The Hometown Lawyer with Joshua Hodges

One of my favorite parts of hosting The Founding Partner Podcast is that I get to meet lawyers who challenge the idea of what “success” is supposed to look like.
Josh Hodges is one of those people.
He’s a personal injury attorney out of Hamilton, Ohio—just north of Cincinnati—but his impact stretches across dozens of small towns throughout the state. And what stood out to me the most wasn’t just how he built his firm. It was how grounded, thoughtful, and intentional he’s been at every step.
We talked for over an hour about everything from small-town marketing to parenting through medical challenges, and by the end, I wasn’t just impressed—I was inspired.
He Didn’t Take the Traditional Route—And That’s the Point
Josh didn’t go straight from college to law school. In fact, he didn’t finish undergrad until his late twenties. He worked all kinds of jobs—factories, the DMV, you name it—while going to school at night. He finally became a lawyer at 32.
“I didn’t really have a career before law,” he told me. “I just worked.”
When he landed a job in big law doing civil litigation, it felt like a win. But friends and family kept calling him with the kind of cases he couldn’t take—DUI, injury, everyday issues. That’s when it clicked.
“I wasn’t even trying to get this business. But it kept coming.”
In 2017, he took the leap and left big law. He started a firm with a friend from law school, and they made a good run of it for a year and a half. But Josh wanted to return to his hometown, focus on personal injury, and build something rooted. His partner had other plans. So Josh started over again.
Why “The Hometown Lawyer” Works
Josh didn’t want some gimmicky slogan. He just wanted something that felt true. Something his uncles wouldn’t make fun of, as he put it.
That’s how The Hometown Lawyer was born.
“It’s not too flashy, but people remember it,” he said. And more importantly, it felt like a natural fit for the way he wanted to practice: hyper-local, accessible, and genuinely connected to his community.
His firm grew. His team grew. And eventually, he bought an old building downtown—one with history. During renovations, they uncovered 100-year-old hand-painted signs hidden beneath metal siding.
It was like a symbol of everything he’d been doing all along: uncovering something real underneath the surface.
The Life Experience Advantage
When Josh started law school, he felt behind. His peers were younger, quicker, and already on the fast track.
But once he graduated, something flipped.
“I wasn’t a kid. I had owned real estate. I had a kid. I looked like a grown-up, and people trusted me.”
That trust became a superpower, especially in small towns where lawyers often feel distant or elitist. Josh didn’t talk like a suit. He talked like someone who’d been behind a time clock and understood what it meant to live paycheck to paycheck.
Clients saw themselves in him. And that made all the difference.
The Hardest Pivot—and the One That Changed Everything
A few months after launching his first firm, Josh’s daughter was born with a severe genetic condition. His wife had to leave her job. The safety net he thought they had—gone.
If he hadn’t already made the leap out of big law, he admits, he probably never would’ve.
Instead, he was in it. Sitting on the floor at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, working with a freelancer from Pakistan to build his law firm’s website.
“I had no choice but to make it work.”
That shift also changed how he thought about his role. He no longer wanted to be in trial all day. He had to be able to run the business from the hospital if needed. So he built a team. Delegated. Trained people. And began focusing more on marketing, vision, and operations.
The Reluctant TikToker Who Built a Brand
Josh is now one of the most creative law firm marketers I’ve met—not because he loves marketing, but because he believes in community.
He’s posted thousands of short videos on TikTok, YouTube, Facebook, and Instagram—some about the law, but many just about life. Reviews of taco joints. Conversations with his wife. Behind-the-scenes shots of small-town businesses.
“I started because I knew I had to. I didn’t even like it at first.”
But it worked.
His first case from TikTok came when someone watched a taco review, visited the restaurant, liked it, and decided to hire Josh as their lawyer.
Now? His TikTok following is over 80,000. He gets cases. He’s hired employees through the platform. And more importantly, he’s built trust at scale.
“I can’t outspend the big firms. But I can out-Hamilton them.”
That stuck with me.
Small-Town Law, Done Differently
Josh isn’t trying to dominate a major city. He’s not trying to be everywhere. But he is trying to show up where lawyers are needed, and often absent.
In many small Ohio towns, he’s one of the only personal injury attorneys serving the community. He opens small offices. He hires people with no legal experience, but deep roots in the area. He trains them. He listens. And he keeps showing up.
“If someone comes into my town and hustles harder than me, I’ll tip my hat to them. But that’s the only way they’ll beat me.”
The Lawyer Who Builds More Than Cases
I asked Josh about his partnership—how it works, why it works, and what he’s learned. His answer was simple: “We’re different, but we both lead with generosity.”
He runs the business. His partner runs the cases. And when tough decisions come up—like giving someone a raise—they never argue about it.
He’s not trying to be the biggest trial lawyer anymore. He’s trying to be the kind of leader who creates a place people want to work.
And he’s doing it.
Final Thoughts
At one point in our conversation, Josh and I connected on something deeper than law. I shared that my daughter had cancer when she was born, and how hard that was on our family. Josh opened up about his daughter’s journey and how they were told she might never walk or talk.
Today, she does both.
There’s a quiet resilience in the way Josh speaks. And it’s no surprise that same energy shows up in his work. In his marketing. In his community. In his story.
“You don’t have to go viral to make an impact,” he told me. “You just have to keep showing up. Every day.”
If you ask me, that’s exactly what sets him apart.
And it’s why The Hometown Lawyer is more than a brand—it’s a blueprint.
AND MORE TOPICS COVERED IN THE FULL INTERVIEW!!! You can check that out and subscribe to YouTube.
If you want to know more about Josh Hodges, you may reach out to him at:
- Website: https://thehometownlawyers.com/
- TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thehometownlawyer
- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCeYcMaMaN2rb9jMlqt4EIdQ
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehometownlawyer/
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/josh.hodges.207018/
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joshua-hodges-hplaw
Connect with Jonathan Hawkins:
- Website: https://www.lawfirmgc.com/
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathan-hawkins-135147/
- Podcast: https://lawfirmgc1.wpenginepowered.com/podcast/
Josh Hodges: [00:00:00] So people, you know, set reasonable expectations. You know, if people, I’m more worried about where my views come from than necessarily the total number. If I’m an Ohio lawyer, I’d rather have a thousand views in Ohio than a million in Los Angeles. Doesn’t really do me that good. Looks cool. It’s a vanity metric.
So you know, think about those things when you’re doing videos, I think is what a lot of people kind of sell themselves short of how well they’re doing. I think a lot of times people are doing maybe better than they think.
Jonathan Hawkins: Great point. So I wanna go back to your current firm now. I did wanna touch on this is, so you started it with a partner and so that’s a question I get a lot, you know, should I go by myself? Should I do a partner? You know, what was your thought process in going out with a partner versus just saying, you know what, I can do this.
Josh Hodges: Yeah, I mean I knew I could kind of do it. I’m a bit of a social person I think. I didn’t wanna just be alone. You know, you don’t know if you’re gonna grow. I do think, you know, and me and my partner are very different people, personality and everything, skillset. But we do kind of agree, like we’re, me and him align a lot on, is like, kind of [00:01:00] like on the money thing.
Like, we’re both pretty generous people. I think.
Welcome to the Founding Partner Podcast. Join your host, Jonathan Hawkins, as we explore the fascinating stories of successful law firm founders. We’ll uncover their beginnings, triumph over challenges, and practice growth. Whether you aspire to launch your own firm, have an entrepreneurial spirit, or are just curious about the legal business, you’re in the right place.
Let’s dive in.
Jonathan Hawkins: Welcome to Founding Partner podcast. I’m your host, Jonathan Hawkins. This is a podcast where I get to interview founders and owners of law firms to hear about their journeys and hopefully learn some lessons that they have, or at least some things that they have learned all along the way.
And hopefully I, and you, the listener, can learn from those as well. So, excited about today’s guest today, we’ve got Josh Hodges, who is a plaintiff’s personal injury [00:02:00] lawyer out of, I’ll call it the Cincinnati, Ohio area. I’ll let Josh fill us in exactly where it is, but Josh, welcome to the show.
Why don’t you introduce yourself. Tell us about your firm and where you guys
Josh Hodges: Yeah, thanks for having me. Yeah, I mean it’s Cincinnati area, but I will draw the distinction. We’re in the city of Hamilton, Hamilton, Ohio, you know, people here. We got our own little city up here. It’s about, it’s just one county north of Cincinnati, so about a little bit closer to Cincinnati than I am to Dayton, but we’re in between the two.
And that’s where I started. We do personal injury. We have six lawyers. I think our team total is about 26, 27 people right now. Growing fast, just the number’s been going up slowly, you know, not so slowly some years. Yeah, been going this week actually is the seven, I think it was like yesterday is the seven years we’ve been in business as partners.
