Law Firm & Attorney Blog Website Template
Statute is an editorial landing page template built for tax attorneys who represent clients facing IRS enforcement. It leads with striking data figures, guides visitors through case narratives, and closes with a lead magnet form. The design uses a charcoal and sky blue palette to project authority, calm, and credibility from the first scroll.
by Rocket studio
Quick summary
Statute is a single-page editorial template designed for a tax attorney practice. It opens with a stats wall of three dominant figures, flows through magazine-style case narratives anchored by data, and converts visitors through a branded PDF lead magnet and a sticky click-to-call bar. The visual identity blends deep charcoal with sky blue to feel authoritative and precise.
Who this template is for
This template is built for tax attorneys and tax resolution practices that want to communicate expertise before asking for anything. It suits solo attorneys, boutique firms, and established practices that handle IRS enforcement matters.
- Tax attorneys representing clients in Tax Court or offer-in-compromise negotiations
- Tax resolution practices handling wage garnishments, levy notices, and FBAR (Foreign Bank Account Report) penalty cases
- Law firms targeting small business owners, W-2 earners with large assessments, and expatriates with unreported foreign accounts
What problem this template solves
Most attorney landing pages lead with credentials and ask for a call too early. Visitors facing an IRS notice are anxious and skeptical. They need evidence of competence before they trust anyone. This template solves the credibility gap by leading with data and building an evidence wall before any conversion ask appears.
- Visitors leave generic attorney pages because nothing answers "can you actually solve my specific problem"
- Clients in IRS crises need to feel informed and understood before picking up the phone
- Standard contact-form pages miss visitors in acute crisis who need an immediate, low-friction path to help
What you get with this template
You get a fully structured editorial landing page with every section pre-built and content-directed. The layout moves visitors from initial data impact through case context and then to two distinct conversion paths.
- A stats wall header with three display-scale metric figures on a charcoal background
- Stats-first editorial content blocks, each opening with a dominant number followed by magazine-style narrative prose and pull quotes
- A lead magnet section with a name, email, and notice-type dropdown form for the "IRS Notice Decoder" PDF offer
- A sticky bottom bar with a click-to-call prompt for visitors facing immediate deadlines
Feature list
A brief summary of what powers this template's editorial impact and conversion design.
Stats Wall Header
The header places three large typographic figures across the full viewport width. Each number is set in a condensed serif at display scale in sky blue on charcoal. A single subhead in off-white anchors the section below the figures.
Stats-First Editorial Blocks
Each scroll segment opens with a single arresting statistic before the explanatory content unfolds. Short case narratives in magazine-style prose follow each number, with pull quotes from anonymized clients adding a human dimension to the data.
IRS Notice Decoder Lead Magnet Form
The primary conversion element is a branded PDF download offer. The form collects first name, email address, and a dropdown selection for the type of IRS notice received, with options covering common notices such as CP2000, CP504, and Letter 3172.
Sticky Click-to-Call Bar
A persistent bottom bar reads "Facing a deadline? Call now" and carries a click-to-call phone number. It stays visible as visitors scroll, catching those in acute crisis who will not wait for a PDF download.
Alternating Editorial Layout Blocks
Background sections alternate between deep charcoal and brief-paper off-white. This rhythm creates visual separation between content themes while maintaining the editorial magazine feel throughout the full page length.
Pull Quote Typography System
Client pull quotes are typeset as distinct editorial elements within the narrative blocks. They serve as social proof anchors embedded directly into the content flow, giving each case story a personal voice without requiring named testimonials.
Page sections overview
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Stats Wall Header | Open with three dominant metric figures and the core positioning subhead |
| Editorial Block One | Lead with "327 days" stat and the collections statute narrative |
| Editorial Block Two | Lead with "$26,000" offer-in-compromise stat and a case story |
| IRS Notice Decoder Form | Capture leads via a PDF download with a notice-type dropdown |
| Sticky Bottom Bar | Provide a persistent click-to-call path for deadline-urgent visitors |
Design & branding system
The palette follows a Legal Shield theme built from four specific tones that each carry a defined role across the page. Typography leans on condensed serif faces at display scale for numbers and headers, with clean editorial columns for body text.
- Deep courtroom charcoal (#2D3436) and brief-paper off-white (#F5F6FA) alternate as full-bleed section backgrounds throughout the page
- Jurisdictional slate (#636E72) carries body text and captions to keep reading comfortable without competing with structural elements
- Resolute sky blue (#4A90D9) is reserved for links, calls to action, and data highlights so every blue element signals a possible action
Mobile & speed optimization
The editorial layout is structured to translate clearly onto smaller screens. Display-scale numbers stack vertically on mobile, and the sticky bottom bar remains functional across viewport sizes.
- The stats wall figures reflow to a single-column stack on narrow screens without losing their typographic weight
- The lead magnet form compresses to a full-width single-column layout on mobile devices for easy thumb interaction
- The sticky click-to-call bar is optimized for mobile tap targets, making it immediately usable on phones where most crisis-driven searches happen
How this template helps you convert
The page is designed around a principle of earning the click before requesting it. Every layout decision delays the ask until the visitor has already received genuine value.
- The stats wall establishes immediate credibility. Visitors who land during an IRS crisis see evidence of scale and competence within the first viewport, which lowers defensive skepticism before any narrative begins.
- The editorial content blocks use a number-then-story rhythm. Each data point makes the visitor feel informed rather than sold to, progressively reducing the psychological barrier to making contact.
- Two conversion paths serve two distinct visitor states. The PDF download form captures research-mode visitors who need time to decide, while the sticky click-to-call bar catches deadline-driven visitors who need help today.
Other information about this template
This template is part of the Editorial Magazine template style group and is categorized under Professional Services for law firm and attorney practices. It is built for the tax resolution niche, with design and content direction aligned to IRS enforcement contexts.
- The template style is Editorial Magazine, with a Stats-First Impact creative direction that prioritizes data credibility over promotional language
- The header concept is a Stats and Metrics wall rather than a testimonial card or imagery-based hero, making the data itself the visual centerpiece
- The content and resource landing page direction means the primary goal is delivering value upfront, positioning the lead magnet as a natural and trusted next step
- This template can support a tax attorney practice focused on Tax Court petitions, offer-in-compromise negotiations, wage garnishment relief, and FBAR penalty resolution




Theme
Editorial Magazine
Creative direction
FAQ-Driven
Color system
Cloud Canvas
Style
Editorial/Magazine
Direction
Content/Resource
Page Sections
Stats Wall Header with Display Typography
Stats-first Editorial Content Blocks
IRS Notice Decoder Lead Magnet Form
Sticky Click-to-call Bottom Bar
Alternating Section Backgrounds
Pull Quote Typography System
Related questions
Can I change the statistics in the header to reflect my own firm's numbers?
Does the lead magnet form require a connected email platform to work?
Is the sticky click-to-call bar easy to update with a different phone number?
Do I need to supply the IRS Notice Decoder PDF, or is it included?
Can I adapt this template for a general law practice rather than a tax-focused one?