Independent journalism has never been more accessible or more fragmented.
Most journalists today do not lack tools. They have too many of them. Notes in one app, drafts in another, published stories scattered across platforms, and half-finished ideas buried somewhere they will never find again. Add tight deadlines, limited resources, and the pressure to publish consistently, and even experienced journalists can find themselves spending more time managing tools than doing journalism.
This is the reality LettsNews is designed for.
Not as another tool to add to the stack, but as a single place where your entire news workflow can live.
Independent journalists operate like small newsrooms, even when working alone.
Pitching ideas, researching, writing, editing, publishing, and often promoting work alone. Stories overlap. Follow-ups matter. Context carries forward. Yet most workflows treat each article as a one-off event rather than part of a living body of work.
Over time, this creates friction that slows the process down and makes publishing feel heavier than it should.
At its simplest, LettsNews gives independent journalists one place to do their work without forcing them into enterprise-level complexity.
A typical workflow might look like this:
No juggling platforms. No copying and pasting between tools. No wondering which version is the “real” one.
Everything stays connected, so work builds on itself rather than disappearing into silos.
One of the biggest drains on independent journalists is context switching. Writing requires focus, but publishing often interrupts that flow with technical friction.
LettsNews is built to minimise that interruption.
Stories move naturally from idea to draft to published piece without forcing one to reformat, re-upload, or re-organise work. The structure stays intact, which means more time spent refining the journalism and less time fighting the mechanics.
For journalists working under time pressure, this is not a nice-to-have. It is essential.
Most journalists only realise how disorganised their workflow is when they need to find something urgently. LettsNews keeps stories organised by default, so the archive becomes an asset rather than a burden. Older work remains accessible and meaningful, not buried and forgotten.
This matters whether publishing once a week or several times a day. The more one writes, the more valuable structure becomes.
Many publishing platforms are designed for large organisations and then stripped down for individuals. The result is often something that feels heavy, expensive, or awkward for solo journalists.
LettsNews starts from the opposite assumption: that independence is the norm, not the exception.
It is built for journalists who want:
Whether you stay independent or eventually grow into a small team, the workflow does not need to change.
Consistency is one of the hardest parts of independent journalism. Not because of a lack of ideas, but because of fragmented systems that drain energy over time.
By keeping everything in one place, ideas, drafts, published stories, and context, LettsNews reduces cognitive load. No constant re-orienting. Know where things are, know what is next.
That calm compounds.
You do not need a complex setup to do serious journalism. You need clarity, continuity, and tools that respect your time.
LettsNews is free to get started, so you can build your workflow at your own pace without committing to anything upfront.
Sign up now at LettsNews.com.
Independent journalism has never been more accessible or more fragmented.
Most journalists today do not lack tools. They have too many of them. Notes in one app, drafts in another, published stories scattered across platforms, and half-finished ideas buried somewhere they will never find again. Add tight deadlines, limited resources, and the pressure to publish consistently, and even experienced journalists can find themselves spending more time managing tools than doing journalism.
This is the reality LettsNews is designed for.
Not as another tool to add to the stack, but as a single place where your entire news workflow can live.

Independent journalists operate like small newsrooms, even when working alone.
Pitching ideas, researching, writing, editing, publishing, and often promoting work alone. Stories overlap. Follow-ups matter. Context carries forward. Yet most workflows treat each article as a one-off event rather than part of a living body of work.
Over time, this creates friction that slows the process down and makes publishing feel heavier than it should.
At its simplest, LettsNews gives independent journalists one place to do their work without forcing them into enterprise-level complexity.
A typical workflow might look like this:
No juggling platforms. No copying and pasting between tools. No wondering which version is the “real” one.
Everything stays connected, so work builds on itself rather than disappearing into silos.
One of the biggest drains on independent journalists is context switching. Writing requires focus, but publishing often interrupts that flow with technical friction.
LettsNews is built to minimise that interruption.
Stories move naturally from idea to draft to published piece without forcing one to reformat, re-upload, or re-organise work. The structure stays intact, which means more time spent refining the journalism and less time fighting the mechanics.
For journalists working under time pressure, this is not a nice-to-have. It is essential.
Most journalists only realise how disorganised their workflow is when they need to find something urgently. LettsNews keeps stories organised by default, so the archive becomes an asset rather than a burden. Older work remains accessible and meaningful, not buried and forgotten.
This matters whether publishing once a week or several times a day. The more one writes, the more valuable structure becomes.
Many publishing platforms are designed for large organisations and then stripped down for individuals. The result is often something that feels heavy, expensive, or awkward for solo journalists.
LettsNews starts from the opposite assumption: that independence is the norm, not the exception.
It is built for journalists who want:
Whether you stay independent or eventually grow into a small team, the workflow does not need to change.
Consistency is one of the hardest parts of independent journalism. Not because of a lack of ideas, but because of fragmented systems that drain energy over time.
By keeping everything in one place, ideas, drafts, published stories, and context, LettsNews reduces cognitive load. No constant re-orienting. Know where things are, know what is next.
That calm compounds.
You do not need a complex setup to do serious journalism. You need clarity, continuity, and tools that respect your time.
LettsNews is free to get started, so you can build your workflow at your own pace without committing to anything upfront.
Sign up now at LettsNews.com.