Generate a structurally sound, emotionally devastating plot twist that reshapes everything the reader thought they knew.
Premise: A grief counsellor helps families after disasters. TWIST A — Identity Reversal Revelation: The counsellor has never experienced personal loss — she fabricated her backstory to get the job, and her entire therapeutic framework is theoretical...
Generate a deep, specific, psychologically textured character sketch for daily writing practice.
Character Name: Renata Voss, 51, Forensic Accountant, Lisbon She keeps her office at exactly 19 degrees Celsius — not because of the servers, as she tells visitors, but because at 19 degrees she cannot smell the particular damp-wool smell of her father's coat...
Converts a completed SWOT analysis into a full annual strategic plan document including mission alignment, strategic priorities, initiative roadmap, resource...
Design a complete 365-day creative writing challenge with weekly themes, daily prompts, and progressive skill milestones.
Month 1: Voice & Authenticity — Learning to sound like yourself before sounding like your genre. Day 1: Write 200 words in first person about a mundane task you did this morning. The only rule: one true observation you've never said out loud. Day 2: Write the same 200 words but switch to third person...
Generate a psychologically complex dramatic scene for adult literary fiction — where nothing is said directly and everything is felt.
Stated Subject: Deciding which of their father's books to keep. Actual Subject: Who was his favorite. Nadia picked up the Chekhov collection and held it the wrong way, spine facing in, the way their father had always complained about...
Generate a genuinely impossible moral dilemma scenario for adult fiction — where every choice costs something irreplaceable.
Character: LENA, 38, a defense attorney who believes in the right to representation. The Dilemma: Her most vulnerable client has confided in her that he intends to harm his accuser after acquittal. She cannot breach privilege. She cannot in good conscience win his case...
Generate a psychologically disturbing thriller scene for mature fiction — where the horror is interior, not exterior.
The ordinary situation: RACHEL is reorganizing her daughter's bedroom while her daughter is at school. She found the photograph in the shoebox on the top shelf — the one her daughter had told her held art supplies — and for a moment she couldn't place the child in it...
Transforms a raw SWOT analysis into a compelling investor narrative that demonstrates strategic self-awareness, addresses likely investor objections, and builds...
Architect a complete year-long mystery novel structure with clues, red herrings, and revelation scheduling.
The Crime (Writer's Eyes Only): PROFESSOR ALDRIC PENN was poisoned with a compound derived from his own research laboratory — by his most devoted graduate student, who discovered Penn had been submitting her research under his name for eleven years...
Build a complete anti-hero arc where the character's wrongdoing is comprehensible — and their partial redemption is never clean.
Character: NATHANIEL CROSS, 41, public defender. Genuine virtue: He actually believes in the constitutional right to representation. Core wound: At 22, his innocent brother pled guilty to a crime he didn't commit because they couldn't afford proper defense. First compromise: He coaches a client whose guilt he suspects on exactly what not to say in deposition.
Generate a complete, structurally sound flash fiction story in exactly 500 words — with arc, character, and resonance.
**What the House Holds** The real estate agent called the study 'charming,' which was what they called small. Mara stood in the doorway with her clipboard, measuring the light rather than the room, which was what she always did in houses she was about to sell... *Word count: 498* *Submission target: SmokeLong Quarterly — this story's compressed grief and precise final image align with their editorial preference for flash that earns its silences.*
Generate a complete short story with an unreliable narrator — where the reader knows more than the narrator admits.
Narrator Type: Self-deceived Narrator's Version: RUTH ended a friendship with grace and mutual understanding after growing in different directions. What Actually Happened: Ruth cut off her friend without warning after her friend got the career opportunity Ruth had wanted. [Story opens:] I'm the kind of person who believes in clean endings...
Conducts a rigorous pre-launch SWOT for early-stage startups, translating founder assumptions into tested strategic hypotheses with investor-ready documentation.
Write one true sentence per day, expanded into a 150-word memoir fragment — building an annual autobiography.
True sentence: 'I left the meeting before they finished the agenda.' Fragment: 'The conference room had that particular chill of recycled air and recycled arguments. I'd been counting chairs — fourteen people, fourteen opinions about a logo...'
Take any single sentence and expand it into a 500-word complete story — daily constraint, infinite variation.
Seed sentence: 'She recognized his handwriting on the envelope but burned it anyway.' Expanded: 'Margaret had kept a box of letters under the floorboard for eleven years. Not his — her own, returned unopened. The handwriting on today's envelope was unmistakably Tom's...'