LawFuel Editorial Guidelines
Version 1.0 | Last Updated: February 2026
LawFuel has been providing news, tools, and views to help lawyers since 2001. Our voice is newsy, authoritative, yet approachable — we deliver serious legal industry content without the stuffiness.
Our Core Tone Attributes
📰 Newsy & Current
- Write with the energy of breaking news
- Lead with what’s happening NOW in the legal world
- Keep lawyers informed and ahead of the curve
🎯 Authoritative Yet Accessible
- Demonstrate expertise without talking down to readers
- Lawyers are smart — respect their intelligence
- Back up claims with evidence, data, and citations
✨ Readable & Engaging
- Legal news doesn’t have to be boring
- Use conversational language while maintaining professionalism
- Think “smart colleague at a conference” not “academic journal”
💡 Practical & Useful
- Always ask: “What can lawyers DO with this information?”
- Focus on insights that help lawyers run better practices
- Balance theory with actionable takeaways
Content Types We Publish
Strategy Posts
Posts that lay out strategies, principles, philosophies, and frameworks for law practice management. These posts:
- Have a clear point of view
- Use evidence to persuade
- Pose questions lawyers should consider
- Help lawyers plan for the future and deliver value
Example topics:
- “Beyond Billables: The #1 Investment That Outperforms Your Marketing Budget”
- “How Google’s AI Changes Will Affect Law Firm Marketing Strategy”
Tactical/How-To Posts
Focused on tips that help lawyers achieve quick wins and master specific tactics. These posts:
- Feature specific examples and data
- Link to helpful resources
- Provide actionable tips
- Often formatted as lists: “10 Ideas for…”, “5 Steps to…”
Example topics:
- “Write a Killer Blog Post to Boost Law Firm Marketing Results”
- “The ABCs of Legal Document Formatting”
News & Analysis
Current events, industry developments, and trending topics. These posts:
- Break down what’s happening and why it matters
- Connect dots between events
- Provide context lawyers need
- Balance speed with accuracy
Writing Style Guide
Language & Tone
DO:
- ✅ Use active voice: “The firm announced…” not “It was announced by the firm…”
- ✅ Write in second person when appropriate: “You can improve your practice by…”
- ✅ Use contractions naturally: “it’s,” “don’t,” “we’re”
- ✅ Vary sentence length for rhythm and flow
- ✅ Include industry jargon when appropriate — lawyers know their terminology
- ✅ Be conversational: “Let’s face it…” “Here’s the thing…” “The bottom line?”
DON’T:
- ❌ Over-complicate sentences to sound smart
- ❌ Use excessive legal jargon just to use it
- ❌ Write in stuffy, overly formal language
- ❌ Talk down to readers or over-explain basic concepts
- ❌ Sacrifice clarity for cleverness
Structure & Format
Headlines
- Be specific and benefit-driven
- Use active verbs
- Aim for 8-12 words
- Include keywords naturally
- Make it scannable and clear
Good: “How Google’s AI Snapshots Will Change Law Firm SEO”
Bad: “Thoughts on Technology”
Opening Paragraphs
- Hook readers immediately with the “so what?”
- Lead with the most newsworthy angle
- Set up the problem/opportunity clearly
- Get to the point — lawyers are busy
Body Content
- Use subheadings every 200-300 words
- Break up text with bullet points when listing items
- Keep paragraphs to 3-4 sentences maximum
- Use numbered lists for step-by-step processes
- Include relevant quotes and citations
- Add emphasis with bold text (sparingly)
Closing
- Summarize key takeaways
- Include a call-to-action when appropriate
- End with practical next steps
Length & Pacing
Ideal Word Counts:
- News briefs: 300-600 words
- Standard articles: 600-1,200 words
- Deep dives: 1,200-2,000 words
- Premium content: 2,000+ words (when warranted)
Pacing Tips:
- Front-load the most important information
- Use transitions to maintain flow
- Vary sentence length to create rhythm
- Break up dense sections with examples or anecdotes
Content Standards
Research & Accuracy
Always:
- ✅ Cite sources properly
- ✅ Link to original research and studies
- ✅ Verify facts before publishing
- ✅ Update statistics to most recent available
- ✅ Fact-check names, titles, and firm information
Source Hierarchy:
- Primary sources (court filings, official statements, original research)
- Reputable news outlets (Bloomberg Law, WSJ, Legal Dive)
- Industry publications (ABA Journal, American Lawyer)
- Expert interviews and quotes
- Secondary sources (use with caution)
SEO Best Practices
Keywords:
- Research relevant keywords for each post
- Include primary keyword in: headline, first paragraph, subheadings
- Use semantic variations naturally
- Don’t keyword stuff — maintain readability
Metadata:
- Write compelling meta descriptions (150-160 characters)
- Use descriptive alt text for images
- Create SEO-friendly URLs (short, keyword-rich)
Links:
- Include 2-4 outbound links to authoritative sources
- Add 1-2 internal links to relevant LawFuel content
- Use descriptive anchor text (not “click here”)
Images & Visuals
Requirements:
- Minimum size: 240×180 pixels
- Format: JPG or PNG
- Include photo credit/source
- Ensure images add value (not just decoration)
Types:
- Relevant stock photos
- Data visualizations and charts
- Screenshots (when demonstrating tools/processes)
- Infographics
Editorial Standards
Before Submission
Content Checklist:
- Original content (no plagiarism)
- Proper citations for all sources
- No sales motives or overt promotion
- No affiliate links
- Fact-checked and verified
- Spell-checked and proofread
- SEO optimized
- Images included with credits
What We Don’t Accept
- ❌ Purely promotional content
- ❌ Affiliate marketing disguised as articles
- ❌ Rehashed or republished content
- ❌ Poorly researched or unsubstantiated claims
- ❌ Content written by or heavily generated by AI (without disclosure and editing)
- ❌ Clickbait headlines
- ❌ Content that doesn’t serve our lawyer audience
Editorial Review Process
- Submission: Draft sent to lawfuel@gmail.com
- Initial Review: Editorial team evaluates fit and quality
- Editing: Copy editing for style, clarity, and accuracy
- Author Review: Changes sent back for approval (if major)
- Final Approval: Publisher sign-off
- Publication: Scheduled and promoted
Note: We reserve the right to make edits and determine publication quality.
