A wave of platform changes is reshaping how potential clients discover, evaluate, and contact law firms online. Many of these updates are subtle tests rather than official rollouts, but together they signal a clear shift toward automation, personalization, and action-first ad experiences.
Below is what matters most right now for legal advertisers, what it could mean for your firm, and how we’re responding.
Google Local Ads Are Becoming Click-First Experiences
According to reporting from PPC Land, Google has increased Local Pack ad presence by 733% in just three months. That’s not a tweak, but more of a structural shift. They’re more prevalent than ever.
Recent formats show up to nine clickable elements — call, directions, website, sitelinks, and more — while traditional headlines and descriptions are visually minimized or cut off entirely.
Instead of encouraging users to read, these ads encourage them to act immediately.
Why this matters for law firms: When every link is a primary interaction point, your asset structure becomes your strategy.
Firms that win will:
Anticipate urgent intent (“call now” situations)
Provide direct pathways to specific services
Align each asset with a clear conversion goal
Eliminate generic or redundant links
A strong headline alone will not carry performance anymore.
Our take: As noted by Adriaan Dekker, when clickable options dominate the experience, asset optimization becomes the primary driver of results. We agree — local searchers want solutions, not copy.
The question is no longer “Is the ad compelling?”. It’s: “Does every click option lead somewhere meaningful?”
What ADSQUIRE is doing: We’re restructuring campaigns around action-first architecture:
Auditing all extensions for performance and relevance
Building intent-specific pathways (urgent vs. informational)
Prioritizing click-to-call during intake hours
Optimizing landing pages for speed and conversion
Tracking engagement at the asset level
Bottom line: Firms treating assets as strategic conversion tools will outperform those relying on traditional ad copy.
Automation Changes Inside Google Ads (Brand Control & Data)
Location Manager Auto-Media Permission
A newly surfaced setting allows ads to automatically use Google-owned photos and media associated with your business — including potentially user-generated images.
This may occur without manual upload or explicit creative approval.
Risks for legal advertisers
Loss of brand control
Unvetted imagery appearing in ads
Compliance concerns in regulated industries
Reduced transparency
Our take: Automation can improve performance — but not when it undermines brand integrity or legal compliance. Convenience should never replace oversight.
What ADSQUIRE is doing:
Auditing accounts for hidden or pre-enabled settings
Ensuring only approved visuals are used
Disabling automation that introduces risk
Providing proactive client transparency
Google Tag Gateway: Tracking Shift Toward First-Party Data
Google is strongly encouraging adoption of Tag Gateway, which routes tracking through your domain to preserve attribution as cookies disappear.
Implications for law firms
More durable tracking signals
Greater responsibility for consent and compliance
Increased dependence on first-party data infrastructure
Potential legal exposure if implemented incorrectly
Our take: This isn’t simply a technical tweak — it’s a shift in responsibility. Firms should implement deliberately, not blindly.
What ADSQUIRE is doing:
Evaluating compliance implications before deployment
Aligning data collection with privacy requirements
Prioritizing accuracy without increasing risk
LSAs: Heavy Testing Across Visibility, Messaging & Credibility
Google Local Services Ads continue to be one of the most volatile lead channels for law firms.
Hidden Addresses: Some profiles now appear without visible addresses despite verified status.
Google may be prioritizing service area coverage over proximity, enabling more out-of-area competition.
Ads Liaison Ginny Marvin clarified that when setting up an LSA account, if the advertiser ticks the setting indicating that the location is not a place people can visit, the address will not show on the LSA profile.
“Nothing says local like hiding the address.”
20-Pack Access Restored: After testing restricted views (2-pack / 8-pack), users can again access the full list of 20 advertisers.
This expands visibility opportunities — but also intensifies competition.
Rotating “Qualifier” Badges: Labels like “Passed Background Check” or “Has Business Insurance” are appearing selectively — even though all advertisers met these requirements.
This creates artificial differentiation.
Messaging Conflict: Dynamic callouts were observed implying confidentiality despite LSA disclosures stating calls may be recorded and not privileged.
For law firms, this issue touches ethics, liability, and client trust.
New ‘Sale’ Extension: There’s a new “Sale” extension showing up within Local Services Ads.
The interesting part? It’s not entirely clear where this information is being sourced from.
Our take: LSAs are being actively experimented on at scale. Visibility can shift due to UI tests alone — not performance. Legal advertisers must monitor not just rankings, but messaging accuracy.
