You're in a deposition. Your phone rings. You can't answer.
The caller hangs up after four rings, tries one of the next three attorneys on Google, and signs with someone else by end of day.
This happens to solo attorneys 40% of the time, according to legal intake research. And the math is brutal.
The Real Cost of a Missed Call
The average personal injury case is worth $8,000–$15,000 in fees. A family law matter: $4,000–$10,000. A simple estate plan: $2,500–$5,000.
If you miss 10 calls a month — not unusual for a solo — and convert half of what you answer, you're leaving $20,000–$60,000 per year on the table.
That's not a productivity problem. That's a structural gap in how your firm operates.
Why Solo Attorneys Miss More Calls Than Large Firms
Large firms have receptionists. They have paralegals who answer and triage. They have call routing systems. You have yourself.
When you're in court, in a meeting, or simply focused — no one answers. When you return calls two hours later, many clients have already moved on. Callers in legal distress don't wait. They're anxious, often in crisis, and they'll take the first attorney who answers and sounds competent.
The Three Moments You Lose the Most Calls
1. Court and depositions — You're legally required to be present and unavailable. Nothing you can do. Calls go to voicemail. Most don't leave one.
2. Client meetings — You're doing the right thing: focusing on the client in front of you. But the phone keeps ringing.
3. After hours — 30% of legal inquiries happen evenings and weekends, when potential clients are finally free to handle personal matters. Your voicemail greeting is your competition.
What Happens When Someone Calls After Hours
A potential client gets into an accident on a Friday night. They search "personal injury attorney [city]." They call three firms. Two go to voicemail. One — which uses an AI receptionist — answers immediately, collects their information in a friendly conversation (English or Spanish), and schedules a callback for Monday morning.
Monday morning, that attorney has a warm lead with full intake information already captured. You have two voicemails you haven't listened to yet.
The Fix Isn't Hiring a Receptionist
A full-time receptionist costs $35,000–$55,000 per year, plus benefits, plus training, plus PTO coverage. For a solo practice, that overhead changes your entire business model.
An answering service might cost $300–$800/month. But most are not trained for legal intake, often sound scripted, and can't conduct a real conversation in Spanish.
What works: A system that answers every call 24/7, conducts a proper intake conversation, captures the information you need, and hands you a qualified lead — for a fraction of the cost.
What Proper Legal Intake Looks Like
A caller shouldn't be greeted with: "Please leave your name and number and we'll call you back."
They should be greeted with: "Thank you for calling. I'm here to help. Can you tell me a little about what you're dealing with?"
Then: collect their name, the nature of their legal issue, how urgent it is, whether they have a court date, and the best way to reach them. All of that in a natural conversation — not a form.
That's what Presently does. 24/7, in English and Spanish, for every call you can't take.
The Spanish-Speaking Gap
35% of the U.S. Hispanic adult population prefers to communicate in Spanish. In markets like Miami, Los Angeles, Houston, and New York, that number is significantly higher.
Most law firm receptionists don't speak Spanish. Most answering services offer heavily accented, scripted Spanish at best. Many attorneys are losing an entire market segment simply because no one on their team can conduct a proper intake conversation in the caller's language.
Presently conducts full intake conversations in both English and Spanish — naturally, without scripts.
What You Should Do Right Now
Go look at your missed call log from the last 30 days. Count the calls you didn't answer that didn't leave voicemails. Then multiply by your average case value and your conversion rate.
That number — whatever it is — is the annual cost of your intake gap.
Then decide if a flat $8,150/year solution is worth solving it.
Presently answers every call you can't take. 24/7. English + Spanish. Full intake. Flat rate.