Market volatility demands a new approach to marketing planning for legal technology companies. The traditional method of setting rigid annual budgets and campaigns no longer serves growing companies well. Rather than attempting to predict exact market conditions, successful legal tech marketers must build flexible frameworks that can adapt quickly to change while maintaining momentum.
Law firms and corporate legal departments face increasing pressure to modernize while controlling costs. This creates both opportunities and challenges for legal tech providers. Buying cycles are becoming less predictable - some organizations accelerate digital transformation initiatives during downturns, while others pause all non-essential spending.
The key is recognizing that uncertainty itself can be planned for. Rather than making fixed predictions about market conditions, legal tech companies need marketing frameworks that can scale up or down based on actual conditions. This means moving away from rigid annual plans to rolling 90-day sprints with clear trigger points for adjusting course.
Start by identifying core marketing activities that should remain constant regardless of conditions. These typically include:
Maintaining your product's presence on key legal tech review platforms
Basic search engine optimization for critical keywords
Nurturing existing customer relationships
Minimal PR/communications to maintain market visibility
Next, map out scalable activities that can flex based on market conditions and results:
Paid advertising campaigns
Content marketing volume
Event sponsorships and speaking engagements
Sales development activities
Set clear metrics and trigger points for scaling these activities up or down. For example, if sales cycle length increases beyond a certain threshold, shift the budget from acquisition to retention marketing. If conversion rates on certain channels drop, reallocate to better-performing ones.
Structure marketing budgets in tiers rather than fixed line items. A base tier covers essential ongoing activities. Additional tiers activate based on market conditions and company performance. This provides leadership clear options for adjusting spend without starting from scratch.
Implement weekly data reviews focused on leading indicators like:
Changes in sales cycle length
Shifts in conversion rates by channel
Engagement levels of target accounts
Pipeline velocity metrics
Build rapid-response protocols for both positive and negative market shifts. This includes having pre-approved contingency campaigns ready to launch and clear processes for pausing or accelerating activities.
Keep core messaging focused on concrete value delivery - efficiency gains, cost savings, risk reduction. While innovation messaging resonates in growth markets, stability and ROI take precedence during uncertainty.
The goal isn't to predict exactly what will happen in 2025. Instead, focus on building marketing systems that can respond quickly to actual conditions while maintaining consistent market presence. Companies that master this flexibility will be better positioned to capitalize on opportunities while managing downside risks effectively.
Success in 2025 will come not from having a perfect plan, but from being perfectly prepared to adapt. Start building that capability now by focusing on framework development, response protocols, and maintaining optionality in marketing investments.