We were attorneys before that. Yeah, I mean, I was, I went to law school a little bit later. I worked in a lot of just random blue collar jobs and I ended up getting a job as at the DNVI gave driving tests to kids. I did all sorts of stuff when I was, I was going to undergrad at night, so I didn’t become an attorney until I was [00:03:00] 32.
And I got a job in big law and big firm had like five, 600 attorneys did civil litigation there. And then 2017 left there, went out on my own for about a year and a half. And then in 2018, about halfway through, me and Scott Team Dub started doing just the personal injury focus here in Hamilton. It was our hometown.
So I, I kind of knew I needed a, needed some kind of catchphrase or tagline or nickname or something, but I didn’t wanna be something cheesy, like something that people have, even though it works. No offense to anyone, you know, but I wanted something that like my uncles wouldn’t make fun of me for, I guess.
But I needed something you can remember. So I went with the hometown lawyer. It was kind of like, you know, memorable enough without being too anything they could make fun of me too hard for. So that’s what I stuck with. And then it seemed to work. As we’ve branched out into other towns though, I had to like kind of rethink, you know, how I’m gonna brand this, you know, because I’m not, I’m not in my hometown in every town, obviously.
But we kind of just try to treat ’em all as if, you know, ’cause we’re in multiple areas. Try to treat ’em all as if, you know, I care about ’em all the same, you know, and try
Jonathan Hawkins: America is your hometown.
Josh Hodges: Yeah, [00:04:00] exactly. Everyone needs a hometown lawyer kind is Woods too, but
Jonathan Hawkins: Yeah. Well, cool. I wanna unpack all that stuff. There’s a lot. There was a lot there. So, um, so let’s go back. So, so law is sort of a second career for you. And you know, I have found I took a year and a half off, but I, and I did odd jobs, but I did not have a career before the law law school.
And most people just go straight through. I have found it’s not always this always this way, but I have found that the ones that had sort of a career before seemed to come out and hit the ground running a lot faster than those that sort of went through straight from undergrad to law school. What was your experience like having a career then and then sort of having to stop and go back to law school and then start over?
Josh Hodges: yeah. I don’t know if I ever really had a career. That mean I worked a lot. I mean, I got a job when I was 14. I had all kinds of jobs, but not one of ’em. I’d say that was my career. I mean, I worked at the DMV for a few years, that was the longest. But none of them ever felt like I was gonna stick there forever.
So, I mean, I guess in my mind I worked long enough to have a [00:05:00] career prior, but I was going to undergrad at night, so I had, I hadn’t graduated college is the reason I didn’t start law school for so long. It just took me a while to get through undergrad at night. But I do, and I felt like I was behind when I was in law school.
People. My, you know, everybody my age was already attorney if they were gonna be, or a lot of ’em were. But I do think what you said when I got out, I do think I hit the ground running a little quicker and kind of got after it a little bit faster than some of the people I went to law school with. And I think I’ve thought about that a lot.
Why that was, I think part of it, you know, like when you look an attorney, they’ve been an attorney 20 years, they got experience, they got their stuff together. Part of it’s the 20 years of legal experience is important for sure, but I think it’s also just 20 more years of being alive is part of it. And now how much of that equals out?
I don’t know. But I think, you know, a guy’s been an attorney 40 years, he’s a smart lawyer. Part of it’s just that he’s 60 something years old and ’cause a lot of the law just like, you know, experience in life. And so I think, yeah, people my biological age when I graduated had already been lawyers seven years.
But yeah, I think the people I was [00:06:00] graduating with they’re in their twenties. I didn’t think I was necessarily equal with them, even though we both had no legal experience. I had kids. Yeah, I had a kid and I’d owned real estate and I’d done other things and and I was just older. I think people are more likely to hire you if you don’t look like a kid.
So, I mean, I had, I was still young, I was 34 when I started the firm, relatively, but I wasn’t like a kid, you know, I could talk to someone who was in their fifties and they, you know, I looked like a grown a, a full grownup, you know? So I got hired on cases quicker, I think, than I would’ve if I’d have been 22 or three or whatever, four or five, whatever people get outta law school.
Yeah, so I think I’ve been trying to catch up, I guess. I mean, it puts a little chip on your shoulder too. You, You know, you’re behind, or at least I felt like I was, so I need to go extra hard to catch up the people that are 42 like me, where they’re at in their career. I think
Jonathan Hawkins: You know, it’s funny, there’s this saying, I’ve heard somebody say chips on shoulders equals chips in pockets, so, not a bad thing.
Josh Hodges: No, it, Yeah. It keeps you going. I mean, I kind of always, you know, it’s like the tricky plan yourself to keep yourself going. I think, you know, you should always have some sort of chip going, I think even if it ain’t that [00:07:00] serious. But I do have some chips on my shoulders and I put ’em there myself, and no one else ever put ’em there.
I mean, I think you do it to yourself, but I don’t necessarily think it’s a bad thing either. I mean, it can be if you let it weigh you down, but I think I’ve, it took me a while to kind of like blossom and find, I was definitely a late bloomer, but you know, I kind of find my footing, what I like to do and what I was good at and I’ve kind of like leaned into that as hard as I can now and try to, you know, keep growing and keep learning and you know, bring some people along with me is kind of, you know, part I’m really enjoying now as I got more lawyers working for us and we’ve seen other people kind of find, you know, their footing and stuff in the wall. It’s kind of fun.
Jonathan Hawkins: So, you know, I think there is something there with the, you know, sort of, I mean, you are older, so, you have a little more gravitas for a client versus somebody like me that took a while for me to grow out of this baby face. I had to lose my hair, like, to get out of it. But so you have that advantage.
And I think I wanna talk about sort of your sort, I call it your blue collar beginnings. You know, looking at your [00:08:00] bio, you know, you worked in factory jobs. I mean, you did a lot of stuff and I imagine for a consumer facing type practice that you have now that really helps you connect with your clients, I would imagine.
Josh Hodges: Yeah, I think it does. I mean, I know it does. I think people, blue collar people, you know, especially people that haven’t went to college and they went to high school, maybe haven’t even got through high school. A lot of ’em, and they just like, you know, elite people, Ivy League people have, you know certain ideas about those types of people. People, blue collar people have certain you know, stereotypes of attorneys of us and people in suits and it ain’t always good. And I think trying to cut through that in real life and in my marketing has kind of always been one of my goals. And I knew I could more so than maybe other people.
’cause I sound like them. I’ve been, I can talk about things in my past that may resonate more so with them than I could, you know, if I was trying to do some finance job talking to big fancy people, I might have to figure out a way to get through. I think I could get along with anyone, but I knew my [00:09:00] background was more suited to consumer facing than it was being a big corporate lawyer.
And I was in big law. But, and I liked that and I didn’t hate it. And I think I could have done good there. But. I kind of knew that just my heart was just dealing with everyday people where I’m more comfortable and and it’s more fun to me. And I know a lot of attorneys that are maybe third, fourth generation lawyers might not be as naturally good with those types of folks.
So that’s what drew me to do it in my hometown. And my hometown was having kind of a resurgence. It was an old factory town. It’s, we’re right in the rust belt, man. Like every, everyone my ages grandpa worked in the factory here and then they all shut down in the seventies and eighties. And our town was kind of depressing when I was coming up, like a lot of towns in the Midwest.
But somewhere along the line when I was like going through law school, you know, I started looking around town. It, It was kind of on the up the upswing and I wanted to be part of that, you know. I think it’s a really good time to be in towns like this. A lot of them in Ohio are finding their, you know. Kind of late blooming or whatever me like, kind of like having to re refining themselves and [00:10:00] reinventing themselves. And I think it’s a, a good place to be in business, in my opinion. I don’t, you know, I like big cities. I like going to ’em, but that’s just not where I need to be in business. I’d rather be out kind of in a small town where maybe it doesn’t seem so sexy to be in, but real estate’s cheaper and rent’s cheaper and people need lawyers out there too.
And that’s just where I know that’s my niche. I found my niche where I need
Jonathan Hawkins: Well, yeah, I want to get into that, but Yeah, for sure. ’cause it’s very interesting. But before we get there, so you just, you went big law. I guess the first thing is sort of where, like, did you go to a big city? What city and why did you go to the big law route? Was it because it was the, they gave you an offer and they’re paying big bucks or
Josh Hodges: Basically, I mean, you know, I graduated high school. I, I didn’t take high school seriously. I just didn’t care. I got good enough grades to play sports, and that was about all, as long as I didn’t get in trouble, my mom wasn’t on me, you know, my brother got a little more trouble than me, so she was on his butt a little bit more than me.
I didn’t get in trouble, but I didn’t get good grades, but I wasn’t, I just didn’t try. I do good enough, you know, if I needed to try hard on a test to get me up to passing grade, I would do [00:11:00] that. But, you know, I just kind of, I wasn’t, I was bored. I just, I really hadn’t found any passion and, and it wasn’t, and a lot of guys in my family didn’t go to college, so it wasn’t like the thing to do.
