Intake Coaching

How to Handle a Caller Who Has Already Hired an Attorney

April 8, 2026 / 9 min read
How to Handle a Caller Who Has Already Hired an Attorney

“People aren’t calling you first. They’re calling three firms at once. Whoever calls back fastest, whoever makes them feel like a human being first, that’s who gets the case.”

Jim Hacking, attorney and firm owner, emotional state: blunt urgency.

That quote carries a hard truth most law firms only admit after they lose enough cases to feel it. The caller who says, “I already hired another attorney” is not always gone forever. Sometimes they were rushed. Sometimes they were pressured. Sometimes they never felt heard in the first place. Your intake team is still in the game if they know what to do next.

This is where most teams freeze. They hear the objection and assume the conversation is over. It is not over. It is simply a different conversation now. The goal is no longer to “close” on the first move. The goal is to understand, de-risk, and open a path for trust.

In this guide, you will get a practical framework your intake coordinators can use when a caller says they already signed with someone else. You will also see why this moment matters for growth, for reputation, and for every dollar you are spending on marketing.

Why this objection matters more than most law firms realize

When someone says they already hired an attorney, many teams mark the lead as dead and move on. That is usually an operational shortcut, not a strategic decision.

Harvard Business Review reported that leads contacted within 5 minutes are 21 times more likely to qualify than leads contacted after 30 minutes. Source: Harvard Business Review, 2011.

That stat matters here for one reason. Speed shapes commitment. The first firm to respond clearly and professionally often becomes the first firm retained, even if it is not the best fit.

If your intake team treats this objection as final, you lose every chance to help the right client at the right time. If your team handles it with empathy and structure, you create a lawful, ethical opening for future conversation.

For a full breakdown of what strong intake coaching looks like in real time, start with what real-time intake coaching is and how it works in law firms.

The ethical line: what your team should never do

Before scripts, before tactics, set the boundary. Your team must never instruct a caller to break an existing contract or disparage another attorney. The objective is to serve, clarify, and preserve trust.

Non-negotiable guardrails

This is the difference between aggressive intake and professional intake. Professional intake protects the caller and protects your firm.

If your team needs a coaching framework for these moments, use a formal QA process like this law firm intake call scoring rubric so quality is measurable, not subjective.

The 6-step script when a caller says, “I already hired someone”

Most law firms lose this moment because they improvise. Your team should not improvise under pressure. They should follow a repeatable sequence.

Step 1: Acknowledge without resistance

Script: “I appreciate you telling me that. Thank you for being direct.”

Why it works: it lowers tension immediately. No friction, no challenge, no defensiveness.

Step 2: Clarify the intent of the call

Script: “Are you calling for a second opinion, or are you trying to understand your options?”

Why it works: it lets the caller define the frame. You are not assuming they want to switch. You are helping them name the need.

Step 3: Surface the core concern

Script: “What is the biggest thing you feel uncertain about right now?”

Why it works: callers rarely switch for one dramatic reason. They switch because trust decays. This question finds the actual fracture.

Step 4: Stay in facts, not persuasion

Script: “I can share how our process works and what questions to ask any attorney so you can make a clear decision.”

Why it works: this restores control to the caller. People in crisis need clarity before commitment.

Step 5: Offer an attorney-led review path

Script: “If helpful, we can schedule a brief attorney review so you can get a second perspective. No pressure either way.”

Why it works: you move from intake friction to professional consultation, which is the right channel for legal nuance.

Step 6: Close with dignity

Script: “Whatever you decide, you deserve clear communication. If you want a second opinion, we are here.”

Why it works: no hard sell, no desperation. A calm close keeps the door open.

Teams that adopt structured language outperform teams that rely on personality alone. If you want word-for-word frameworks, use this copy-paste legal intake script as a baseline and adapt it by practice area.

📥 Free Download: Intake Coordinator Training Guide, a practical framework for coaching language, follow-up discipline, and objection handling.
Get it here →

What to do when the caller is unhappy with current counsel

This is common and delicate. Your team must gather context without drifting into legal advice.