Voice Examples
✅ GOOD: LawFuel Voice
“Google’s rolling out AI ‘snapshots’ that’ll fundamentally change how lawyers need to think about content marketing. Here’s what’s happening: when someone searches for legal information, they’ll see AI-generated summaries pulled from multiple sources — not just the traditional blue links. For law firms banking on that coveted top spot in search results? Time to rethink your strategy.”
Why it works:
- Conversational yet authoritative
- Uses contraction naturally
- Addresses reader directly
- Explains the “so what?”
- Active voice throughout
❌ AVOID: Too Stiff
“It has been determined that Google will be implementing artificial intelligence-generated content summaries. Legal practitioners should be aware of these developments as they may impact search engine optimization strategies currently being employed by law firms.”
Why it fails:
- Passive voice
- Unnecessarily formal
- Lacks energy and urgency
- Doesn’t engage the reader
Target Audience
Primary: Legal Professionals
- Law firm partners and associates
- Solo practitioners
- In-house counsel
- Legal marketers
- Practice managers
What They Care About:
- Growing their practice
- Staying competitive
- Managing their firms efficiently
- Legal technology and innovation
- Industry trends and news
- Marketing and business development
- Career advancement
How They Read:
- Scan headlines and subheadings
- Look for quick takeaways
- Value practical advice
- Appreciate data and evidence
- Respect their time — get to the point
Submission Guidelines
For Guest Contributors
Before you write:
- Review these guidelines thoroughly
- Research our existing content
- Identify your unique angle
- Ensure you can provide original insights
Your pitch should include:
- Working headline
- Brief outline (3-5 bullet points)
- Your credentials/bio
- Why this matters to lawyers NOW
Submit to: lawfuel@gmail.com
Subject line: “Guest Blog Pitch: [Your Working Title]”
Author Bio Requirements:
- Full name or author name
- Professional title/description
- Clear headshot (JPG or PNG)
- Brief bio (200 characters max)
- Social media handles (LinkedIn, Twitter, etc.)
Content Calendar Tips
Trending Topics for Lawyers:
- BigLaw salary scales and compensation
- Legal technology and AI
- Law firm rankings and reputation
- Practice management software
- Marketing and SEO
- Regulatory changes
- Industry M&A and moves
- Work-life balance and wellbeing
Evergreen Content:
- How-to guides
- Best practices
- Tool comparisons
- Career advice
- Skill development
Seasonal Opportunities:
- January: New year predictions and planning
- March-April: Law school decisions, hiring season
- May-June: Summer associate programs
- September: Fall recruiting, conference season
- November-December: Year-end reviews, predictions
Continuous Improvement
These guidelines are living documents. As LawFuel evolves, so should our voice and standards.
Regular Reviews:
- Update quarterly or as needed
- Incorporate feedback from readers
- Adapt to industry changes
- Refine based on performance data
Feedback Loop:
- Monitor comments and engagement
- Track which topics resonate
- Analyze top-performing posts
- Survey readers periodically
Quick Reference Card
The LawFuel Formula
- Hook them fast → Lead with the news angle
- Respect their intelligence → Don’t over-explain, but do cite sources
- Make it useful → Always answer “so what can I do with this?”
- Keep it moving → Short paragraphs, active voice, varied rhythm
- End with action → Give them next steps
Voice Checklist
- Would I say this to a smart colleague?
- Is it newsy and current?
- Does it respect readers’ time?
- Is it authoritative without being stuffy?
- Can lawyers actually USE this information?
Contact & Questions
Editorial Inquiries: lawfuel@gmail.com
Publisher: John Bowie
Website: www.lawfuel.com
Since: 2001
Mission: Providing news, tools, and views to help lawyers succeed
These guidelines ensure LawFuel maintains its distinctive voice: authoritative yet approachable, newsy yet useful, professional yet readable. When in doubt, write like you’re having coffee with a smart lawyer who values their time.