I just figured I’d go ca catch a job as soon as I was 18, which is what I did. So I think I graduated high school with like a 2.2, and then I started going to college, kind of petering through. It took me like a decade, but during that decade of going to school at night, I started get, becoming a better student, taking it more seriously.
I got older, I had a kid, and by the time I graduated college, I was a pretty good student. You know, I was well into my twenties and then when in law school I did really well. So I was like, as the school should have got harder, I started doing better. And I got a job in big law offer, and the basically the recruit of the people at my law school that do the job posting, I mean, they, they have incentive.
I mean, they want someone in from their school to get a big law job. And they’re like, you gotta take that. You know? So I, I kept, I, and, and the pay, I mean, I had never made more than, I think I made $35,000 a year when I was at the job and before, so I never made more than about 30. I think I was making 38 grand and then I [00:12:00] obviously get offered a pretty good amount of money to work in Big Hall.
It was a, it was a, it was a firm, outta Cincinnati, but they have offices all over Midwest and I think in the South now. And they had a, they had kind of a satellite location in my county, which made it even easier. So I didn’t even have to drive downtown Cincinnati. It was like 15 minutes from my house.
So it was like the perfect place for a big law for me. And I worked there for a couple years, but I just kept getting calls from random people that I knew that I was the only lawyer they knew, like, Hey, I got a DUI or Hey, I got hit by a car, whatever it was. People don’t understand that like attorneys kind of specialize in something.
They just, and I would just tell ’em, I can’t take that case. I’m in government litigation or whatever. They’re like, what does that mean? You know? And I just kind of knew I wouldn’t starve if I, I was like keeping it in my mind like I was sending cases to other attorneys. Like I figured if I actually, and I wasn’t even trying to get this business, if I tried hard, I probably could make a go of it.
So that’s what I did. It was a
Jonathan Hawkins: so, so, yeah. So what finally pushed you, you know, there’s a lot of people, I mean, you talked to ’em, I’m sure I’ve heard it, where they’re like, yeah, one day I’ll do it, or. Or they say, man, I wish I could do what you did, but for whatever [00:13:00] reason they, they just don’t take the step and jump off and do it.
What, what led you to do it?
Josh Hodges: Yeah. I don’t know. I mean, I don’t have a perfect answer for it. I obviously, I don’t know why other people don’t, I’m not in their brain, but it is scary. I think part of it’s just, I kind of grew up, I wouldn’t say I was like, I’m on like dirt poor, but I was definitely like on the broker side of things compared to most lawyers.
You know, like I lived my grandma, she was on food stamps, you know, we didn’t have a lot of money and. But I, but it wasn’t like a bad childhood all the time. Like I’ve been kind of broke and I was still kind of happy. So I think I was never scared. Like I think some people, if you come from more upper middle class and you got 150 grand job, being broke is really scary to someone who’s never been broke and now being broke to me would suck, but it ain’t as scary ’cause I’ve already been there before.
And so I think I have a kind of a higher tolerance to that. ’cause I know that I was happy when I was a kid. I’m kind of a happy person. Like I wake up in a pretty good mood most of the time. And if I’m rich, I’ll probably be happy. And if I’m dead broke, I’ll probably be happy too. As long as you know that that’s not gonna really drive it.
It was more like I wanted, but I am competitive, so [00:14:00] I wanna win. So I wanna build up and have a real good firm just to see if I can, more so than money. So I think some people don’t leave big law because they’re scared. They might do not, well, not do well money wise or make a little less. So I wanted to make the jump just because, you know, I, I knew I wasn’t getting younger.
I was looking, I was always antsy too, like in big lawyer. You know, you’re like seventh on the bench to get in there and do something interesting. And I was older, I was like, man, I’m gonna be 45 before they even let me do anything cool. You know, like, and I just didn’t wanna wait that long and I didn’t.
And I thought that I could do better. I mean, really, I just kind of had some confidence that I’d build up. Took a long time, but I kind of knew. I, I deep down knew I could figure something out. I didn’t know quite what it was gonna be, but I kind of knew I was gonna be okay. And my, and I’m lucky I did it because it my wife had a job at the city, you know, just a basic, you know, job with, it wasn’t a great job, but enough to where we wouldn’t starve.
And she had benefits and. About nine months not even a year after I quit big law and started my firm. We had a second [00:15:00] child and my daughter had really severe genetic disorder. My wife lost her job, had to take care of her. So I lost the money. I thought the little bit of money she was making and the benefits, I lost all that.
So then I was just all me. If that, if I would’ve stayed another year in big law, which I was considering like, Hey, you know, wait one more year, pad my savings a little bit more, I never probably would’ve done it then. ’cause I wouldn’t. Yeah. So if I wouldn’t have left in 2017, I don’t know if I would’ve left in 2018.
I don’t know. Maybe I, I hope I would’ve got the gumption to do it, but I can’t say for sure. It would’ve been a heck of a lot. It was scary when I did it. It would’ve been a lot more scary when your daughter’s, you know, sick and she’s doing way be, I mean, she’s doing great. Like, way better than the doctors ever thought.
But you know, my wife’s never worked since then.
Jonathan Hawkins: mm-hmm.
Josh Hodges: Put the pressure, but, you know, pressure.
Jonathan Hawkins: glad your daughter’s doing better.
Josh Hodges: Thank you, man. She’s doing great. I mean, they told us that she might not walk or talk and she does all that. She goes directly to school. But yeah, I was sitting in the hospital, like working with a guy.
I found a guy on Upwork in Pakistan to build me my first website for my first firm here. I didn’t have hardly any money and [00:16:00] he was doing, I was sitting on the floor of the children’s hospital down in Cincinnati while we were building the wool website to build this firm. So, I mean, it was definitely, it wasn’t from easy beginnings, but I think sometimes, you know, sometimes the best things are built kind of that way.
You know, we’re definitely, we’ve been through some tough times and we’ll have some tough ones coming in the future, I’m sure. And you deal with ’em as they come.
Jonathan Hawkins: yeah I can relate a little, although I was at a firm, but I have twins that are 15 now, and our daughter was born with, with cancer and we went through a lot of shit for a number of years. And it was, you know, they give you the parade of horribles, but she’s actually. You know, we got past all those.
She’s doing
Josh Hodges: Oh, that’s awesome,
man.
Jonathan Hawkins: so yeah, I know. It’s tough. Now, I did not start my firm in the middle of that, so that’s a whole other element. But so you’ve got a partner now. Did you start your firm with a partner?
Josh Hodges: Yeah. A different partner though. I started a firm with a buddy of mine from law school. We did that for about a year and a half and [00:17:00] we were doing pretty good, but it just didn’t work out. And I wanted to come back to Hamilton, kind of do PI and he wanted to do something else. So, so I was with him for about a year and a half.
And then I transferred up to, I was doing that in Cincinnati. And then I moved to Ham, moved the office to Hamilton and teamed up with a different partner here in 2018. We’ve been together since then.
Jonathan Hawkins: All right. So let’s talk about that before we get to your current firm. So the first one you were doing, I guess, big government litigation or whatever.
Josh Hodges: The real big law firm. Yeah, it was a little bit of everything, but I was on the zoning litigation team, so that’s, anything with land use usually sounds boring, more boring than it is. It was actually kind of fun sometimes.
Jonathan Hawkins: Yeah, well, you start your firm with your friend. What were you guys doing? Like, what was the law that you did?
Josh Hodges: He was an immigration lawyer already and I was helping him kind of get clients for that because I was kind of good at getting people to hire. So no matter what it was, I mean, that’s what I’m kind of good at. And so I was helping him get immigration clients and I was helping him some on that.
So that was like most of our focus. But I was doing, like a lot of times with immigration, there’s like a criminal aspect. So I was doing that and I was doing some personal injury cases ’cause I had civil [00:18:00] litigation experience, so anything kind of with court I was doing, he was doing more of the paperwork for the immigration, like the filings and stuff.
And but we were brand new law firm. So you’re, I was doing a little bit of everything. I did a couple divorces, you gotta kind of do what you can early on. But I was getting good at getting cases. And I was getting cases that were too difficult for me even to do in different avenues. So I was co-counseling with other attorneys, finding older attorneys that knew I.
How to do a, you know, a big felony case or a bigger PI case and was learning from them. And then I kind, I had done clerk, law clerk and a personal injury plaintiff’s firm in law school. So I always kind of had that back of my mind as something I, like, I didn’t like billing, like the actual practice of keeping the hours kind of not up my alley.
So then, you know, when me and my first partner were kind of like deciding to go different ways, I was like, I’m just going all in on pi ’cause I know civil litigation and I knew some PI and I was just going to go full on that. And my partner, he’d been a lawyer about 12 years before I teamed up with [00:19:00] him.
