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NLVA Spotlight

From First Click to Signed Retainer

May 28, 2026

A compliance-first framework for vetting mass tort lead vendors

Vendor selection today shapes what a firm's docket looks like two years from now. The following framework covers the questions every buyer should be asking before signing a packet supply agreement, and the documentation every vendor should have ready to support those answers.

Mass tort intake has become genuinely high-stakes territory. An active regulatory environment, a sophisticated fraud ecosystem, and lead generation technology that has moved faster than most firms' diligence processes have all made a poor vendor choice more costly than it used to be. A single TCPA class action, an ethics complaint tied to an unverifiable claimant, or a docket of synthetic leads that fall apart under medical review will each cost more than any savings from choosing the wrong partner.

The Fifth Circuit's decision in Bradford v. Sovereign Pest Control, the FCC's ongoing rulemaking around offshore call centers, and the rapid emergence of AI-generated claimant profiles have all raised the bar. So has the maturity of the plaintiff's bar's own self-regulation, including the standards being shaped by the National Legal Vendor Alliance.

This framework assumes a packet-based model. The firm receives a complete client packet for each retained claimant—signed retainer, executed authorizations, intake and medical questionnaires, supporting documentation, and full consent records—rather than a warm transfer or a raw lead. That raises the value of every file, but it also raises the bar on what each file should contain. In practice, the firm is adopting the vendor's intake operation as its own. Gaps in that process don't stay with the vendor; they show up in the docket.

What follows is a vetting framework, not a vendor scorecard. It outlines the questions every firm should ask before signing a packet supply agreement, along with the documentation it should expect in return. A vendor who can’t answer these questions—or declines to—has already communicated what the firm needs to know.

A legitimate vendor should be able to walk a buyer through the origin of every lead they sell. Vague or inconsistent answers to these questions are a reason to keep looking.

  • Identify the advertising channels in use (paid search, social, display, CTV, organic, email) and the consumer journey for each.
  • Provide sample disclosure language consumers see at the point of opt-in. Read it. Look for firm name scope, the parties authorized to contact the consumer, and whether the consent is general or one-to-one.
  • Ask how the consent flow accommodates TCPA law in the wake of Bradford v. Sovereign Pest Control. A vendor that hasn’t thought through this isn’t keeping up with the regulatory environment.
  • Require that disclosures and consent records be retained for at least the statute of limitations applicable to the cause of action, not just the vendor's standard data retention window.

2. Affiliate and Source Screening

Most mass tort lead vendors source from a network of affiliates, which means their compliance posture depends on how well that network is managed. The following questions help firms understand what controls are actually in place.

  • Request the affiliate onboarding process in writing, including identity verification, business registration, and required TCPA training.
  • Review the affiliate contract template. It should require TCPA, TSR, and state-specific consent compliance, and indemnify the vendor (and by extension the firm) for any violations.
  • Confirm the vendor reserves the right to audit any affiliate at any time, and ask how often they actually exercise it.
  • Ask for the banned source list. A vendor that doesn’t maintain one has no reliable way to keep bad actors out of the supply chain.
  • Establish a clear policy on incentivized lead behavior, gift card sweepstakes funnels, and bounty arbitrage. These tactics produce volume and very little else.

3. Intake Quality and Packet Integrity

Because the deliverable is a signed file, the entire intake operation happens inside the vendor before anything reaches the firm. Quality isn’t measured at a transfer call anymore—it’s determined by how each component of the packet is captured, verified, and assembled before delivery.

  • Pre-qualification criteria documented in writing, specific to the case type, and visible to the firm.
  • One hundred percent of inbound and outbound intake calls recorded, retained, and accessible for the firm's QA review on request.
  • Active fraud detection at intake, including voice biometric analysis, device and IP fingerprinting, behavioral signal scoring, and signatory identity verification before retainer execution.
  • Cross-vendor duplicate detection. The same claimant signed by multiple firms is a fraud risk, a docket integrity issue, and a bar ethics exposure.
  • Packet completeness audit before delivery, covering executed retainer, signed authorizations, completed intake and medical questionnaires, ID verification where applicable, and the consent record.
  • Disposition codes reported back on every lead worked, including rejection reasons. If a vendor is reluctant to share why leads were disqualified, that warrants a closer look at what’s happening in the funnel.

