Process
LATE Late March 2026: 6 Goals Accomplished
Another writing goal accomplished! And I snuck this one in just before March was all done with! This one is labeled as Write 2nd Draft of Script (Gun) because I like writing in halted speech patterns… and I was working with limited space. But to lengthen it out here where I got some extra leg room, the goal was to write the 2nd draft of my script, “Son of a Gun.”
By Stephen Kramer Avitabile6 days ago in Writers
When The Story Pivots and Changes. Top Story - April 2026.
My writing journey has been a bit of a roller coaster. I don't have any accolades to claim, though if I actually attempted to get serious about writing contests and submitting my work, I could change that. After I finished my rewrite and recording of the audiobook of "Memoirs of the In-Between" I decided that I needed to decide what to do next.
By Hope Martin6 days ago in Writers
MAP Monitoring vs Price Tracking: What Retailers Must Know
In today’s hyper-competitive retail landscape, pricing is no longer just a number—it’s a strategy. Whether you’re an ecommerce brand, distributor, or marketplace seller, how you manage and monitor prices directly impacts your revenue, brand perception, and customer trust.
By Retail Gators6 days ago in Writers
Why Unwritten Thoughts Are Lost Forever
There is a specific kind of loss that most people recognize only in hindsight: the realization that something once understood clearly has vanished without leaving a trace. It is not the loss of a fact, but the loss of a connection, a realization, or a way of seeing that once felt complete and meaningful. The mind remembers that something mattered, but cannot recover what it was. No record exists to return to. No artifact remains. The understanding did not fail. It simply disappeared.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast7 days 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 Prince9 days ago in Writers