He was just a true solo and he’d done some pi, so I just kind of convinced him, let’s just go full on, focus on that. And we’ve been doing that ever since.
Jonathan Hawkins: All right, so before we get to your current firm you said you’re, you were good. You’re good at getting clients, so let’s talk about that. So, you know, I mean. Every lawyer, every law firm, you gotta get a client. I mean, you’re not gonna survive if you can’t do that. So if you’re good at it then, then that’s, that’s golden.
So I guess the first thing is you know, really you know, why do you think you’re good at it and how did you get ’em?
Josh Hodges: I mean, I’ve got ’em all kinds of different ways. I mean, any way that’s ethical, you know, I’m not gonna break the rules, but I think why I’m good at it, I don’t know people, I li I like people, I think and I think people trust me, you know, pretty quick. And I keep their trust. I do the damnedest to do the right thing always.
That’s after though. But I think they feel that maybe I can’t really, you’d have to ask them. But I’ve done, I’ve always done pretty good at getting ’em early on. And then when you get in pi, it’s cut through. I mean, it’s, and it’s a lot of marketing. So then I had to figure out, you okay, people hire me when [00:20:00] I talk to them, but how do I even talk to them when I’m trying to do this?
PI is a whole nother, that’s a different. Avenue, you know, a different thing entirely. So then you get good at, you know, I learned about digital marketing. I read, I think every book you can think about it. And every follow, every podcast, every lawyer, podcast, under the sun, I listen. If they’re talking about marketing, I’m listening to ’em.
I go to conferences. Then I started really, you know, we were doing all right and then I really, I knew social media, I had to do better. And I didn’t quite get that. And I didn’t want to get good at it, really. I didn’t really enjoy it. I thought, you know, that’s for younger people. I’m old or whatever, older than I didn’t grow up with Facebook.
I didn’t wanna do it. But I, I really paid a lot of attention to people I thought were doing good, and tried to put my own spin on it and started doing videos begrudgingly, really, I didn’t wanna do it, you know? But I felt like I needed to do it, and I kind of, I owe it to obviously my family, but the people work for me to like, make sure we got cases coming in and I wanted to do as well as we could. And I knew doing a bunch of videos was probably the way to do it. And I started doing videos about five [00:21:00] years ago, and I’ve done thousands. I mean like probably 5,000 short form videos about all sorts of things. Law, food, local events, whatever it is. And just try to build a brand to help the firm.
That’s,
Jonathan Hawkins: so what do you do with the videos? Do you have a YouTube channel? You send it, put ’em on all the platforms? What,
Josh Hodges: Yeah, some, I I have, I started really doing well. I had Facebook and YouTube and everything, but I started really doing well on TikTok. For whatever reason would’ve been the last one I thought I’d be good at to be honest. But during the pandemic, I started posting on TikTok and it started taking off.
I do le, I do legal content, but I do most of my content’s not legal. It’s about, you know, behind the scenes being a lawyer. Sometimes it’s just talking to my wife while she’s cooking. Those are the ones that do the best. I do a lot of, I have a videographer, I hire him and he go, we go out together and we highlight.
Other people in our communities that we serve, like we call it the around town, around town with the hometown lawyer. And we do basically free commercials for nonprofits and little mom and pop businesses all over southwest Ohio. I’ve done [00:22:00] hundreds of ’em and, I go out and I meet the person. It’s usually a kindred spirit.
They’re in business. You know, I can understand scary to start a bakery. It’s scary to be a start, start a law firm. It’s scary to, you know, start anything, you know. And so I like people that are out there, you know, running businesses in small towns and we, and a lot of ’em don’t have marketing budgets and PI firm.
Once you start doing well, you hit some cases, you got a little bit, you know, I could, I put 20 grand more toward pay per click or maybe I could spend a few grand highlighting some other people every now and then. I think long term, for one, I know it’s more fun and I enjoy doing that better than spending more money on Google clicks.
But I think long term I. That’s where I can set myself apart from, I’m never gonna outspend the big guy in town, or the Morgan Morgan. I mean, it is impossible, but I can out, I can out Hamilton them. That’s what I tell people, you know, if someone come, if a lawyer comes and does more hustling in Hamilton, Ohio, then I’ll tip my hat to ’em, you know, they’ll deserve to win then.
You know, so that, that’s where, that’s the only thing a a small firm, a small guy or gal in a small town can do. You can [00:23:00] be the most hustling attorney in your town and do as many good things in your town as you can for other people. And social media is a good way to do that. You’re not gonna win in Google all the time.
You can win in your neighborhood and then
Jonathan Hawkins: Well, you made a, you made a couple really good points there. One, you know, lots of things in marketing work, lots of things. And if you’re gonna do something, you might as well do something that you enjoy and have fun doing. So that’s, that’s a good point. And the other point is, yeah, you can’t outspend, you know, the big, the dinosaurs or the, you know, 800 pound gorillas as they call ’em.
So you gotta do what’s gonna work and lean into what you got. So it sounds like you’ve been doing that. So tell me about TikTok real quick. I’m not on TikTok. If it makes it over to Twitter, I’ll see some TikTok stuff, but you know, you said you’ve done well on it. What does that mean?
Like, I mean, do you get cases where they say, yeah, I saw you on TikTok or, you know, how does it work?
Josh Hodges: Yeah. So I, my first introduction to TikTok was during the lockdown my wife had on her phone. And I said, what the hell is that? And she said, it’s TikTok. And I grabbed her for a minute. [00:24:00] It was, you know, it was early on, kids dancing, people being silly. And I was like, yeah, it’s the last thing I’m gonna look at.
And she was on it for a few months and I didn’t pay no more attention to it, just ’cause I, I don’t know. I’m too old or I’m better than that. I’m gonna read a book. I’m not gonna just waste my time on this. But then she kept, you know, sending me like little videos that were, first, they were kind of funny, then some of ’em were more serious.
And then I, I downloaded it just ’cause there was nothing to do in the pandemic, you know, it was boring, you know. And I started scrolling and I immediately, I didn’t know at the time it was because their algorithm was different. But I did notice like, I’m getting fed. It ain’t just kids being silly dancing.
Like, it’s this guy talking about real estate investing where it’s this person talking about, you know, history, like interesting stuff. There’s smart people on here. And I was like, this isn’t I don’t know, for whatever reason I was like, this is not what I thought it was. And I just thought it was an opportunity to be an early adopter.
So I started doing videos and I was one of the, the, I, I don’t know who the first attorney was on there, but I was definitely one of the early people on there. And I, we kind of grew up falling on there fast. I mean, I went from no followers to, I got [00:25:00] like 80 something thousand followers on there, but I had 50,000 probably in the first year.
The first year I really blew up on there. And. And you know, did I get cases off the bat? No. The first year I don’t think I got any. But I still remember the first case I got off that I directly know came from there. It was one of my paralegals who they were all making fun of me. Like, Josh is over here making tiktoks, whatever.
And I just kind of, you have to be stubborn enough to believe in something sometimes, even if there were people who are telling you that’s advice for any business person. Don’t be so stubborn that you won’t listen, but be stubborn enough that sometimes you won’t listen if you really believe in it. And I just believed in it.
And one day, sh and I was doing all these food review videos and highlighting other people on there and having as much fun with as I could, but hoping that it would help the business. And she answered a phone and she, I could hear her saying, you hired us. Why? And then she covered her and looked at me and she rolled her eyes.
’cause she knew my head was gonna grow a little bit ’cause I was right about something finally. And she said. They saw you watching or they saw you doing a video about tacos down the street in Hamilton and they went there and it was good. So now you’re their lawyer. I was like, [00:26:00] I just like it worked. I had to like look at the sky like, you know, like, it, it did work.
And because you feel and that’s for anyone out there trying to do on social, it feels like you’re yelling into the void for a long time. You ain’t gonna, it’s like lifting weights or something. You’re not gonna get like Arnold Schwarzenegger probably ever. You’re definitely not gonna get like that in a week or a month or six months.
Like it is a long, and social media is like that you gotta do post and stay consistent with it for a long time. And I’ve know I’ve got more cases that I can’t even track, but I, I do get cases where they directly tell me, they message me on there, they tell me they watch their tic, the tiktoks, and then I put the videos on all the other platforms too.
So I mean it, I know it helps. I cannot tell you how many cases directly a year I get from it. But I know, I mean, I’d go to, oh, I’d go to court and the bails would be like, Hey, we saw your video, like on Facebook it might be on a different platform where everybody watches ’em on their own place. But and then the other odd thing, I met a lot of, a lot over the years, a lot more attorneys got on there.
So I started meeting other attorneys in [00:27:00] other states on there. And I’ve gotten cases referred to me from Wisconsin or Minnesota or Florida from other personal injury attorneys that are maybe sometimes on the younger side that see me on there and they know I’ve been on there for a while. So then the last point, this is probably the most important point, ’cause everyone struggles to get employees.