For mass tort specifically, the packet should also include injury or exposure documentation, statute of limitations confirmation, and a no-prior-representation screening record. These shouldn’t be items a firm chases after delivery—they belong in the file from the start.

4. Medical and Documentary Components

For most mass tort case types, the medical and documentary pieces determine whether a packet is workable. In a packet-based model, these arrive with the file rather than being chased after intake closes.

  • HIPAA-compliant medical records authorization signed and included in every packet, not pending or in-process.
  • A defined medical review process, whether in-house or outsourced, with credentialed reviewers and documented turnaround standards.
  • A clear definition of “qualified” specific to the case type, agreed in writing before the engagement begins.
  • Verification timelines that align with the firm's filing strategy. Slow verification erodes statute of limitations runway.
  • Audit access to records, intake recordings, and questionnaire responses, so the firm can spot-check packet contents.

5. Reporting, Auditability, and Disputes

Reporting infrastructure is what turns compliance commitments into verifiable facts. Each claimant who enters a firm's docket should arrive with a documented chain of custody from first click to signed file—something a vendor can demonstrate, not just describe.

  • Real-time dashboards covering packet volume, disposition, source attribution, and quality metrics.
  • A full audit trail per packet, including timestamp, source, disclosures shown, consent captured, signatory verification, and channel of origin.
  • Documentation retention policy in writing, with clear ownership of the records and the signed packets if the relationship ends.
  • Defined packet return and replacement policy, including the dispute window, return criteria (incomplete documentation, fraud, conflict, qualification failure), and financial reconciliation.
  • Service level agreements with measurable performance terms. Without SLAs, a firm’s only recourse when things go wrong is a conversation. With defined SLAs, there are actual remedies.

6. Industry Posture and Alignment

A How a vendor engages with the broader industry tends to reflect how seriously they take their own standards—not just when clients are paying attention, but when they aren’t.

  • Membership or active participation in the National Legal Vendor Alliance and adherence to its standards.
  • Demonstrated engagement at industry events such as Mass Torts Made Perfect and the Trial Lawyers Summit. Vendors who are conspicuously absent from these conversations tend to have reasons for staying on the sidelines.
  • Published thought leadership or regulatory commentary. Vendors who engage publicly with TCPA and compliance developments tend to be the ones who actually stay current on them.
  • References from firm clients of comparable size and case mix, with permission to contact.

The Bottom Line

A vendor that can answer every question above is not necessarily the cheapest in the market. They’re the one whose packets will hold up under scrutiny, whose contracts won’t become a liability, and whose claimants will still be in the case file when the bellwether trials begin.

In a packet-based relationship, the firm isn’t buying leads. It’s buying signed clients whose signatures carry the firm’s name. Vetting upfront costs a fraction of what it costs to defend a TCPA class action or unwind a docket two years in.

About Email Agency

Email Agency is a full-spectrum performance marketing firm delivering compliant, scalable growth for law firms and service-oriented businesses. Through digital acquisition, lead optimization, automation, and compliance-centric intake workflows, the firm produces complete client packets for its law firm clients, signed and ready to enter case management. Email Agency is the parent of LawLogic, a unique team that manages every step of the legal claimant process, from affiliate screening and intake through QA fraud detection, medical verification, and final packet delivery.

Amie Lawson, Chief Executive Officer

Amie has built Email Agency into a trusted partner for law firms that want measurable, ethical growth. Under her leadership, the firm developed the packet-based model that now underpins its legal intake work. She also leads LawLogic, is a LinkUnite Founding Member, and was recognized as a First Lady nominee for her influence across the legal marketing industry.

Nick Thompson, Chief Revenue Officer

Nick combines revenue strategy with deep industry insight. He serves on the NLVA Advisory Working Committee and chairs the NLVA Compliance Committee, ensuring Email Agency campaigns meet the highest ethical standards while actively shaping industry-wide best practices.

emailagency.com  ·  linkedin.com/company/email-agency

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