals should continue carrying nearly all the weight of future growth. That is a very different question.
The Real Choice Is Referral-Only Growth or Referrals Plus Another Route
A referral-only firm depends on existing relationships to start most new client conversations. A firm with another route can still benefit from referrals, but new work can also begin with someone who has never met anyone at the firm.
That person might find the firm through search, content, advertising, local visibility or another source. The route itself will vary from firm to firm.
The important change is that not every new client relationship needs to begin with someone already knowing your name. That is what makes the business less dependent on a small network.
When Staying Referral-Led Is Completely Reasonable
Not every firm needs another route to clients. Some law firms are exactly the size they want to be and already have enough of the right work.
In that situation, referrals may genuinely be enough. You don’t need more marketing activity simply because other firms are doing it.
Staying referral-led can make sense when:
- you are happy with the current size of the firm
- you already have enough of the right work
- one introducer slowing down would not create a serious problem
- you are comfortable staying personally involved in business development
- there are no major plans to hire, expand or launch into a new market
There is nothing wrong with that model. The right approach is the one that supports the business you actually want to run.
When Another Route Becomes Necessary
The decision changes when the firm changes. Hiring, expansion or a new service can expose limits that were easy to ignore before.
You may hire another solicitor and need more work to support them. You may open another office and need to reach people outside your current network.
You may launch a new service that your existing introducers don’t naturally send work for. You may also want to step back from being the person who starts every important relationship.
These are the moments when a referral-only model can become limiting. The firm may still be busy, but the way new work arrives is no longer keeping pace with where the business is going.
If you are not sure whether your firm has actually reached that point yet, read How Do You Know When Referrals Are No Longer Enough?
Referral-Only Growth vs Referrals Plus Another Route
| Referral-Only Growth | Referrals Plus Another Route |
|---|---|
| Most new work starts inside your existing network | New work can also begin outside your network |
| Trust often exists before the first conversation | Trust needs to be built before someone gets in touch |
| Low direct acquisition cost | Usually requires time, money or both |
| Growth depends on the size and activity of your network | The firm has more than one route to new clients |
| Works well when the firm is stable at its current size | Better suited to hiring, expansion or wider growth |
| The owner may stay central to business development | The firm can become less dependent on the owner personally |
Neither model is automatically better. The right one depends on what you want the firm to become.
Where Referral-Only Growth Starts to Struggle
The problem isn’t the quality of referrals. It is what happens when the firm needs more work than the current network can reliably provide.
That usually becomes visible when you hire, expand or try to reach people outside the relationships you already have. At that point, the firm may need another route alongside referrals.
The Trade-Offs of Building Another Route
Building another route isn’t automatically better or easier. It takes time and usually requires some level of investment.
People who don’t arrive through a referral may need more reassurance before they get in touch. The firm may need stronger visibility, clearer messaging, a better journey towards enquiry, better follow-up or a combination of several things.
Someone also needs to understand whether the work is producing anything useful. More activity isn’t helpful if nobody can connect it to real opportunities.
That is why another route should not be built simply because referrals feel old-fashioned. It should be built because the firm has a specific growth problem that referrals can no longer solve alone.
Don’t Choose the Channel Before You Know the Gap
This is where many firms waste money. They decide the answer must be SEO, a new website, Google Ads or more content before they have checked what is actually wrong.
Any of those things might help. They might also solve the wrong problem.
For one firm, the main issue may be that people outside the network can’t find it. For another, people are already arriving but don’t understand why the firm is the right fit.
Someone else may be getting enough enquiries but losing them later in the process. The second route will look different depending on where the gap actually sits.
So don’t start by asking which marketing channel to buy. Start by asking what is currently stopping the firm from reaching and converting people outside its existing network.
A Simple Way to Decide What Your Firm Needs
Are You Happy With the Current Size of the Firm?
If the answer is yes, referrals may still be enough. That is especially true if the current pipeline already provides enough good work.
A stable firm does not need to chase growth for the sake of it. The current model may already fit the business you want to run.
Would One Major Introducer Slowing Down Cause Real Concern?
If the answer is yes, the firm may be more dependent on a small number of relationships than it feels. One quiet period can expose that very quickly.
That does not mean the introducer relationship is weak. It means too much of the pipeline may be resting on too few people.
Are You Hiring or Expanding?
If the answer is yes, ask whether the current referral network can realistically support the extra capacity. Headcount often grows faster than the network that used to feed the firm.
That is when the gap starts to become visible. The business gets bigger, but the route to new work stays the same size.
Do Most New Client Relationships Still Start With You Personally?
If the answer is yes, the owner may still be the main route into the firm. That can limit growth even when the business is busy.
At some point, the firm may need to bring in work without every important relationship starting with you. That is often one of the clearest signs that another route is needed.
Can People Outside Your Network Find and Choose the Firm?
Don’t guess at this. Look at where recent clients came from and how many had no previous connection to the business.
If nearly everyone still arrived through someone you already know, the firm may not yet have a reliable route beyond referrals. That is useful information before you spend money on any specific tactic.
The Bottom Line
Most law firms should not try to replace referrals. They should keep the relationships, trust and reputation that already bring in good work.
The real question is whether that model can support where the firm is going next. A firm that wants to stay at its current size may not need to change anything.
A firm that is hiring, expanding or trying to become less dependent on the managing partner probably does need another route. The answer isn’t to abandon what works, but to decide whether it can support the firm you want to run tomorrow.
Not sure whether referrals are still enough for where you want to take the firm? Take the four-minute Enquiry Gap Assessment.
It will help you see where your current route to enquiries may be limiting growth, and what is worth checking first.