I think three, you know, I got 25 team members. Three for sure. Three of my employees came off TikTok, which is like 10% of my staff, you know. So, people are on there and they, especially, I mean, younger people are the ones coming outta school and they’re on TikTok and they see me on there. Like, that guy doesn’t seem like too bad a jerk.
And he is down the road in Cincinnati or Hamilton or he, he was. Eating lunch in Columbus and I’m going to Ohio State, they see you and they reach out to you. So it
Jonathan Hawkins: they reach out or do you post a job, somehow, post a job ad on TikTok, or do they,
Josh Hodges: well, yeah, I’ll do a video on TikTok if I’m hiring sometimes other times they’ve put in on the job on Indeed. And we hired ’em through there and I was like, check for Indeed. But then when I really talked to ’em, I’m like, well, my dad [00:28:00] kept telling me to follow you on TikTok and I did for six months. So like, yeah, that helps.
So it others I had a lady one of my mar marketing assistants, I had a different lady of mine that was an influencer on TikTok and I reached out to her, offered her a job. She said, nah, I don’t really wanna do it, but my friend would be good at it. So she introduced me to her friend. I mean, like, it’s basically just networking.
I mean, that’s how I used to think social media is this, and in-person networking’s this and. You’re either good at one or the other, or people don’t wanna do one or the other. I think people need to throw that out. Like networking is networking and Yeah, in person’s one thing. But you know, me and you were getting to know each other here, it’s not quite in person, but it’s, you know, TikTok or Facebook, whatever it is, social media.
It, you can meet some really interesting people in there. And I’ve leaned in, I’m leaning into it even more and more. I’m starting, this is more new, but I’m, I’m meeting local content creators, people in my neighborhood that are not lawyers that are doing other types of content, and I’m teaming up on with them on stuff.
And I’m excited about where that’s gonna take me. That’s, I’ve only been doing that for a few, you know, two, three months now. [00:29:00] Been planning it longer, but I think there’s a lot of opportunity for there. You can tap into other people’s you know, their falling and, you know, if you’re a small attorney, you can’t afford TV ads.
You might be able to afford the lady in your town that has, maybe she just has 5,000 followers, but they’re all local. That’s a lot of people who like somebody. And if they’re vouching for you, that you’re a cool person. I don’t know what’s that worth? I can’t put a number on it. You tell me. Someone smarter than me maybe can, but it’s, it’s not bad.
Jonathan Hawkins: Yeah. So I’ve had, you know, I’m not on TikTok. I’m pretty active on LinkedIn. I’ve had some similar experiences. So one thing that I’ve noticed there are a lot of local, I’m here in Atlanta. There’s a lot of local attorneys that they never interact with the Post at all. They don’t comment, they don’t like, there’s no evidence that they saw it.
But then I’ll go out to some bar event or I’ll see ’em somewhere and then they mention it. Yeah, I see you on LinkedIn all the time, or whatever. So, for sure. And then also, sort of, I’ve met people like you and others all around the country. And it’s just, I mean, it’s enjoyable for me to get to know these people that [00:30:00] otherwise I would not have, especially you, the hometown lawyer.
You know, were you gonna be meeting somebody from, you know, Los Angeles or New York or wherever? I mean maybe, but chances are probably pretty low.
Josh Hodges: Yeah. And I know how I, I mean, I can, I can tie it back to how I’m talking to you through social media. I met Gary Sarner on social media, the radio guy. He introduced me to Steve. Steve introduced me to you, and this is how it goes. I mean, and, and it’s no different than meeting someone. If I’d have met them in person, they’d introduce me to you.
It’s no different. And I think a lot of people get that, a lot of people in the legal space I think this is important for people who maybe think they’re struggling on social media, they’re not doing well enough ’cause they’re not going viral. You know, you’re, you probably are not gonna go viral talking about your type of law if you do go viral, I’d almost be worried that you probably said something that you shouldn’t have and people are making fun of you.
’cause it’s not, if I’m talking about an uninsured motorist and I go viral, I’m gonna be scared. What did I say? They’re making fun of something bad. You know? It is not that [00:31:00] interesting to everyone all the time.
Jonathan Hawkins: you had something on your face. Yeah.
Josh Hodges: Yeah. Yeah. Said something, you know, like something awful, you know, apolitical or something and or something wrong off color and, or it is not gonna be probably a good thing.
And people like, well my views on videos are only getting 300. Well, how long would it take you to talk to 300 people in real life? That would be like a whole year, you know, once a day. 300 people watch your videos, not, don’t look at it as a bad thing. Yeah. Other Mr. Beast has 27 million. You’re not him.
He’s giving away a bag of million dollars. You know, like you’re talking about, you know, custody law in Utah, everyone in the country doesn’t care about that. But maybe if 80 people in your town watch one video that just change the goalpost of what you think is success. You know, like, I don’t think that’s bad.
Like this podcast, me and you are doing, I. Most of the country probably is not gonna be that interested in running a law firm. ’cause they don’t need to do that. You know? So if you tell me in a week that this has been seen by 5 million people, [00:32:00] I’m not gonna think that’s a good thing. I really, I’m gonna, it might be, I’m gonna wonder why, you know?
So people, you know, set reasonable expectations. You know, if people, I’m more worried about where my views come from than necessarily the total number. If I’m an Ohio lawyer, I’d rather have a thousand views in Ohio than a million in Los Angeles. Doesn’t really do me that good. Looks cool. It’s a vanity metric.
So you know, think about those things when you’re doing videos, I think is what a lot of people kind of sell themselves short of how well they’re doing. I think a lot of times people are doing maybe better than they think.
Jonathan Hawkins: Great point.
Real quick. Thanks for listening. If you’re getting any value out of this podcast, please take two seconds to hit the subscribe button and leave a five star review. It would really mean a lot to me. Now back to the show.
Jonathan Hawkins: So I wanna go back to your current firm now. I did wanna touch on this is, so you started it with a partner and so that’s a question I get a lot, you know, should I go by myself? Should I do a partner? You know, what was your thought process in going out with a partner [00:33:00] versus just saying, you know what, I can do this.
Josh Hodges: Yeah, I mean, I knew I could kind of do it. I’m a bit of a social person. I think. I didn’t wanna just be alone. You know, you don’t know if you’re gonna grow. I do think, you know, and me and my partner are very different people, personality and everything, skillset. But we do kind of agree, like we’re, me and him align a lot on, is like, kind of like on the money thing.
Like, we’re both pretty generous people. I think. Me and him have, I’ve never went to him been like, Hey, we need to give, you know, Becky a raise. And we had like an argument like we’re both like, yeah. Or whatever. Give somebody to li league, like, and amongst ourselves, we’re not like real, like, jealous about money, you know, we disagree on other things, but I think if you kind of agree that you both are like good people at heart that are kind of like generous and general with each other, I think that’s a good start. But like, you know, from the business side, like I handle ba basically the whole business, you know, like he’s not a real business, you know, minded person.
Like he, he’s wants to be involved and know what’s going on, but he’s not gonna like run with marketing or learn how to do the, the books and stuff. As much as I have kind of, you [00:34:00] know, the ability or, or the want to do. He wants to be a lawyer all the time, you know, that’s what he, you know, he, so he is a, he’s like a hundred percent full-time lawyer all the time.
I’m not a lawyer near as much, you know, anymore with, I’m a lawyer all the time, but like, I’m not doing legal work all the time. We’ve hired other people and I’m trying to like, drive, you know, kind of the business, the vision, you know? And that’s how we’ve divided it. so I think, you know, as long as.
Yeah I, I think it’s, it partnerships can be difficult. I know a lot of people’s partnerships fail. But I think, you know, it is good to know, like when I’m on vacation, if something blows up, at least someone here owns some of this place and will fall on the sword where I don’t always have to you know, and do the, the dirty work, you know, that only an owner really can.
Having multiples of those I think is helpful. And, you know, when my daughter got sick, I kind of, I wanted to be a trial lawyer a hundred percent all the time. And then she started going to hospital every year for a month or so, started like putting a dash on that dream like man, I can’t really just be delaying trials and big depositions all the time ’cause my daughter’s sick and I don’t wanna leave her in the hospital.
So I [00:35:00] just decided like, well I gotta get good at running a law firm that way I can do it from the hospital and be with her, but not delay my client’s day of court. You know, so I kind of have to build a team. That can litigate and do a lot of things I wanted to do without me. And then if I got time to hop on and be a second chair with ’em, that’s what I’ll do.
But you gotta, you know, life throws your curve balls, you gotta kind of like react to it. And and I’ve really found that I like running a law firm as much as I did. You know, I’ve turned this into my dream now. I used to be one to be the biggest, baddest trial lawyer. Now I kind of want to be really, really good at running a firm and making a good place to work for other people and good for the clients and all those things.
