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Built for Better Legal Writing

BriefCatch is the leading legal writing platform trusted by top law firms, courts, and government agencies to elevate the clarity, precision, and impact of legal documents.

Built by Ross Guberman, the nation’s most trusted legal-writing authority
2017
Founded
300+
Law firms supported
3,600,000
Suggestions accepted

Why We Built BriefCatch

BriefCatch was founded by attorney and legal writing expert Ross Guberman to solve a common challenge: even the best lawyers struggle to write clearly and persuasively under pressure. Drawing on years of experience training Am Law 200 firms and judges, Ross built BriefCatch to deliver real-time editing suggestions, examples from top legal writers, and detailed draft analytics. In seconds, BriefCatch enhances clarity, precision, and impact - empowering legal professionals to write with confidence and credibility.

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Why We Built BriefCatch

Ross Guberman, the CEO and Founder, is widely recognized as a leading authority in legal writing and education. His innovative approach culminated in BriefCatch. His deep expertise and unmatched 20+ years experience have earned him the trust of the legal community:

Judiciary’s choice to train new federal judges
Expert witness and frequent legal commentator
Former law school adjunct professor
Best-selling author of two books
Regular contributor to The New York Times and other news outlets

Team Behind BriefCatch

Leadership
Jonathan Smith
Director of Marketing
Jonathan Smith
Director of Marketing
Jonathan Smith
Director of Marketing
Jonathan Smith
Director of Marketing
Jonathan Smith
Director of Marketing
Board of Directors
Jonathan Smith
Director of Marketing
Jonathan Smith
Director of Marketing
Jonathan Smith
Director of Marketing

We’re always on the lookout for talented individuals
who share our passion for enhancing legal writing and
embracing innovative technology.

Events & Speaking Engagements

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Meet BriefCatch at PDC
1201 Wilson Blvd. Floor 27, Arlington, VA 22209
July 9, 2025
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Meet BriefCatch at ILTACON 2025
1201 Wilson Blvd. Floor 27, Arlington, VA 22209
August 12, 2025
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Sharpen your writing with expert resources

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Kickstart Internal Initiatives with ChatGPT
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Write Like Justice O'Connor: The Art of the Confident Concession
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"Potshots and hyperbole"?
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Supreme Structure: Four Tips from the Chief Justice
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Five Ways to Write Like Justice Scalia
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The Best Briefs: What AI Reveals
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Five Ways to Write Like D.C. Circuit Judge Patricia Millett
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Nine Writing Tips. Nine Justices. One Tumultuous Term.
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Writing About Testimony: Is There a World Beyond “The Witness Further Stated”?
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Justice Ginsburg the Writer: Something in Between
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The $500 Million Appellate Brief: Five Takeaways
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Kagan and Kavanaugh Unite: Stop Cutting “That”!
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Case Study: <em>Ford Motor Company v. Bandemer</em>—Seven Ways to Write Like Justice Kagan
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Writing Rules for Fun and Profit: The Agony and the Ecstasy
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Three Justices. Three 100s. Three Tips.
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Preliminary Statements and Introductions: Checklists and Models
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Hyphenate or Bust? A Truce on Phrasal Adjectives
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Case Study: <em>Allen v. Cooper</em>—Five Ways to Write Like Justice Kagan
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Five Ways to Write Like George Conway III
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25 Ways to Write Like Chief Justice Roberts
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Force Majeure and Coronavirus: A Checklist
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Adverbs on Trial: Guilty, Innocent, or It Depends?
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Writing to Clients and the Public in the COVID-19 Era: Some Clarity Tips
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Are “Indemnify” and “Hold Harmless” the Same?
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Stop Cutting "That"
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Kagan’s Power of Examples
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A BigLaw Paragraph Meets BriefCatch: A Case Study
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Hyphen Nation
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Four Usage Fights
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Just Between You and Me
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What Partners Hate: Eight Grammar Gripes—And How to Avoid Them
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Splitsville
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Too Hot to Handle
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Judges Gone Wild
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Warren Buffett, Writing Trainer?
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What Makes for "Brilliant" Writing?
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The Supremes Soar
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The Supreme Writer on the Court: The Case for Justice Kagan
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The Supreme Writer on the Court: The Case for Chief Justice Roberts
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The Apple of Our Eye: Scoring the <em>Apple v. Samsung</em> Openings
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The Three Great Cuts
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Talk to Yourself: The Rhetorical Question
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Ten Ways to Write Like <i>The New Yorker</i>
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Still Saying No!
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Opening Act: Do Your First Words Fall Flat?
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Lighten Up: John Roberts the Brief-Writer
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Just Say No!
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Free Martha? Not with These Headings!
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Five Ways to Write Like John Roberts The Brief-Writer—<em>Alaska v. EPA</em>
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Five Ways to Write Like Ted Olson and David Boies
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Five Ways to Write Like Then-Solicitor General Elena Kagan—<em>United States v. Stevens</em>
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Poker Face: Concede Bad Facts But Put Them in Context
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Finessing Footnotes in Legal Briefs
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Client Alert or Client Asleep?
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Avoid These Clichés Like the Plague
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Five Ways to Write Like Warren Buffett
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The Three Biggest Mistakes I See—And How to Fix Them
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Case Study: <em>Fry v. Napoleon Community Schools</em>—Five Ways to Write Like Justice Kagan
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Five Ways to Write Like Paul Clement
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Introducing the Next Generation of BriefCatch
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Four Motion Mistakes
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Feeling Possessive?
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Eight Ways to Write a Superb Brief
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Logical Transition Examples—To Draw an Analogy or Compare
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Logical Transition Examples—To Provide Another Point
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Syntax: Split Infinitives
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