
Lead generation for business law
LunchLeads organizes focused B2B lunch events for business law companies. Every event brings 15–25 founders, executives, and local business owners into a private room for a 90-minute session and catered lunch. Available in all 15 LunchLeads markets.
Who attends a business law event
Each event brings 15–25 founders, executives, and local business owners into a private room. Every attendee is individually researched and invited — never a purchased list.
Every person at the table becomes a lead with full contact data.
Typical attendee profiles
What a business law session looks like
"Navigating Commercial Litigation and Corporate Risk"
Questions the session answers
The session covers where commercial disputes typically start and what structures prevent them.
The session covers how founders and operators think about legal risk before it becomes litigation.
The session covers what partnership and shareholder agreement gaps create the most exposure.
The session covers how companies protect IP and trade secrets without overcomplicating operations.
Why the lunch format works for business law
Business law relationships are built before problems arise. A room of founders and executives built around practical risk topics gives the right firm a direct path to those relationships.
Run a business law event in any city
Available in all 15 LunchLeads markets. Click any city to see a full preview of a business law event in that location.
Questions about business law
Who attends a LunchLeads event for business law?
A LunchLeads business law event brings together 15–25 founders, executives, and local business owners. Every attendee is individually researched and invited — no purchased lists. Typical profiles include founders managing legal risk, ceos and operators with legal exposure, local business owners with commercial relationships.
What session topic works for business law events?
A session topic that fills rooms in business law is practical, specific, and tied to a real operational challenge. One topic LunchLeads has used successfully: "Navigating Commercial Litigation and Corporate Risk". The session addresses questions like where commercial disputes typically start and what structures prevent them and how founders and operators think about legal risk before it becomes litigation.
Why does the lunch format work for business law?
Business law relationships are built before problems arise. A room of founders and executives built around practical risk topics gives the right firm a direct path to those relationships.
In which cities can I run a business law lunch event?
Business Law & Litigation events can run in any of LunchLeads's 15 active markets — Las Vegas, Phoenix, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Milwaukee, Nashville, Austin, Detroit, Charlotte, Indianapolis, Columbus, Greenville, Cincinnati, and Minneapolis-St. Paul.
How is pricing set for business law events?
Pricing follows the standard LunchLeads model: a $500 retainer covers setup, outreach, venue, and catered lunch, then a custom per-lead price is agreed before launch. For business law, per-lead pricing is set based on audience seniority (typically Founders) and outreach complexity. The retainer is credited against your first invoice.
Related guides

How to Choose a Session Topic That Fills the Room
A framework for selecting practical, specific topics that make busy decision-makers rearrange their afternoon to attend.

Building a Targeted Invite List
How LunchLeads builds event audiences from named prospects rather than purchased lists.

Lunch Events for Professional Services
Why law firms, accounting practices, financial advisors, and consultants win more business through focused lunch events than any other channel.
Related industries in Finance & Legal
Other verticals LunchLeads covers in this category.
Check fit for business law
Tell us about your company and where you want to generate leads. We will let you know if business law is a fit for your market and what the per-lead pricing would be.
$500 retainer covers setup + lunch. Pay per lead. No contracts.