COPY & CONTENT

brochures & collateral
video, multimedia & CDs
websites & electronic media
proposals

CONCEPTS & CONSULTING

marketing communications
internal & external programs
concept development


Ross Benjamin is a savvy marketer and strong writer who creates actionable marketing communications content for businesses and organizations.

For over two decades, he was chief operating officer and a principal in the boutique communications firm of TR Productions, Boston, concentrating on writing and producing print, multimedia, and video projects. He continues to maintain a close relationship with TR (now operated by his brother Cary in Charlestown), and his writing imprint is still fixed upon many TR projects.

His writing encompasses a wide variety of subjects which represent the breadth of the New England economy – finance, high tech, retail, biotech, education, healthcare and more. He enjoys learning about sophisticated discoveries, inventions and processes, and then describing answers found and solutions implemented.

Prior to TR, he was an attorney in Chicago, Illinois. A litigation specialist, he researched, wrote, and argued trial and appellate motions and briefs on behalf of business clients.

His passions include politics and Red Sox baseball, and he remains hopeful that two championships will be followed by another, headlined by a new generation of young players.

Ross received his B.A. cum laude from UMass Amherst, and his J.D. cum laude from Northwestern in Chicago.

He lives in Newton with his wife Midge. His daughter Amalie is a sports features writer at the Boston Globe. Daughter Hallie works in business development for the CDS division of CoreLogic, marketing property-specific geographic hazard reports.

On writing for action:

“The assignment is the same whether I’m writing for marketing or training, internal or external, employee or customer, or B2B or B2C. Once I understand the motivation of the audience and develop the unique selling proposition, I use the power of language to captivate, convince and compel.”