Rose Moncur
Rose Moncur writes on business topics for The Herald, focusing on specific services and developments that shape how organisations operate and how people use them. Her work includes coverage of flagship rail operations, using concrete timetable changes and service details to anchor business stories in everyday experience.
Flying Scotsman returns to its renowned 10am Edinburgh departure time
In her piece on the Flying Scotsman, Moncur reports on the service returning to its renowned 10am departure time from Edinburgh. The article centres on a single, well-known rail service and a precise operational change, treating the timing of the departure as a defining feature of the route. By framing the story around the restoration of a familiar schedule, she connects a business-side decision about how the service runs with the continuity and identity of the train itself.
Business coverage grounded in named services and schedules
Moncur’s work on the Flying Scotsman shows a business approach that starts from named services, brands and the details of how they run, rather than from abstract financial data alone. She highlights departure times and service patterns as news in their own right, reflecting how operational decisions can be central to a business story. This emphasis on concrete, timetable-level change positions her coverage at the point where business decisions meet the practical realities of customers and operators.
4 more business journalists.
Adam McCulloch
Adam McCulloch covers business developments for Personnel Today, focusing on how changes in the wider economy affect hiring, job creation and workforce planning. He writes for an HR and people-management readership, treating business and labour market news through its impact on recruitment pipelines and day-to-day staffing decisions. He tracks labour market data, job postings and employer confidence as practical signals for employers. His reporting follows employment trends, recruitment cycles and sector shifts in vacancy volumes, linking turning points in hiring to external shocks, uncertainty and global pressures on business confidence. He often connects domestic hiring conditions to geopolitical tension and other international risks. His coverage is concise and news-driven, highlighting key figures, turning points and business implications to give HR and line managers a fast, fact-based view of how business conditions are reshaping recruitment, staffing and workforce plans.
Aidan Fortune
Aidan Fortune is a business journalist who covers the commercial realities of the convenience retail sector for trade title Convenience Store. He focuses on how fascia, supplier and union decisions play out in day-to-day life for independent and franchise retailers. His core beat is the business side of convenience, especially symbol and franchise fascias such as Morrisons Daily and other branded formats. He reports on wholesale supply, franchise terms, retailer recruitment, and how they affect margins, range, service and competitiveness. He covers operational disruption, labour disputes and supply chain risk with a focus on store-level impact and risk management. He also reports on openings, refits and format changes, using individual stores as case studies. His analysis of trading conditions, costs, regulation and category trends is grounded in retailer experience and trade data.
Albert Toth
Albert Toth stands out for business coverage that tracks how boardroom and industrial decisions disrupt everyday life. He reports for The Independent, focusing on the intersection of workplace disputes, transport networks and the wider economy. His business beat centres on the real-world impact of strikes, industrial action and other developments that might otherwise feel abstract. He explains how these stories translate into costs, choices and disruption for the public, using clear, practical language. A core part of his work is service-led reporting on strikes and transport disruption, including guides to upcoming tube walkouts. He organises information around what readers need to plan: dates, routes, affected services and the scale and phases of expected disruption.
Alberto Nardelli
Alberto Nardelli covers the collision between European economic policy and global power politics for Bloomberg, tracking how decisions in Brussels shape trade, industry and business exposure to geopolitical risk. He focuses on EU trade rules and industrial strategy, especially when the bloc deploys tougher tools to manage global competition. His reporting follows how strategies on trade, technology, security, sanctions and sensitive technologies become concrete measures that affect companies, markets and cross-border supply chains. He closely reads official documents, confidential drafts and the fine print of EU decisions, explaining how new instruments are designed, negotiated and presented inside institutions. His work often centers on the EU’s response to China, global trade tensions and measures aimed at de-risking, screening investments and protecting critical infrastructure, with stories that spell out sector exposure, policy levers and the diplomatic context behind key decisions.