Current Awareness Strategy Blog

Two Years On: Why “Show Me You Know Me” Still Matters

Two Years On - Show Me You Know Me

In April 2024, we explored how the “Show Me You Know Me” approach can strengthen client relationships in legal marketing. The idea was simple: when firms demonstrate a genuine understanding of their clients’ challenges, goals and context, they build stronger engagement and long-term loyalty.

Since then, the legal marketing landscape has continued to evolve. Client expectations around personalization, relevance and timeliness have only increased. So we’re revisiting that earlier post to ask a simple question:

What still holds true - and what’s changed?

A quick refresher: the problem and the pursuit

In the original article, we drew on Kelly D. Parker’s concept of the “problem and pursuit.”

  • A client’s problem is their current situation: the challenges they face and how those issues affect them.
  • Their pursuit is where they want to be: the future state they are working toward.

Understanding this gap is essential to creating content that resonates. Without specificity - a specific audience, challenge, context and emotion - it’s difficult to create meaningful engagement.

That principle remains just as relevant today.

Why “Show Me You Know Me” matters even more today

Over the past year, we’ve seen a growing emphasis on relevance and personalization across professional services.

Legal clients are increasingly selective about what they read and engage with. Generic updates and broad newsletters often get ignored, while targeted insights tied to real business challenges are far more likely to spark conversations.

This is exactly where the “Show Me You Know Me” approach becomes powerful. When firms demonstrate that they understand a client’s sector, pressures and priorities, content stops feeling like noise and starts feeling like value.

What we’re hearing from legal marketing teams

Many of the legal marketing and BD teams we speak to face the same challenge: producing high-quality, relevant content consistently while managing competing priorities.

One client told us:

“We can respond faster and deliver more, highly curated, relevant updates, customized to people’s needs. The professional, fresh design has elevated our team’s output. The fact that people are enthusiastic and engaged means we are finding this a re-energized, positive, collaborative exercise.”

This is where content curation, supported by the right technology, becomes essential.

Personalization at scale: where content intelligence fits

In the original blog, we highlighted the difference between content marketing and content intelligence.

  • Content marketing focuses on creating original insights.
  • Content intelligence focuses on identifying and sharing relevant existing content with the right audience.

For busy legal teams, curated content can often be the fastest way to demonstrate that you understand a client’s interests and priorities.

For example, a quick, tailored note referencing a client conversation - alongside a relevant article - can show attentiveness and strengthen the relationship.

Final thoughts

The core idea behind the original article still stands: loyalty is built on relevance, understanding and trust.

Legal marketing is not just about sending information - it’s about demonstrating insight into what matters most to your clients.

The firms that succeed are the ones that consistently show their clients:

“We understand your world.”

And that simple message is still one of the most powerful drivers of lasting relationships.

 


Ready to deliver more personalised client insights?

See how Vable helps legal teams curate and share relevant content at scale.

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