How Law Firms Win People Also Ask Placements With FAQ Schema
Why PAA Placements Matter More Than Position 1 for Legal Queries
For legal searches, Google surfaces People Also Ask boxes before position 1 organic results on the majority of high-intent queries. A prospect searching “how long do I have to sue after a car accident in Texas” sees PAA answers before they see any firm’s website. If your content is in that box, you’ve captured attention before your competitors’ organic listings are even visible.
PAA placements also feed directly into AI Overviews and AI assistants. When a prospect asks ChatGPT the same question, the AI draws from content with the same direct-answer structure that wins PAA placements — well-structured, entity-rich, 40–60 word direct answers with FAQPage schema. Optimizing for PAA and optimizing for AI citation are the same optimization.
The Anatomy of a PAA-Winning Legal FAQ
Most law firm FAQ sections fail to win PAA placements because they answer the wrong questions in the wrong format. The difference:
The winning answer is: specific to a jurisdiction, names the relevant statute, acknowledges exceptions, and is 40–60 words. It’s the answer a practitioner would give — not the answer a content writer researching for an hour would produce. That specificity is exactly what Google’s systems evaluate.
The 7 Legal FAQ Categories That Win PAA Consistently
- Statute of limitations questions — “How long do I have to [sue/file/claim] in [state]?”
- Cost and fee questions — “How much does a [type] lawyer cost?”, “Do I pay upfront?”
- Process questions — “What happens after I file [claim/complaint/petition]?”
- Fault and liability questions — “What if I was partially at fault?”, “Who is liable if…?”
- Documentation questions — “What evidence do I need for [claim type]?”
- Alternative questions — “Can I handle this without a lawyer?”, “What happens if I don’t get a lawyer?”
- Recovery questions — “What damages can I recover?”, “How much is my case worth?”
Implementing FAQPage Schema in WordPress
FAQPage schema is injected as a JSON-LD block in the post’s HTML. It does not require a plugin — it can be added directly to the post content. The schema structure tells Google’s systems exactly which HTML elements contain the question text and which contain the answer text, making the content machine-readable for PAA extraction and AI citation.
The most common implementation error is creating a FAQ section in HTML without the corresponding JSON-LD schema — Google can see the questions but cannot parse them for PAA extraction. Both the visible FAQ section and the JSON-LD block are required.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take for FAQPage schema to earn PAA placements?
FAQPage schema can earn People Also Ask placements within 2–4 weeks of implementation for posts that are already ranking in positions 1–20. Google crawls and re-evaluates indexed content regularly, and FAQPage schema is one of the fastest-surfacing schema types in Google’s rich result system. Posts that are not yet indexed or ranking below position 20 will need to build ranking authority before PAA placements are achievable.
Should every law firm blog post have a FAQ section?
Every post that targets an informational query — which is most legal blog content — should have a FAQ section. Practice area service pages benefit from FAQs too, but they serve a slightly different function (addressing pre-hire objections rather than research questions). The posts with the highest PAA potential are those targeting process, cost, liability, and statute of limitations questions — the queries prospects ask during active research before contacting a firm.
Does FAQPage schema work for all practice areas?
Yes. FAQPage schema works across all legal practice areas because the underlying mechanism — direct answers to specific questions that Google can extract — is universal. Personal injury, family law, criminal defense, estate planning, business law, and immigration all have distinct question patterns that prospects search. The key is writing questions in the language clients use, not the language attorneys use, and providing direct jurisdictional answers rather than generic legal information.
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