Law Firm SEO Microsites: How "Off-Site SEO" Vendors Hijack Your Brand episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 14, 2026 · 22 MIN

Law Firm SEO Microsites: How "Off-Site SEO" Vendors Hijack Your Brand

from Minneapolis Made · host Christopher Merry

In this episode we unpack a quiet but devastating scheme that has spread across the legal industry: the "off-site SEO" lead-generation contract that ends with a law firm losing control of its own brand name in Google, Maps, and AI search.The pitch is irresistible. A vendor calls and says: "We do SEO for law firms. No upfront cost. No retainer. You only pay when we deliver a signed case." The math feels like free money. So the firm signs. What they don't realize is that the vendor is not optimizing the firm's own website. The vendor is building a brand-new keyword-stuffed microsite at a domain the vendor owns — something like autoaccidentlawyer[state].com — and stamping the firm's name, address, and tracking phone number on every page. The firm pays per signed case. The vendor owns the URL, the hosting, the WordPress install, the schema, the call tracking, the Search Console property, and the Google Business Profile edits.That's the setup. The damage compounds from there.We walk through eleven specific stages of how the scheme actually unwinds:The pitch. Why per-case billing sounds like the safest deal a managing partner has ever heard, and why it is structurally the opposite.What the vendor actually builds. The templated WordPress microsite, the keyword-targeted EMD (exact-match domain), the duplicated NAP, the scraped attorney bios, and why the site is technically the firm's brand-asset replica but legally and operationally the vendor's property.The authority gap. How Google's link graph and topical authority accrue to the vendor's domain — not the firm's — because every backlink, mention, citation, press hit, and review eventually points at the microsite the firm thinks is "their page."The real target is your brand name. The vendor isn't competing for "personal injury lawyer Houston." They're competing for your firm's exact name. Within twelve to eighteen months the vendor's microsite outranks the firm's own website on its own brand SERP. Every consumer who Googles the firm clicks a domain the firm does not own."But if I show up twice, isn't that good?" The contrarian-sounding argument managing partners make to themselves, and the reason it's wrong. Two listings owned by two different parties is not redundancy — it's a transfer of equity.The Goodfellas reality. Every marketing channel the firm runs — TV, radio, billboards, sponsorships, referrals, paid search, organic word-of-mouth — now generates demand that gets harvested by the vendor's domain. The vendor invoices per case. The firm pays for the demand it created, twice.How the damage spreads. We trace the contamination through Google Business Profile (NAP-inconsistency flags), Apple Maps, Bing, Yelp, the Google Knowledge Graph, and the AI Overview / ChatGPT / Perplexity citation layer — the new top-of-funnel that pulls from the highest-authority page, which is now the vendor's. Includes the E-E-A-T and YMYL signals legal pages have to carry, and what happens when those signals are routed away from the firm's own domain.The 18-month brand-equity transfer. A timeline of how the SERP changes month by month. Months 1–6 look like growth. Months 7–12 look like plateau. Months 13–18 the firm's own domain falls behind the vendor's on its own brand query, and the firm doesn't notice because cases are still coming in — from the vendor.The bait-and-switch. Why the first six months always look like success — and the specific reporting trick that masks the loss of brand control until the contract has accrued enough switching cost that walking away feels prohibitive.The hostage close. What happens when the firm finally tries to fire the vendor. The vendor keeps the domain, the hosting, the GBP edits, the call tracking, the schema, the reviews, and the brand SERP position. The vendor then resells the same domain, with the same NAP slot vacated, to a competing firm in the same market. The original firm starts from scratch — at zero — on a brand name they spent twenty years building.The test. A 60-second checklist any law firm can run today to know whether they are caught up in this. We walk through the exact Google queries, the WHOIS lookup, the Search Console ownership question, and the Google Business Profile "primary website" field that tells you who actually controls your brand presence.The rule. The single contract clause every firm should require before signing any lead-generation deal, and the single question every firm should ask before approving a "free" microsite.The bottom line. This is not lead generation. It is brand hijacking through SEO disguised as a no-risk pay-per-case offer. It will destroy a firm's organic brand presence inside two years. The only firms that survive it are the ones that recognize the pattern before signing.Who this episode is for: managing partners, marketing directors, and solo attorneys who are currently in a per-case lead-gen contract — or who have been pitched one in the last six months. Also useful for in-house marketing teams at multi-location firms, and for legal marketing consultants doing due diligence on a vendor before recommending them to a client.What you'll walk away with: a clear mental model of the scheme, an eleven-stage timeline of how the damage compounds, the specific Google + GBP + WHOIS test to run on your own firm today, the one contract clause that prevents the entire thing, and the language to use with your partners when you raise the alarm.Full written breakdown with screenshots, citation capsules, the testing checklist, and the recommended contract clause is at minneapolismade.com/blog/law-firm-seo-microsites/.Hosted by Minneapolis Made, a Twin Cities web design and SEO studio that audits law-firm digital footprints and rebuilds brand-equity ownership after vendor relationships end. $85/hr, hourly, no packages, no lock-in.

In this episode we unpack a quiet but devastating scheme that has spread across the legal industry: the "off-site SEO" lead-generation contract that ends with a law firm losing control of its own brand name in Google, Maps, and AI search. The pitch is irresistible. A vendor calls and says: "We do SEO for law firms. No upfront cost. No retainer. You only pay when we deliver a signed case." The math feels like free money. So the firm signs. What they don't realize is that the vendor is not opti...

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Law Firm SEO Microsites: How "Off-Site SEO" Vendors Hijack Your Brand

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This episode was published on June 14, 2026.

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In this episode we unpack a quiet but devastating scheme that has spread across the legal industry: the "off-site SEO" lead-generation contract that ends with a law firm losing control of its own brand name in Google, Maps, and AI search.The pitch...

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