The area, or areas, in which your firm chooses to operate will shape your entire strategy — the clients you attract, the way you market, the price you can charge and the rhythm of your working week. It is one of the first and most important decisions you will make.
Why your area of law matters
Your practice area is more than a label. It determines your ideal client, the complexity and volume of your matters, the seasonality of your cashflow and the regulatory obligations you carry. A firm built around high-volume conveyancing operates very differently to one built around a handful of complex commercial disputes.
Choosing deliberately — rather than simply continuing whatever you happened to practise as an employee — lets you design a firm that fits the life and income you want.
Start with your strengths and network
The most sustainable firms are usually built on existing expertise and relationships. Before looking at the market, take an honest inventory:
- Which areas do you genuinely enjoy and know deeply?
- Where do you already have a referral network or reputation?
- What work could realistically follow you, ethically and contractually?
Confidence and credibility compound. Building on what you already do well shortens the path to your first instructions.
Weigh demand, competition and margin
Next, look outward. A practice area needs enough sustained demand to keep you busy, a level of competition you can differentiate against, and a fee structure that supports your overheads. Consider whether the work is one-off or recurring, fixed-fee or hourly, and how sensitive it is to the wider economy.
Factor in regulation and risk
Different areas carry different compliance and insurance profiles. Some attract higher professional indemnity premiums or stricter anti-money-laundering obligations. Understand these costs up front — they directly affect whether an area is viable for a new, lean firm.
Decide: focused or multi-service?
A tightly focused firm is easier to market and become known for, but concentrates your risk. A broader, multi-service firm spreads risk but demands more systems and marketing. Many successful new firms launch with a single, clear specialism and expand once they have stable cashflow.
Quick decision checklist
- I have real expertise and enjoy this area
- There is steady, reachable demand
- The fees support my overheads and PII
- I understand the compliance burden