In depth
Why AI search is reshaping Missouri legal marketing
For two decades, winning a Missouri legal client meant ranking on Google's first page. That playbook is fracturing. A growing share of Missouri residents now open ChatGPT, Gemini or Perplexity, ask a direct question, and act on the short, cited answer the model returns. There is no page two.
This shifts the unit of competition from keywords to citations. AI engines assemble answers from sources they trust: structured data that states your firm's facts unambiguously, authoritative content organized around the practice areas and courts you actually serve, and third-party mentions across directories, bar listings and review platforms.
Our approach — Generative Engine Optimization layered on a full SEO, local and content foundation — is built to put Missouri firms in that shortlist and keep them there, measured by signed cases rather than vanity traffic.
“The firms that win the next decade in Missouri won't be the ones with the biggest ad budget — they'll be the ones AI trusts enough to recommend.”
Advertising compliance
Missouri attorney-advertising rules every law firm marketer must follow
Missouri follows the standard ABA Model approach to attorney advertising regulation without requiring pre-approval or pre-filing of advertisements (unlike stricter states like Florida and Texas). The state prohibits false/misleading communications and requires record-keeping for two years, with specific restrictions on solicitation methods, specialization claims, and testimonials. Missouri's framework emphasizes truthfulness, transparency in past-results claims, and compliance with rules rather than administrative pre-review.
False or misleading communications
4-7.1A lawyer shall not make a false or misleading communication about the lawyer or the lawyer's services; a communication is misleading if it omits a fact that makes it materially misleading, creates unjustified expectations about results, or states the lawyer can achieve results by violating the Rules.
Testimonials & past results
4-7.2(b)When proclaiming results obtained on behalf of clients (damage awards, favorable verdicts or settlements), advertisements must state that past results afford no guarantee of future results and every case must be judged on its own merits; paid testimonials and endorsements must disclose that payment was made.
Record-keeping & retention
4-7.2(c)A lawyer shall retain copies of all advertisements and related solicitation materials for at least two years after dissemination, including documentation of when and where the advertisement was used.
Solicitation prohibitions
4-7.3(b)A lawyer shall not send a written solicitation to any prospective client if it involves coercion, duress, fraud, harassment, intimidation, undue influence, contains false or misleading statements, or makes unsupported comparative claims about lawyer quality.
Solicitation methods
4-7.3(d)Written solicitations to prospective clients must be sent only by regular United States mail (not certified/registered delivery), must not resemble legal pleadings, and must disclose how the lawyer obtained information if the solicitation was prompted by a specific occurrence affecting the recipient.
Specialization claims
4-7.4A lawyer shall not state or imply specialization unless the communication contains a disclaimer that neither the Supreme Court of Missouri nor The Missouri Bar reviews or approves certifying organizations or specialist designations (exceptions: 'patent attorney' recognized by USPTO, and 'admiralty' by maritime tradition).
Sources
- Missouri Rules of Professional Conduct - Rule 4 (Main Index) — Official Missouri Courts page containing all Rules of Professional Conduct related to advertising (4-7.1 through 4-7.5)
- Rule 4-7.1 - Communication Concerning a Lawyer's Services — Governs false/misleading communications about legal services
- Rule 4-7.2 - Advertising — Prohibits false/misleading advertisements, requires past-results disclaimers, testimonial disclosures, and two-year record retention
- Rule 4-7.3 - Direct Contact with Prospective Clients — Restricts solicitation methods; direct mail only via regular mail, prohibits misrepresentation and unsolicited contact