No directory listing. No shared leads. A real person who used our divorce tools, asked to talk to an attorney, and gets a personal email introduction — with your firm on the thread. The first five are on us.
Get My 5 Free Introductions 20-minute verification call required — Bar rules, and honestly, ours too."Quick version of what this is, because you're busy and I don't do long videos." — Carlos, 2 min
Thousands of people use SelfHelpDivorce.com every month to run child support numbers, estimate alimony, and follow county-by-county filing guides — in all 50 states. Some of them tell us — explicitly — "I want to talk to an attorney."
When that happens in your county, we send one email: to them, introducing your firm. You're CC'd. They already asked for you. You just reply.
We never send the same person to two firms. Ever. The introduction is yours alone.
Every introduction affirmatively requested an attorney connection. No cold names, no scraped lists.
Every introduction lands in your pipeline view the moment it's sent.
The gap between a warm introduction and a booked consultation is usually the first 24 hours. So the moment you request your five, we send you the Warm Intro Playbook — the exact reply templates that turn an email introduction into a consultation.
Use them with our introductions or with every referral you already get. Yours to keep either way.
Two honest answers.
That last part matters: we only keep seats for firms that work their introductions. If leads sit unanswered, we give the seat to someone who'll take care of them. That's what keeps the introductions worth having.
We don't flood a county with participating firms — that would gut the value for everyone in it. When your county's seats are taken, you go on the waitlist until one opens. If your county's open, it's open now.
If the introductions are good, you fund an account: $1,000 deposit, $50 per introduction. That's it. No contract term, no percentage of anything. Your deposit is your balance; every introduction deducts $50.
$50 is the starting rate. Pricing moves with supply and demand in each county — as seats fill and lead volume gets claimed, the rate for new firms goes up. Firms already in keep building on the economics they locked.
For context: the average family-law retainer starts around $5,000 — and most cases run well past it. One retained case pays for a hundred introductions. That's the math you're actually weighing.
We operate in line with the bar rules that govern attorney lead generation in each state we serve (in Florida, for example, Rule 4-7.22 for qualifying providers). The $50 is a flat marketing fee per introduction — never a percentage of your fees, never contingent on retention or outcome. Your ethics counsel can review our participating-attorney agreement; we'll send it before the call.
Neutral rules: geography and practice area. Round-robin within a county's seats. We don't pick favorites and we don't auction leads.
Reply to the introduction within one business day. That's the whole job. (The Playbook makes it a 2-minute copy-paste.)
Some won't — these are humans in a hard season, not guaranteed cases. That's why intros are $50 and not $500. The math works because volume and speed do.
No. Stop any time; your seat goes to the waitlist.
Fill this out, grab the Playbook instantly, and pick a time to talk.