Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Writers.
Is It Necessary to Trademark Your Business Name in the UK? Here’s What You Should Know
Most people who start a business in the UK don’t think about trademarks until something goes wrong. I know this because I’ve watched it happen. Entrepreneurs who spent years building a brand, only to receive a legal letter telling them to stop using their own name. It’s a gut punch that’s entirely avoidable.
By Saurav Singha day ago in Writers
Eliminating Surprise Spend with Real-Time Procure-to-Pay Visibility
In a world where remote teams make thousands of purchases every day, from software subscriptions to office supplies, the moment “surprise spend” hits the books is when finance loses both control and confidence. The traditional procure-to-pay cycle, request, approve, order, receive, reconcile, was designed for paper trails and batch processing. Those days are over. Now, companies that treat procure-to-pay as an intelligent, real-time workflow keep their budgets intact and their teams empowered.
By Zain Princea day ago in Writers
AI Can Clarify Thought Instead of Replacing It
The Accusation Is About Origin, Not Appearance The accusation that using AI makes writing deceptive sounds strong because it targets authorship, not style. It implies that if a tool is involved at any stage, the final product is no longer truly yours. That assumption only holds if the tool is the source of the thinking. If the reasoning, direction, and conclusions originate elsewhere, then the presence of a tool does not transfer ownership. It only affects how the ideas are presented.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast2 days ago in Writers
Breaking Up Is Hard To Do: a Harper Lewis rogue challenge
This is my second post about this challenge, which is to write a letter breaking up with a literary character. You may take the point of view of another character, real or of your own creation; there’s no wrong way to do this. You may choose anything from a nursery rhyme to a poem to a play to an opera to a short story—you get the picture: any genre.
By Harper Lewis2 days ago in Writers
Side Quest Goal Achieved: Placing an Alien Claim. Top Story - March 2026.
This is a post that has me quite ecstatic. It's funny, I thought it was going to be one of my usual, "Hey, I achieved another one of my goals and checked it off" type deals. And it sort of is. But it sort of isn't. And it's also one of my greatest writing accomplishments of late.
By Stephen Kramer Avitabile3 days ago in Writers
Preservation as an Act of Care
Care is usually associated with people, not with ideas. It brings to mind attentiveness, patience, protection, and responsibility toward something fragile. Meaning rarely enters that picture. Thoughts are assumed to be abundant, replaceable, and endlessly renewable. If one is lost, another will come. This assumption feels practical, but it is wrong in a quiet and costly way. Some meanings are not interchangeable. Some insights arrive only once, shaped by a particular moment, a particular season, or a particular convergence of experience that will never repeat in the same form.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast3 days ago in Writers
What Survives After Editing
Writing usually starts out in a worse form than people ever get to see. It comes out messy, repetitive, overexplained, and half-formed. Editing is where you go back, cut what’s dead, fix what’s weak, and keep only what still holds. That’s the point where writing either gets better or gets abandoned.
By Annam M Gordon3 days ago in Writers









