So you run a personal injury firm in Fort Lauderdale and you’re trying to figure out who can actually help you grow without burning $10K a month on clicks that go nowhere. I’m Jorge. I spent ten years inside Percy Martinez’s medical malpractice firm before I started doing this for other Florida attorneys, and the short version is I track every dollar back to a signed retainer because that’s the only number that pays your bills.
Started as a paralegal handling intake, ended up running marketing across four Florida cities. Every Broward campaign gets built from the case file out, with cost reported per signed case by case type, every month, no dashboards full of vanity numbers.
Across 4 FL cities
Florida only
BBA
Ahrefs, SEMrush
What does a marketing partner for a Broward PI firm actually need to do? Three things, honestly. Be law-firm exclusive so they’re not learning your industry on your dime, track every dollar back to signed retainers instead of clicks, and know Florida Bar Rule 4-7.2 well enough to write copy that sells without triggering a compliance letter. That’s it. I run this stack across four Florida cities right now, anchored by Percy Martinez, which started at a $500 monthly budget and grew into a multi-city medical malpractice operation that ranks above Morgan and Morgan in Hialeah for Local Service Ads, which is verifiable if you want to check. Source: Jorge Argota, ten years in Florida legal marketing.
Most agencies sell clicks. I sell signed retainers.
Every dollar traces back to a specific keyword, ad, page, and phone call, and if I can’t tie the spend to a signed case I won’t run it, which honestly knocks out most of the campaigns other agencies want to keep alive.
Three Florida markets. Three different playbooks.
Broward is not a Miami suburb and treating it like one is how national agencies burn about 30% of monthly spend on cross-county clicks that never convert. A real Fort Lauderdale program treats this market as its own thing, with separate Map Pack targeting and separate Local Service Ads geography and separate intake scripts and separate landing pages tuned to Broward case demographics. The right answer is rarely the company with the biggest national footprint; it’s the partner who knows the 17th Judicial Circuit, knows the I-95 commuter patterns, and knows how the Florida Bar applies Rule 4-7.2 to ad copy.
Three things I learned inside the firm.
Most agency pages get written by people who’ve never watched an intake specialist decline a $50K case because the medical records don’t support the demand. I have. These are the patterns that changed how I build campaigns, or at least the ones that stuck.
Intake hangs up on bad cases faster than the website filters them.
I watched Percy’s intake turn down a $50K case once because the injuries weren’t bad enough to justify what the client wanted to settle for, and that’s when it hit me that every keyword I was buying needed to filter for the same things intake was filtering for, otherwise I’d just be paying to send unqualified leads into a phone call that was always going to end the same way.
The Florida Bar can shut down your best ad.
I watched a competing firm get a Bar letter over a single line in their headline that called them “the best” without anything to back it up, and they had to pull a $40K-a-month campaign that was actually working, which is the kind of thing you don’t recover from quickly, so now every ad I run goes through compliance review before it goes live, slower to launch but it never gets shut down.
$500 a month beats $50K a month if the math is honest.
Percy started with a $500 monthly budget against billboard firms spending six figures and the only reason it worked is that every dollar tied to a signed retainer, with the spend scaling only after the math proved out, which is the opposite of how most marketing budgets get built around here.
Five services. One stack. Every line tracked to a signed case.
SEO, paid search and Local Service Ads, AI search visibility, web design, and review systems. Each one runs as part of one stack instead of a separate retainer with a separate vendor and a separate invoice that never reconciles to anything.
Search rankings, by case type
Getting your firm onto the first page of Google for the case types that actually sign retainers across your target Broward zip codes. Car accident, truck, motorcycle, slip and fall, wrongful death, and so on, each one treated as its own ranking effort with its own landing page and its own Google Business Profile work.
Paid Search + LSA
Local Service Ad readiness is the first thing I audit because most rejections come from a name mismatch between Google Business Profile and the Florida Bar listing, which sounds small until you realize that’s what’s blocking your verification.
AI Search Visibility
Getting cited inside Google AI Overviews and ChatGPT and Perplexity takes a clean and consistent profile across the web, meaning your firm name and address and phone number have to match exactly across the Florida Bar, Avvo, Justia, and your Google Business Profile, plus FAQ schema on the site. Most firms have all the pieces but almost none have them aligned.
Web Design
Separate landing pages per case type, each one tested against intake conversion. Florida Bar 4-7.2 review before launch. WordPress on managed hosting, and you own the domain and the site and every line of content if the engagement ends.
Review Management
Post-settlement review automation, embedded Google review widgets on the site instead of made-up text testimonials, templated responses inside Florida Bar 4-7.2 limits. The final trust signal before a claimant calls and probably the cheapest growth lever a firm rarely runs well.
A $500 budget. Ten years. Four Florida cities ranked.
“I gave him a $500 budget. In 3 months I was ranking on the first page of Google. Ever since then I’ve been getting nonstop phone calls.”Percy Martinez, Esq.
Percy’s reports, before and after.
Same firm, same Florida market. The numbers below come from the Percy Martinez engagement, documented across the years, not a sample, not a hypothetical, just what an honest engagement looks like when it works.
Ranking #1 isn’t enough. You have to get cited.
Roughly 28% of legal searches now trigger an AI Overview. The firm cited inside the AI summary captures the click, and the firm ranking #1 organically captures whatever’s left, which usually isn’t much.
Four firm profiles. One range each. Nothing made up.
You know Rule 4-7.2. The question is whether your agency does.
Most generalist agencies write copy for your firm the way they would for a plumber and that’s where most Bar advertising letters come from, honestly. The cost isn’t the letter, it’s the campaign that was actually working getting yanked the day it lands. Here’s how I work to keep that from happening to you.
Compliance pass on every draft.
Before any ad, headline, or landing page goes live, it gets read against the rule, looking for the four things the Bar pulls letters over: superiority claims without proof, predicted outcomes, unverified testimonials, and missing disclaimers on past results.
You sign off, not me.
Final copy goes to you for approval before launch, because you’re the one with the Bar number on the line, not me. If something feels close to the edge, you tell me and we rewrite, no ego, no pushback.
Filed when filing is required.
Direct mail, TV, and certain targeted ads still need to be filed with the Bar before they run. I handle the cover sheets and the filing fee tracking so nothing goes out unfiled by accident on your dime.
25 Google reviews. 5.0 average.
All real, all verified, all attached to a Google profile. No anonymous “S.M.” testimonials, which honestly is the easiest thing to fake on a marketing page.
“Their strategic approach to SEO and paid advertising has not only increased our visibility but also helped us attract high quality leads.”
“He tracks everything back to signed cases. I went from 2,400 users to over 14,000. I rank across four Florida cities competing directly against Morgan and Morgan.”
“He is just one person and was able to get triple the results I was paying a bigger agency to get.”
FAQ
Direct answers to what Florida attorneys actually ask before signing on with a marketing partner.
How much does it cost to market a Broward PI firm? +
How long until I see results? +
What should I look for in a marketing partner? +
Do you work with multiple firms in the same market? +
Why am I ranking on Google but invisible in ChatGPT? +
Is Google Ads worth it for PI? +
What is Florida Bar Rule 4-7.2? +
What results should I expect? +
Send me your numbers.
I’ll send you the truth.
Your Broward zip, your case mix, your monthly spend, your intake response time. I run the audit the same way I ran it for Percy before building one of four Florida cities. If the math doesn’t support the spend, I’ll tell you, and that’s not a sales tactic, that’s just how I’d want someone to talk to me if it were my money.