Three questions that reveal fit

  1. “What has communication looked like so far?”
    You are looking for trust and responsiveness gaps.
  2. “Have you received a clear explanation of next steps?”
    You are looking for confusion and unmet expectations.
  3. “What outcome are you hoping for from this call today?”
    You are looking for urgency, emotional state, and decision horizon.

Document these responses in plain language. Avoid legal conclusions. Your attorney should receive a clean handoff with facts, timeline, emotional cues, and immediate concerns.

Many firms discover here that their real issue is not lead flow. It is intake quality under stress. This is why teams that review calls consistently improve faster than teams that only review outcomes. If this sounds familiar, read five signs your law firm intake process is leaking cases.

Training your coordinators for this moment in 30 days

The coordinator is not the problem. The missing system is the problem. The role is emotionally loaded, high-volume, and often undertrained. Law firms that acknowledge this reality outperform firms that simply replace staff and repeat the cycle.

Week-by-week rollout

What not to do:

What to do instead:

For a full onboarding framework, use this complete guide to training legal intake teams.

How competitors are framing this problem, and why it misses the point

Most competitor messaging says the answer is replacement. Replace your front desk. Replace your coordinators. Replace the human conversation with automation and routing logic.

Law firms already tested this path. Many were disappointed for one reason. Clients in pain do not want to feel like workflow objects.

Even attorneys skeptical of automation say the same thing in different words. They want speed, yes. They also want warmth, clarity, and trust. Pure automation can improve speed while damaging trust if your system is built around deflection instead of support.

That is the strategic difference between replacement and augmentation. Augmentation keeps the human voice and gives that human better timing, better language, and better consistency.

If you are evaluating alternatives, review eNZeTi vs Goodcall and eNZeTi vs Smith.ai to compare real-time coaching against receptionist replacement models.

A practical operating scorecard for this objection

If you do not track this, you cannot improve it. Add these metrics to your monthly intake audit:

MetricTargetWhy it matters
“Already hired” calls with complete notes95%+Protects attorney handoff quality
Second-opinion consults booked from this objectionBaseline then +10% QoQShows whether script is opening lawful opportunities
Follow-up completion within 24 hours90%+Prevents trust decay after first contact
Coordinator script adherence85%+Drives consistency under pressure
Attorney feedback loop closedWeeklyAligns intake language with legal reality

The point of this scorecard is not micromanagement. It is stability. Your team performs better when expectations are visible, coachable, and fair.

FAQ: handling callers who already retained counsel

Can a law firm speak with someone who already hired an attorney?

Yes, in many situations a caller can request a second opinion. Intake teams should avoid legal advice and route substantive matters to an attorney while documenting facts accurately.

Should intake coordinators try to convince callers to switch firms?

No. Coordinators should not pressure or disparage another firm. Their role is to clarify the caller’s concerns, explain your process, and offer an attorney review when appropriate.

What is the biggest mistake firms make with this objection?

They treat it as a dead lead too early. Many callers are uncertain, under-informed, or frustrated with communication, which means trust can still be rebuilt through professional handling.

How quickly should we follow up after this kind of call?

Immediately when possible, and within 24 hours at most for any promised follow-up. Delays compound uncertainty and reduce the chance of re-engagement.

Do scripts make intake sound robotic?

Bad scripts do. Good scripts create clarity and emotional steadiness. They are a framework for consistency, not a replacement for human judgment.

What should attorneys review from these calls?

Review caller intent, dissatisfaction triggers, timeline facts, and unresolved questions. This helps the attorney decide whether a second-opinion consult is appropriate and how to lead it.

The close

When a caller says they already hired an attorney, most law firms hear a wall. Disciplined law firms hear a signal. They slow down, ask better questions, and protect trust without crossing ethical lines.

If your intake team needs this level of consistency, see how eNZeTi coaches teams in real time and book a free intake revenue audit.

We believe law firms grow when humans stay at the center and every critical conversation is supported, not outsourced.

Stop losing cases at the first phone call.

eNZeTi gives your intake coordinators real-time coaching, mid-call, so every conversation moves toward a signed case.

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