So kind of shift, shift the goals and shift, you know, with life, you gotta kind of take what it gives you sometimes and make the best of it.
Jonathan Hawkins: Well, I’ll tell you for me, you know, running a firm, building a firm, growing a firm there’s always something new. It’s like you’d never, you know, cause you know, I wanted, early on, I wanted to be a trial lawyer years ago. And I remember early on when I’d go to depositions, like, oh, this is [00:36:00] badass.
And then I did my first hearing. I was like, man, that’s great. I did my first trial. I was like, oh my God, this is exciting. But then after a while I was just like, yeah, I mean, the facts change, but the elements are sort of the same. And, it just for me I needed something new. And so the thing with growing a business and a law firm, there’s always something new.
You’re never gonna figure it out. And the second you think, you figure it out, like you said, that curve ball comes and you’re like, oh, shit.
Josh Hodges: Yeah. And it, and I get bored. I get bored easy. And so running a law firm keeps me from getting bored ’cause it’s always something new and I get to wear a lot of different hats. I still practice law a little bit, but, you know, we got, we’re rehabbing a 140 or 50-year-old building right now, some running point on that.
And then we’re, you know, I run point on marketing and then, you know, helping, hiring, building the team up. It ke there’s a lot of things that keeps you busy and they’re all not easy. So, you don’t get bored running a business for
Jonathan Hawkins: Yeah. So, you know, a couple things just point out, you know, that I think’s important with, with partners, you know, you gotta trust ’em and it’s good that you guys are both generous, but then [00:37:00] also it’s, it’s sort of the division of skill sets, which it sounds like you guys have been good at sort of separating.
So I wanna, I wanna move to well, first thing I have noticed your posts about that office building and you, I think you found the signs underneath. That’s cool, man. That’s really
Josh Hodges: that was awesome. I mean, it was, people were the there’d been a metal facade over it, these transom windows that were painted under, but no one knew they were painted and it’d been covered, I think, since maybe the late forties. So you’d have to be super, I mean, pretty old to even, I mean, remember most people live in or not.
I mean, it’s like 80 years ago and we pulled that metal off and I didn’t know what we were gonna find. It’s kind of halfway looking out like this kind of scared ’cause it’s already expensive enough and they pop that off. And these, this beautiful painted windows for the furniture store. I think they were painted in the twenties or thirties.
I was like, I was just one of the happiest days probably of my life, honestly. I could, I just couldn’t believe, like I found something that cool under there and people were like, stop and track. Like stopping in the road looking at it that lived here, that drive by it all the time. Like, what the hell? You [00:38:00] know?
So, but now I gotta figure out we’re gonna, how to fix ’em up, you know? ’cause we can’t, it just, it’s all about furniture all the time, which doesn’t really help me out too much in the law firm, but we’re figuring out how to like, kind of,
Jonathan Hawkins: you gotta do furniture law, furniture law, man.
Josh Hodges: It was cool though. It’s fun, but there’s fixing up all buildings.
There’s a lot of not fun stuff that comes along with it too. So, you know, kind of take your lumps. But I think it’s giving back to the community, fixing up a building. I think it, it just further with the brand, you know, like the guys out of town that have the big budgets, they may run more TV ads or more Google, but they’re not fixing up the old building right by the courthouse.
And digging in roots deeper and deeper always, I think is kind of the goal.
Jonathan Hawkins: So, yeah, let’s circle back to that. So you use the hometown lawyer and I think maybe your website is hometown lawyers. How did you come up with that and you know, how does it work? Is it working for you? It sounds like it is.
Josh Hodges: Yeah. I I mean, I, I haven’t, I don’t have a, placebo group or, or a control group where I tried something else to see if it would’ve [00:39:00] worked better. I don’t know. But I mean, it, we’ve grown and we’re doing well. I think more, I mean better than I thought we would, to be honest. I mean, I didn’t know really where it’d take us, but we got plenty of work and we’re growing every year.
When I started out I didn’t have any clients, you know. So how I came up with it, I just wanted something that kind of spoke to a small town more, but I didn’t wanna say small town lawyer. ’cause it small seems more like, you know, dominion, like less powerful or something. I didn’t want that, but I wanted something.
You know, ’cause hometown could be New York City too, so it’s not like pushing anyone away necessarily. But I think it has more of a warm feel of like a, a mid-size town, like where I’m from, you know, in Ohio. And it’s memorable enough, but I didn’t want it to be a joke. I didn’t wanna be like an animal or the pit bull or something that I didn’t feel good about.
Not that there’s anything wrong with being that I would do it if I had to feed my family. But I thought there was a good segment of the population that didn’t wanna hire an attorney at all. And I wanted to cater to those people. And I thought being a little bit less of a caricature may help me grab some of those people, you know, that that was my underlying theory [00:40:00] with going with the, something memorable, but not over the top.
Kind of like, you know, people in the Midwest is just different, you know, like, I don’t think it would maybe work in Miami, the hometown lawyer. Now I might have to be a little bit more, I don’t know, colorful or something. But like it works in Wilmington, Ohio, where, you know. People work hard and there’s farmers and you know, people don’t really want to get an attorney at all, but if they are gonna get one, they want to get one that’s maybe not too flashy and just seems more every day.
Jonathan Hawkins: So you’re based outside of Cincinnati. You’ve got the hometown lawyer as your sort of brand. I imagine you do have some cases in CI Cincinnati. I don’t know, but you know how, you know, how with the branding and sort of your focus in the small town, you know, how does that shape your strategy in terms of growth and what you’re gonna do next?
I’m just curious if you’ve said, all right, we’re the hometown lawyer, we are focusing on small, our small town, do you want to, it’s, you know, it is almost like, [00:41:00] you know, back in the day Walmart said, we’re not going to the cities. Right? They went to all the rural areas and people, they were sort of a joke to Kmart and Sears and all that, and they got the last laugh, obviously
Josh Hodges: Yeah, I mean, I’ve read about
Jonathan Hawkins: Amazon, Until Amazon came around.
Josh Hodges: Yeah, and I’m not a, you know, I’m not a stranger to that story. You know, the Dollar Generals, the Walmarts, you know, it’s been done outside of legal and I thought about that and I’ve thought of, you know, looked at other businesses, model business models of, you know, and I just believed Hamilton, where I’m from is not that small.
So there’s 65,000 people in my city, and the county has about 400,000. So it’s not tiny at all. Not for Ohio, man. It’s a pretty good amount of people. And there wasn’t a ton of competition here. People in Cincinnati marketed here, people in Dayton marketed here, but not a lot of people were here. So I started here.
People kind of told me it was maybe too small. We started doing well here, and then I wanted to find other towns like mine. And then I started looking. There wasn’t other towns in Ohio as big as mine without a bunch of competition. I was just lucky my hometown had less, so then I had to look [00:42:00] smaller. So when you’re, if you’re gonna go to Atlanta, yeah.
If you do well in Atlanta, there’s enough people there to do well and probably don’t have to go anywhere else. If you’re gonna be a small town lawyer. Your geography has to get a little bigger. ’cause you gotta have population and there’s less populations, more, less densely populated. Long, long way of saying you gotta be willing to drive more, you know if
Jonathan Hawkins: Especially if you have a niche practice like you do versus doing everything that walks in,
Josh Hodges: Yeah. So you can be a niche practice in a big city. You can be a small town who only focuses small town. If you’re a generalist, that’s what most small town lawyers do. I was trying to bridge the gap between those. I wanted to be a niche practice. ’cause I think it’s better for your clients and better for your everything, your procedures.
If you only do one thing, but I wanted to do in a small town, but you can’t do that in one small town. You gotta be around, you gotta spread your, you know, your marketing in a broader. Just a larger area. So I drive a lot. Yesterday I was two hours north, you know. [00:43:00] Don’t have to maybe do that if you’re in downtown Cincinnati all the time.
So I market, you know, I hire people, local people in different small towns, all, you know, around our area. And, I, I myself, I do a lot of digital marketing, all the area obviously and, and we do the highlight videos all over southwest Ohio. But I get in my car and I go meet people all over the place too.
You know, I might be in, I might be south of Columbus in a small town one day, and the next day me might be north of Dayton meeting other attorneys or meeting insurance people, whatever it is, networking. So I don’t just, you know, if you wanna to sit in one area you be, if you wanna be a niche practice and, and sit in your office, most of the time you gotta be in a big city.
You know, if you are gonna be a small town lawyer, you gotta drive around more. And not a lot of people wanna do that. Not a lot of people maybe fall to do it. I don’t know. I’m sure other people do it, but that’s, that’s what I do. And we get cases, you know, out in the sticks and I like being out.
You know, I like, I like being in small towns. It takes a while to break in. People are kind of, you know, I wouldn’t say distrusting of you, but they’re like, why are you here in, you know, Circleville, Ohio? You’re not from here, you’re an hour and a half away. Like, yeah, [00:44:00] no, I explain it to ’em. And you, if you’re a good person and, and you fall through your word, I think people warm up to you because most of the people in small towns aren’t niche practices.
