The classic awareness/consideration/decision funnel collapses too much. For law firms, split it into five: unaware, problem aware, solution aware, firm aware, and decision. Most firms have decision-stage pages and a few unaware-level blog posts but nothing serving the readers between those two extremes. That gap is where prospects walk away to a competitor.
Audit your existing URLs against the five stages. Count the assets per stage for your top practice area. The gaps are the work.
The page that converts depends on where the reader is mentally, not where the firm wants them to be
A firm running paid traffic to its homepage and wondering why the conversion rate is poor is usually paying to reach problem-aware searchers and dropping them onto a decision-stage page. The mismatch is the cause. Decision-stage pages assume the reader has already decided they need a lawyer, already chosen a practice area, and is now picking between firms. Problem-aware searchers are still asking whether they have a case at all.
The fix is structural, not creative. Every page needs a clear answer to one question: which stage of the journey is this serving? When the answer is “all of them,” the page serves none of them. When the answer is one specific stage with one specific reader in mind, conversion follows.
This applies to AI surfaces too. Google’s AI Overviews and ChatGPT search both reward pages that match a clearly identified intent. Generic “everything you need to know” pages get skipped because the AI cannot tell which question the page actually answers.
The five stages a legal prospect moves through
The journey for a legal prospect is rarely linear, but the five stages below describe the mental positions a reader can be in when they land on a page. Every URL on a firm site should map to one.
Someone wakes up three days after a fender bender and their neck still hurts. They are not searching for a lawyer. They are searching whether the pain is normal, whether they should see a doctor, whether to call insurance. The reader does not know a legal claim is even on the table at this point. Pages that work here read like a friend explaining what to watch for, not a firm pitching its services.
Now the same person is searching “do I have a car accident case if I was partly at fault.” They have crossed the line from “is this a problem” to “is this a legal problem.” But they still do not know whether their case is viable, what type of attorney handles it, or whether they should call anyone yet. Pages that work here answer the specific question they typed and stop. A 6-question decision flow that ends with “you likely have a claim, here is what to do next” outperforms a 3,000-word practice area page every time.
The reader accepts they need an attorney. The questions in their head shift from “do I have a case” to “how does this actually work.” How do contingency fees work. What does the process look like from intake to settlement. How long does it take. Pages that work here show the math, not the marketing. A side-by-side breakdown of what a $80,000 settlement actually pays out at 33% contingency vs 40% post-suit beats every “Why hire a personal injury lawyer” headline ever written.
The reader has narrowed to a handful of firms. They are now comparing those firms against each other. The question in their head is not “should I hire a lawyer,” it is “should I hire this lawyer.” Pages that work here are proof-heavy and concrete. An anonymized case timeline that shows how a delayed back injury claim went from intake call to $240,000 settlement does more here than ten testimonials. Bar credentials and law school names answer questions nobody asked.
The reader has decided. They are reaching for the phone or the contact form. Every additional second of friction at this point is a case the firm already won and is now losing. The page should answer one question only: how do I start the conversation right now. A 12-field intake form on this page is firms losing cases to firms with a click-to-call button.
The 5-field intent template (apply to every page or asset)
Before publishing any page, fill in five fields. If you cannot answer all five, the page is not ready. This template forces every asset to make a specific promise tied to a specific stage with a specific proof element.
| Field | What it defines | Example (problem-aware PI guide) |
|---|---|---|
| Intent stage | Which of the 5 stages this page serves | Problem aware |
| Non-commodity promise | Specific, outcome-oriented, not vague “ultimate guide” framing | “Decide in 4 minutes whether you likely have a viable claim.” |
| Proof mechanism | The asset that earns trust (audit, dashboard, sample, demo, anonymized case) | Embedded decision flow with 6 yes/no questions and citation to the state statute |
| Compliance note | How legal/ethical constraints are handled on this page | FL Bar 4-7.13(b)(3): no superlatives. Past results disclaimer if cited. Not legal advice notice. |
| Semantic keyword bank | Stage + pillar + practice area + geo + question modifiers | do I have a car accident case, partly at fault, comparative negligence, Florida |
Filling out these fields is also how you stop publishing commodity content. A page that cannot promise something specific or cannot point to a proof mechanism is interchangeable with every other firm’s version of the same page. Google sees that and ranks it as such.
The 40/40/20 split that keeps content from collapsing into either extreme
The two failure modes are publishing only top-of-funnel fluff (high traffic, no cases) or publishing only decision-stage sales pages (low traffic, no awareness). The 40/40/20 mix prevents both.
What a typical firm site looks like, and what it should look like
Most firm websites have an over-served decision stage and an under-served middle. The chart below shows a typical PI firm’s existing architecture mapped to intent stages, then the rebalanced version.
- Decision/contact/
- Decision/free-consultation/
- Firm aware/about/
- Firm aware/results/
- Solution aware/personal-injury/
- Solution aware/car-accident/
- Unaware/blog/ (5 generic posts)
- Decision/contact/, /free-consultation/
- Firm aware/about/, /results/, /our-intake-process/
- Solution aware/personal-injury/, /how-fees-work/
- Problem aware/do-i-have-a-claim/, /what-to-do-after/
- Unaware/blog/ (symptom and event guides)
The rebalanced version adds two missing problem-aware pages and one missing firm-aware proof page. Those three pages typically take a firm from “we get traffic but it doesn’t convert” to “we get fewer visits but more retained cases” because the right reader hits the right page at the right point in their decision.
The page that converts depends on where the reader is mentally, not where the firm wants them to be. Build for all five stages or watch the middle of the funnel walk away to a competitor who did.
What law firms can borrow from SaaS and e-commerce
Other industries with longer consideration cycles built mature stage-mapped funnels years before legal did. The tactics translate directly when you adjust for compliance constraints.
The Monday morning audit
This is the audit that turns the framework into a workable list. Run it on any firm site in an afternoon.
- Pull a list of every URL on the site (XML sitemap or a free crawler).
- Label each URL with one of the five stage tags. Force a single label per page.
- Count how many assets you have per stage for your top practice area in your top metro.
- Flag every URL that reads as commodity content (interchangeable with any other firm’s version of the same page).
- Identify the smallest gap (usually problem aware or firm aware) and build 2 to 3 strong assets for it before publishing anything else.
- Add stage-specific CTAs to every page. The CTA on a firm-aware page should not be the same as the CTA on an unaware blog post.
- Set up call tracking and form analytics segmented by stage so you can see which stages are converting and which are leaking.
Where this framework connects to other parts of the system
Intent mapping sits at the architecture layer. Once the framework is in place, the work moves into specific channels and content types. These pieces cover the next decisions:
Common questions about intent mapping
What are the buyer intent stages for a law firm website?
How is this different from the standard awareness consideration decision funnel?
Should every blog post target one specific stage?
What is the 40/40/20 publishing mix?
How do I audit my existing law firm website against these stages?
What is the 5-field intent template?
Want me to map your firm’s site to the 5-stage framework?
I run the audit, label every URL, identify the gaps, and hand back a prioritized build list. Two to three weeks. Available for select PI, med-mal, and family law firms.
Request an intent mapping audit →


