A bad intake call does not announce itself as expensive. It ends quietly. The coordinator hangs up, logs something in the system, and moves to the next call. The prospective client calls another firm. The case is lost. No one in the building knows it happened.
The invisibility of bad intake calls is what makes them so costly. Unlike a lost trial or a billing dispute, a failed intake call produces no incident report, no complaint, no visible consequence. It simply produces absence: the case that was not signed, the revenue that was not earned, the client who was not helped.
This article makes that absence visible by calculating the actual financial cost of bad intake calls and explaining what causes them, what the accumulated cost looks like over a year, and what the cost of not training is.
The financial cost of bad intake calls is calculated from three inputs:
The formula:
Monthly Revenue Gap = Qualified Calls x (Target Rate – Current Rate) x Average Case Value
Example: A firm receives 100 qualified calls per month. Current conversion rate is 22%. Industry benchmark for a firm with this profile is 35%. Average case value is $45,000.
100 x (35% – 22%) x $45,000 = 100 x 13% x $45,000 = $58,500 per month
Annual revenue gap: $58,500 x 12 = $702,000
That is $702,000 per year that is currently leaving the firm through the gap between a 22% conversion rate and a 35% conversion rate. Not from calls that did not qualify. From qualified calls that were handled poorly enough to not convert.
This is consistent with the eNZeTi 2025 research finding of a $180,000 average revenue gap per firm. For larger firms or those with higher average case values, the gap is proportionally larger. The $180,000 figure represents an average across firms of varying sizes. For a high-volume personal injury firm with a large case value portfolio, the gap can reach seven figures.
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Bad intake calls cluster around five recurring causes:
The coordinator treats the call as information gathering. The caller needed to feel heard. There is no warmth, no acknowledgment of the caller’s situation, no moment where the caller thought “this person understands what I am going through.” The caller hangs up feeling processed, not helped. They call a firm that made them feel differently.
The coordinator does not ask about insurance status, prior injuries, or statute of limitations. The attorney who later reviews the case file finds gaps that require a callback, creating friction. Worse, the coordinator may have passed a case that would not qualify, or dismissed a case that would have, because the qualifying questions were incomplete.
The caller raises a concern about cost. The coordinator does not have a clear, confident response. They hedge, they become vague, they retreat. The caller interprets this as uncertainty about whether legal help is affordable. They decide not to pursue it. The contingency fee explanation that would have eliminated the objection was never delivered.
The coordinator gathers all the qualifying information, explains the firm’s services adequately, and then ends the call without asking for a commitment. The caller had no reason not to sign. No one asked them to. They hang up, intending to call back, and never do.
The caller was not ready to commit on the first call. They said they needed to think. The coordinator agreed and ended the call with no follow-up plan. Three days later, the caller signed with another firm that followed up the same afternoon.
The eNZeTi 2025 research average of $180,000 in annual revenue gap corresponds to a firm that is converting at roughly 10 percentage points below where it should be, on approximately 80 to 100 qualified calls per month, at an average case value of around $25,000 to $35,000.
For a firm in that range, $180,000 per year is roughly four additional cases per year at an average value of $45,000. Four cases. Not 40. Not 400. Four cases that could have been signed from the calls that were already coming in, had the intake calls been handled with a trained, coached coordinator following a structured process.
Four cases sounds manageable. Until you multiply it by five years and recognize that the firm has left $900,000 on the table not because of bad lawyering, but because no one invested in the intake function.
Training an intake coordinator costs time and some amount of direct investment in curriculum, materials, and coaching. The question is not whether training costs something. It does. The question is what it costs to not train.
A coordinator who receives no intake training will convert at whatever rate their natural instincts produce. Research suggests that untrained coordinators in legal settings typically convert between 12% and 20% of qualified calls. A trained coordinator with script discipline, objection handling practice, and regular coaching feedback typically converts between 30% and 45%.
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At the numbers above (100 qualified calls per month, $45,000 average case value):
This is an illustrative example at the extreme end. Real numbers vary. But the direction is consistent: training produces conversion improvement, and conversion improvement produces revenue that vastly exceeds the cost of the training program.
The question is never “can we afford to train our intake coordinators.” The question is “can we afford not to.”
The first step to addressing the cost of bad intake calls is to make them visible. This requires:
Once the cost is a dollar figure instead of a vague sense that “intake could be better,” the investment case for improvement becomes clear. The math is not difficult. The will to look at it is what most firms lack.
eNZeTi helps law firms calculate their intake revenue gap and close it through real-time call coaching and systematic coordinator development. To see what your firm’s gap is and what closing it would be worth, visit enzeti.com.
Further Reading on This Topic:
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