Title: Expert Witnesses Shine with Winning Word Selections Word Count: 495 Summary: A picture may paint a thousand words, but in the expert witness field you still need to find the right words to describe your practice. It may sound easy, but it is not! Even a seasoned writer searches for appropriate language. Keywords: Expert Witnesses Shine with Winning Word Selections Article Body: A picture may paint a thousand words, but in the expert witness field you still need to find the right words to describe your practice. It may sound easy, but it is not! Even a seasoned writer searches for appropriate language. <b>Why is word selection important?</b> Reason # 1: Attorneys and paralegals find you online by searching on keywords. Reason # 2: Search engines categorize your website based on Metatags and keyword density. Reason # 3: Prospects look for certain phrases when they need an expert witness with very specific experience. <b>Five sources for industry buzz words</b> Now is a good time to take an inventory of your website and promotional material. If your copy is stale, here are some good places to look for useful ideas to freshen up your own service descriptions. Monitor competitor sites and maintain a file of “best practices.” Personalize and incorporate the good ideas into your own work to keep your website and printed materials current. Review websites of law firms that specialize in your area of practice. Read their newsletters, articles and practice descriptions to gather ideas on important words and phrases you can use. Take notice of the presentations being made at leading industry conferences. You will discover newsworthy subjects described with catchy titles and important keywords. Visit industry association websites to look for fact sheets, press releases or newsletters that outline current events. Add appropriate keywords to your own website to stay up-to-date. Explore federal, state and local government agency websites. These can be an excellent reference source for legislation, regulations and enforcement actions. Read national newspapers, local dailies, state Bar Journals, online legal news sources and trade publications to see how emerging trends and key industry issues are described. <b>The “Ins” and “Outs” of good copywriting</b> Lawyers frequently need to know about standards and practices. Identify terms and protocols that are reasonable and customary in your field and include the technical terminology in your service descriptions. Standards-setting organizations govern best practices in many industries. If you are an expert witness in standards issued by ANSI, JCAHO, IEEE, ISO, UL or the alphabet soup of other organizations, spell out the organization name, include the acronym and specify the standard when you describe your pertinent experience. Industry metrics frequently guide professionals when they evaluate a situation and determine a recommended course of action. Examples include the Richter earthquake scale, the Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale or the Stanford-Binet IQ scale. You will want to document every scale in your field that you can address in a court of law. How often have you visited a website that spouts so many generalities that it sounds like “blah, blah, blah, blah, blah”? BORING! Do not let this happen to you. You will not distinguish yourself in a crowded field by relying on general terms like “courteous professional services” or “high quality litigation services.” Stick to the facts, describe your services thoughtfully and you will be well positioned for enhanced online visibility.