They don’t even wanna do niche practice usually. So sometimes they like that you’re there and you’re helping them out with cases they were trying to handle. But you gotta put into FaceTime and build trust with people.
Jonathan Hawkins: So you’ve got your building that you guys are, are renovating and, and so you’re gonna be there for sure. And you drive, so there’s, you know, you gotta be within at least half day or whatever, driving distance. Do you have any ideas of maybe expanding the actual like office footprint at some point of
Josh Hodges: Yeah, yeah, Yeah. I have other offices, so at least I’ll hire somebody. And when I say, like I, I hired someone in Circleville, Ohio, and I have an office there. And I, you know, I hired somebody in Eaton, Ohio, and I have an office there smaller office, you know, one person. But it and then we’ll go up there to other people in the office, may go there too if they need to.
But yeah that’s what I’ve slowly done. And [00:45:00] so it helps with Google to have an office. You have someone there. I’ll hire someone. What has happened? I usually hire ’em, obviously if I open a new office, the first one I did was wash. Like this was Washington Courthouse, Ohio. Tiny little town, middle of the state.
I hired a lady who was from there. She was my age, lived there her whole life. So she knew everyone in town. ’cause it’s a small town. She didn’t have any legal experience. Definitely in none at all. Definitely not in pi. ’cause why would you? There’s no PI lawyers in the town. But she knew everyone in town, so I hired her for, and I didn’t have any cases there anyway, so it was fine.
So I hired her basically just to be my outreach person. She helped me meet people for a year and then when we started getting cases, then she slowly transferred to being a legal secretary. Now she’s doing great with that and I’ve done that multiple times. So the first time I hired someone in town, she usually, they don’t have any experience ’cause there’s no other lawyers there really doing what I’m doing ’cause it’s a little town.
And, but they know every I, I’m looking for someone who’s connected. And they help us. It helps with the marketing. And then some of ’em have, I lose them on the market side. The attorney’s doing the legal steal ’em from me, but I got one. I’m not letting ’em steal now. But cause the [00:46:00] outreach is a lot of work.
I mean it, social media and the networking, people think it’s fun. It wears you down. You gotta do, you know, you gotta do it every day. I’ve been doing it every day for four or five years and, you know, there’s a reason. Not everybody does it ’cause
Jonathan Hawkins: you gotta feed that beast. You gotta feed
Josh Hodges: You gotta keep busy. But it, it’s fun and it keeps you creative.
I’m all, every year I’m thinking of a new, I usually thinking of a new video series or a new. Outreach method we could do every year that we try to implement, because I guess I wanna stay ahead and it, and it’s fun to come up with new things.
Jonathan Hawkins: So you, you know, we’ve talked about the social media. You do, do that you know, definitely TikTok, probably the others. You also have a podcast. Let’s talk about that. Tell me about what’s it called and, and tell me your strategy or your approach for that.
Josh Hodges: Yeah. We just call around town with the hometown lawyer and then the smaller one, the short that it’s usually 15 to 30 minutes. And then we have the shorter one, it’s called the around town minute. It’s usually a minute or two. And that I’m not in that, it just has my branding and it’s all about whatever small business we’re highlighting that week.
But the podcast, we go to the, you know, we go to them wherever they [00:47:00] are, if they have an office, or sometimes we’ll meet outside depending on the topic. And it’s not about law at all. It’s just highlighting a local person or, or some kind of community organization. I’ve done it with all sorts of people.
The la one of the last ones I did was the City of Hamilton has a professional arborist. We’re like a tree city. They got a grant and we have a bunch of trees and he takes care of ’em. And I met him out and he told me about this ginkgo tree we’re standing in front of. He picked a good tree, you know, he knew all the stuff and we just talked to him for about half hour about what he does, about his life, about trees.
All I don’t really prepare too much for it, I just let it go where it goes. I’ve done it one with the guy who writes parking tickets in a town. I’ve done it with local politicians. I’ve done it with you know, other people who are big in social media in Cincinnati. I haven’t done, I got one I’m gonna probably do with a judge pretty soon that just retired.
And then nonprofits, people helping anything positive, you know. The art center across the street, I’ve done, you know, I do about one a month of those, but I probably do 15 of the short ones a month. And so I have a [00:48:00] video videographer and then my outreach person, she’ll set ’em all up. So how it works is like she’ll set up a day like, Hey, I.
Last week we did, two weeks ago we did Hillsborough, Ohio, small town, about an hour from where I’m at now. I’m about an hour and 20 minutes from where I’m at. And s o we drove there and she had all through the Chamber of Commerce and we work, she works it ahead of time. We had 13 small businesses set up that day, all in a line.
And we did a highlight video for every single one of them. And I went to every single one of ’em, shook their hand, talked to ’em while we did it, told ’em, you know, and they’re all excited for these videos. So we just posted the last one. And then all the other people know, like when ours coming out. So it’s like probably every other week for the rest of the month.
I got videos in Hillsborough, Ohio. And I’ve only went there one day with that. I’ve went there more, but with that intention. So now we got 15 videos. I don’t need more content there for a while, you know, and they can repost ’em. So I’m probably good there for a year or two. And so we’re always looking for a te we’ll call it like we’re Mount Sterling Day, we got that coming up, another small town.
So I’ll go there all day and shoot videos. So about once a month we [00:49:00] do that. Then we do other ones in Hamilton. I’ve always got a couple going off. ’cause that’s local to me, but it’s working, it’s a lot of time outta the office
Jonathan Hawkins: That’s, I mean, it’s great. I’m sure it’s fun getting to know these people, but the goodwill that you are creating, I mean, it’s probably just incredible. And back to what you said earlier, it’s not an immediate tomorrow. It’s a compound effect.
Josh Hodges: and it’s hard to track if it’s ever working.
Jonathan Hawkins: Yeah. And if you ever wanna run for a statewide political office man you, you’re setting the
Josh Hodges: long term, like 2040 Governor run or something like that, if my wife sees that she’ll I tease her about that all the time and she gets absolutely. Does not want me to get in politics uh, I
Jonathan Hawkins: well, hopefully things will have settled down and it’s back to being boring again and, you know.
Josh Hodges: Yeah, it’s fun though. I mean, I and I obviously make, I mean, you start caring about that. I mean, I really cared about my hometown and then I started going to other small towns and I start seeing my hometown in them. And I see people that are from. This little town, they care about it and I need to start caring [00:50:00] about it, or I do.
And I just like my state more now that I’ve been doing this. And I see towns, some of them need to like, have some development. Others are further along and they’re doing great, you know, and, and I see the progress that’s being made and, you know, we’re doing a little bit peace to help, I think.
And it’s fun. It’s not, it’s hard to track, but, you know, people, they’re asking me, does it work? I think it I know it does deep down. Can’t always prove exactly my ROI, like, I could on a, a local service ad, but I’m never gonna regret doing this. Like, when I’m an old guy, I’m gonna be like I’m gonna look back and be like, man, me and the camera guy drove around Ohio once a month for all those years highlighting people.
I think it’s kind of fun. And I think people realize like, it’s coming from a good place. And then I think that’s how it works. It can’t be fake, you know? And you have to, if you do, if this sounds like an awful idea to you, then don’t do it. You’re not gonna like it. You know, do something, find, you know, find some other way to do it.
Like writing people write. For the A, b, a, those long, beautiful written things. That sounds awful to me. It sounds like a good idea for some [00:51:00] people, but I don’t wanna do that and I’m not gonna do that ’cause I would hate doing it. So you gotta find something that works for you.
Jonathan Hawkins: That’s great advice and it just dawned on me if it’s not politics and it’s not law, you can have a TV show. You’re, it is a TV show, you know? I see. You know, it’s like, I see these in small town where they go around renovating houses. You’ve got a, a building under your belt. You could, you know, revitalize the state.
Josh Hodges: And I’m lucky in Ohio there’s, you know, not every Ohio has a lot of like little mid-sized towns like cities. Every county has like a little old courthouse and a lot of old buildings. And now west coast I’ve been to, I like the West coast for other reasons and nature and stuff, but they don’t have as many small towns as this side of the river.
So I’m you know, I’m kind of lucky that about every half hour there’s a new little mini town with a courthouse in a downtown little area. You know, some nicer than others, but. There’s just a lot of little places to kind of explore which probably not too exciting when you’re in your twenties, maybe if you wanna be in a big city.
But like, you know, now I’m a dad, I’m in my forties. It’s kind of cool to go to a little [00:52:00] town of 5,000 and read the little history plaque and, you know, make a dad joke. You know, it’s,
Jonathan Hawkins: Yeah. That’s what we do. Right? So a question I like to ask folks. You know, as you’ve been doing this for a while, and as you look back, you know, any lessons learned and it could be something that you wish you had done sooner or maybe something you wish you hadn’t done at all. As you look back, is there anything you can point to?
