Home The Problem How It Works Scenarios About Blog Free Audit →
Law Firm Intake · Script Language

The Script Audit: 7 Phrases
Killing Your Conversion Rate

Seven specific phrases appear in 44–89% of law firm intake scripts. Each has a documented reason it fails — and a word-for-word replacement that works.

89%
Of scripts contain "Absolutely!"
↓ Most common filler phrase
48
Avg trust score — unaudited scripts
↓ Out of 100
87
Avg score after full rewrite
↑ +39 point improvement

There is a specific kind of damage that happens when intake language becomes too familiar. Words that once built rapport — "Absolutely," "I completely understand," "No problem at all" — have been repeated in enough call centers, enough medical offices, and enough law firms that callers no longer hear them as genuine. They hear them as a signal that the person on the phone is reading from a script.

This matters more in legal intake than almost any other industry. Callers contacting a law firm are often frightened, in pain, or at a crisis point. They are making a real-time evaluation: does this person actually care about my situation? Hollow language fails that evaluation instantly.

How Often These 7 Phrases Appear in Law Firm Intake Scripts
Frequency across IntakeRepair's analysis of 100+ intake script audits, 2024–2026
"Absolutely!"
89%
"I completely understand"
76%
"No problem at all"
71%
"What is this regarding?"
64%
"Let me get info from you"
58%
"Take great care of you"
44%
"Your call is important"
38%
Source: IntakeRepair intake script audit data, 2024–2026. Frequency = % of audited scripts containing the phrase.
Trust Score: Before vs. After Script Fixes
Average Trust Deficit Detector scores — IntakeRepair audit data, 100+ firms
Unaudited script
48/100
After top 3 fixes
71/100
After full rewrite
87/100
IntakeRepair intake script audit data, 100+ law firms, 2024–2026

Below are the seven phrases that appear most consistently in underperforming intake scripts. Each has a specific reason it fails — and a specific replacement that works.

Phrase 1: "Absolutely!"

"Absolutely" started as an emphatic affirmation. It is now so overused that it has lost all meaning. When a caller says "I was in a car accident on Tuesday" and the rep responds "Absolutely! Let me get some information from you," the word communicates nothing — worse, it communicates that the rep is following a rhythm, not listening.

Replace with: Respond to the content of what the caller said. "That sounds like a really difficult situation — can you tell me a bit more about what happened?"

Source: Unbounce Conversion Benchmark Report, Legal Industry, 2024
IR
IntakeRepair Editorial Staff
intakerepair.com
IntakeRepair works with US law firms to diagnose and fix broken intake and sales processes. Our analysis is based on data from intake audits across personal injury, family law, criminal defense, immigration, and other practices.