What ADSQUIRE is doing:
Tracking address visibility and service-area impacts
Monitoring badge rotations and engagement patterns
Strengthening review velocity and booking signals
Auditing messaging for compliance conflicts
Optimizing for both pack placement and deep-list visibility
Bottom line: LSAs remain powerful but unstable. Strategy and vigilance matter more than ever.
ChatGPT Ads Are Coming (But Not for Lawyers Yet)
OpenAI is testing ads inside ChatGPT conversations for certain users.
These placements appear after responses, are clearly labeled, and are context-driven rather than keyword-driven.
Why this matters long-term: Discovery is shifting from search queries to conversations. However, sensitive categories — including legal — are unlikely to be included initially.
Our take: This won’t impact law firms immediately, but the long-term implications are enormous. Channels that begin with consumer products often expand.
Early understanding will create future advantage.
What ADSQUIRE is doing:
Monitoring how conversational ads are triggered
Studying engagement patterns and trust impact
Evaluating compliance considerations for legal use
Preparing messaging strategies for conversational contexts
Broad Match Push & “Urgent” Rep Outreach
Google is heavily encouraging advertisers to adopt broad match keywords and automation tools.
Broad match expands reach beyond exact queries — sometimes dramatically.
Potential effects:
Higher volume but lower precision
Budget spread across loosely related searches
Dependence on strong conversion data
Risk in high-CPC verticals like personal injury
At the same time, many advertisers report an increase in alarm-style emails from Google reps urging immediate changes.
Our take: More automation is not usually better — especially in legal marketing where precision and lead quality matter more than raw traffic. Urgency in an email does not equal an emergency in your account. Stay vigilant and if you don’t know — ask a pro.
What ADSQUIRE is doing:
Evaluating broad match strategically, not universally
Maintaining tight query control in high-cost areas
Validating performance against actual intake results
Filtering automated recommendations through real data
Demand Gen Campaigns Showing Strong Engagement Signals
Some accounts are seeing unusually high engagement from Demand Gen campaigns — including exceptionally long time on site and meaningful upper-funnel interaction.
While not yet primary conversion drivers, these signals often precede downstream case acquisition.
Our take: Engagement alone doesn’t guarantee revenue — but when behavioral metrics exceed historical norms, it warrants attention.
Legal services often require education and trust-building before conversion.
What ADSQUIRE is doing
Tracking assisted conversions and long-term impact
Evaluating audience quality improvements
Using Demand Gen strategically as a pipeline builder
YouTube & Video Advertising Tests Are Escalating
YouTube continues aggressive experimentation with new formats.
Discovery Feed Pop-Up Ads: Ads emerge dynamically when a user pauses on a video preview — triggered by attention signals.
Aggressive “Get App” Overlays: Some overlays crowd the Skip button, potentially increasing accidental clicks.
Implications for law firms:
Attention-based delivery is replacing simple placement targeting
Creative quality is becoming decisive
Engagement metrics may need deeper interpretation
Our take: Clicks alone are becoming less meaningful. Intent matters more than interaction volume. Firms need both strong video and static creative assets ready for unpredictable placements.
What ADSQUIRE is doing:
Preparing multi-format creative libraries
Monitoring engagement quality vs. raw clicks
Optimizing messaging for immediate clarity
Top Stories Personalization & the Shift Toward Big-Screen Advertising
A new “Preferred Sources” button allows users to customize news publishers shown in Top Stories.
This reflects a broader trend toward personalized discovery environments — and likely expansion into video-centric, TV-style placements.
Why this matters: Top Stories intersects with:
Real-time intent
Video consumption
Large-screen viewing
Premium ad inventory
As advertising moves toward OTT and connected TV environments, video will become increasingly central.
Our take: In a world of automated video creation, authentic creative will be the differentiator.
Law firms will face a choice:
Generic AI-generated ads
Real, trust-building messaging
What ADSQUIRE is doing:
Building scalable video frameworks for legal clients
Prioritizing authenticity over AI
Tracking emerging OTT/CTV opportunities
Preparing for increased automation in delivery
Bottom line: Showing up will not be enough. The message itself must stand out.
Final Takeaways
Across search, local ads, LSAs, video platforms, and emerging AI channels, one theme is unmistakable: Advertising is shifting away from static placements in favor of dynamic, automated ecosystems.
For law firms, success will depend on three capabilities:
Control — Over messaging, data, and brand
Adaptability — As platforms test constantly
Strategic oversight — Not blind adoption of automation
At ADSQUIRE, we monitor these shifts daily so our clients don’t have to react after performance changes — they’re prepared before they happen.
If you want to ensure your firm stays ahead as the digital landscape evolves, we’re here to help you navigate it strategically.