Josh Hodges: I mean, I wish I could, I mean, Back to the beginning, I wish I could have got started sooner with it, but I then, at the same time, I don’t know if I’d have been the same person doing what I’m doing now. If I had, you know, I’m probably sure I probably wouldn’t have. So I really regret that. I think I would’ve. You know, we bought, we, I’m I’m sitting in my first office we bought right now, and it’s, got way too small, way too fast because you wanna be a little conservative, you know?
So don’t doubt what you can do. Maybe I wish I would’ve bought the bigger building earlier and not had to have too you know, and now I’ve bought that one. I think it’s big enough, but I, don’t know, [00:53:00] 5 or 10 years I’ll probably be kicking myself for buying one that’s too small. Again, you know, I, I think I’ve learned my lesson and bought a bigger one, but we’ll see, you know, it yeah, don’t doubt we find a mentor. I wish I would’ve, I found a mentor pretty quick, probably 2 years in.
That was really good. But I wish I would’ve had, you know, there’s different mentors too. There’s, I’ve got legal mentors that help me become a better legal practicing lawyer. Then there’s mentors that are good business people, you know, and my mentor is not even an attorney. He runs the law firm, you know, he is the COO.
And I have many mentors, but he’s one of my main ones. And I wish I’d have found him earlier ’cause he just taught me more than law school ever could or would about running a law firm. ’cause he knew how, he knew the nuts and bolts and the numbers and you know, things that when he first started talking, I was like, holy shit, you know, like this dude.
Like I never heard anyone talk that way about what I was trying to run. And I knew I gotta be like that. I gotta be like that guy and I’m trying to be, you know, still. And you, so I, I think find, finding a mentor if I could have found one a little sooner with the business you know, shops. [00:54:00] I mean, you had to out look outside your town probably I found someone in a different state, you know?
But other than that, I don’t know. I mean, I don’t really regret all that. I think things are moving along pretty good. And you know, I think probably, you know, I probably, I wish I would’ve gotten done. I mean, I started videos quick, quicker, most people. But if I’d have done it two or three ear years earlier would’ve even been, been even better.
Other than that not, not a whole lot. I,
Jonathan Hawkins: to be, that tends to be a a mistake that I make a lot is I wish I’d just start, whatever it is, had started earlier.
Josh Hodges: yeah. I make quick, I make quick decisions. One of the things that’s helped me, like I will make decisions and just start charging forward. Sometimes I didn’t think it through a hundred percent, but like I think a lot of successful people, it’s better than like just sitting around thinking about things forever.
Too many lawyers I know just think about doing something for five years and never do anything. I would rather just do something kind, like not I’m talking about on a case, but with my business, like my marketing, I’d rather do something kind of dumb than nothing. You know? I mean, at least you’re trying and you’ll [00:55:00] learn from that mistake, you know?
So don’t be scared to, you know, do something you think other people may not. Like. When I started doing videos, I mean, I’m in pretty conservative areas, small towns, Ohio lawyers aren’t doing videos or marketing at all. Most time. And I’m out here doing tiktoks. I. It was kind of scary a little bit, you know, but most of it’s been positive.
I mean, you’re gonna get a catch a hater here and there, but you know, as long as you’re being a good person, look yourself in the mirror. People that need to find you will find you that will support you. And, And they will. I, and you know, I will, if anyone ever needs help, they can reach out to me. I’ll do anything I can to help another attorney that’s trying to market themselves.
I mean, I’ll spend much time with you as I can, trying to make it easier. And people have helped me. I, I try to help as many people as I can behind us.
Jonathan Hawkins: Well, well, that’s, that’s great advice. So, last question as you sit here now, you know, what’s your vision for the next 5, 10, 15 years for your firm, for your life? However broad you wanna make it.
Josh Hodges: Yeah, I mean, I wanna be the, the choice for small town Ohio’s law firm. [00:56:00] You know, I think that’s some personal injury first, but I think long term, you know, maybe more things look. Small towns don’t have enough lawyers. It’s despite what everyone tells you, there’s too many attorneys. You go to a small town, a rural community, they don’t have enough lawyers.
They don’t have any young lawyers. Mostly if they do, they’re a prosecutor or a public defender. They’re not out in public private, you know, doing any kind of civil. So I think I want to bridge that gap and access to attorneys. And I think it’s a good thing for society to have access to attorney, but it’s also a good business opportunity.
And, you know, that’ll probably keep me busy for a while. If I wanna be the, you know, be in every little small town to Ohio would probably keep me busy for a minute, I think.
Jonathan Hawkins: Yeah, probably enough to go to the end.
Josh Hodges: yeah. You know, maybe, maybe branch out, help some other people do it, you know, kind of a version in other, there’s other states that, you know, you could do similar things.
Jonathan Hawkins: Well, you could franchise the name, man. You get that thing trademarked if you haven’t already.
Josh Hodges: Yeah. I’ve thought, I’ve thought about franchise, you know, I mean, right now I’m, I’m still, I’m. The marketing is what we’ve been talking about. That’s what it’s fun to me. But I really [00:57:00] care about doing a good job on the cases and being, having a good operations and a good legal outcomes for my clients.
And that, that, you know, it’s not, that’s behind the scenes. Everyone doesn’t see that all the time, all the policies and procedures and all the technology to make sure nothing’s getting missed. That’s been really hard work. And and so I don’t ever wanna grow so fast that the, I don’t want to be a mill where quality drops.
So kinda like, try to grow as fast as I can without that. So, you know, balancing the two. ‘Cause I think I, I wanna do a good job on both ends, you know? And not a lot of people figure that out. You know, I think there’s a lot of people that are really good lawyers, not so good at business. Some people are great at business and maybe not so good at outcomes all the time.
I want to kind of, there’s some people out there doing both, and I wanna be one of those. I mean, and that’s, it’s, you know, they’re not always. You know, I think long term, if you do both, it’s better for your business. But it’s a balance, you know? And it’s not, it doesn’t just do itself. ’cause, just ’cause you got a lot of cases doesn’t mean you’re gonna do well.
You gotta, You gotta take care of ’em. [00:58:00] it’s a, it’s a never ending battle. I mean, it doesn’t ever, it doesn’t really get a lot easier, I don’t think from the people. My mentors that are bigger than me says, you know, I’ll be doing that till until, till it ends, I guess.
Jonathan Hawkins: Yeah, finding that balance is a challenge and you’re never gonna find it. You may have it for a brief moment and then it gets outta balance again. But yeah that’s, that’s the goal. But Josh, man, this has been awesome. You got some really cool things you’re doing and I appreciate you coming on and sharing it.
Anybody out there that wants to find you, what’s the best way?
Josh Hodges: Yeah. I mean, uh, if you go on any of the, you know, on TikTok, I’m the hometown lawyer, YouTube, the hometown lawyer Instagram, the hometown lawyer. On my Facebook, it’s just Josh Hodges. ’cause I had that before and I don’t wanna change it. My grandma would be asking me what happened to her, you know, my name I guess, or whatever.
So I just left that. My personal name thehometownlawyers.com. That’s the website. Yeah. We’re, you know, yeah, reach out to me if young lawyers, anyone ever, or, you know, anyone with a good idea or anything. I go to conferences. I’m speak, you know, I’ll shout out one of ’em, going to the lunch hour legal marketing one out in Vegas in [00:59:00] September.
I’ll be speaking about some of this community outreach and social media stuff I do at that conference. So yeah, don’t be a stranger. Reach out to me. I, I love when people do that. You always learn something from them too. They call you, maybe you’re thinking you’re gonna help them, but I almost always get a little nugget from them too, and put that in my arsenal and try to, you know, spin it into something I can do too.
That’s out. That’s my favorite part of running a law firm, is learning from people and helping people. It’s two way street.
Jonathan Hawkins: Yeah, well, I’m hoping to make it to that conference. I gotta see if I can swing it, but it’s, it’s on my list, so hopefully I, I’ll get there. And if I don’t see you before
Josh Hodges: Yeah, maybe see you out there.
Jonathan Hawkins: to get to meet you in person. So,
Josh Hodges: love to.
Jonathan Hawkins: so I appreciate this and enjoy your weekend for the, you know, timing wise.
We got fourth July’s this weekend. So, enjoy your weekend and have a good time, and thanks again for coming on.
Josh Hodges: Thank you. Thanks for having me. I.
OutroUpdatedWebsite-1: Thanks for listening to this episode of the founding partner podcast. Be sure to subscribe on Apple podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your [01:00:00] podcasts to stay up to date on the latest episodes. You can also connect with Jonathan on LinkedIn and check out the show notes. With links to resources mentioned throughout our discussion by visiting www.lawfirmgc.com. We’ll see you next time for more origin stories and insights from successful law firm founders.