June 9, 2021
UK job quality continues to fall short
Job quality in the UK has been surprisingly unaffected by the Covid pandemic so far but continues to fall short on a number of key measures, according to the CIPD’s annual Good Work Index. More →
Designing for Dialogue: Meaningful Connections for a Flourishing Workplace,
Online
15 January 2025
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Serendipity and Storytelling - Key factors for Designing Great Workplaces,
Online
15 January 2025
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CoreNet Global UK Chapter Predictions and Resolutions 2025,
London
23 January 2025
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BCO East Anglia Talk & Tour: The Optic,
Cambridge
28 January 2025
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BCO North Seminar: Commercial Office Outlook 2025,
Leeds
29 January 2025
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BCO North Talk & Tour: Pilgrim’s Quarter,
Newcastle
30 January 2025
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Stockholm Design Week,
Stockholm
03 February 2025
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Wellbeing at Work Summit Middle East 2025,
Riyadh, Cairo and Dubai
04 February 2025
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June 9, 2021
by Jayne Smith • News, Wellbeing, Working lives
Job quality in the UK has been surprisingly unaffected by the Covid pandemic so far but continues to fall short on a number of key measures, according to the CIPD’s annual Good Work Index. More →
June 8, 2021
by Jayne Smith • Business, News, Property
Major UK employers plan to reduce their office space by up to nine million square feet, equivalent to 14 Walkie Talkie buildings – the 37 floor high rise on London’s Fenchurch Street – according to PwC’s Occupier Survey of 258 of the UK largest companies. The fresh figures show half of the organisations surveyed expect to reduce the size of their real estate portfolio and, of these, one third believe they will reduce their office footprint by more than 30 percent. More →
June 8, 2021
by Jayne Smith • News, Wellbeing, Working lives
According to research from Randstad UK, more than a third of workers told the recruiter that the pandemic had left them feeling ‘aimless’ while more than a quarter of employees said the pandemic had left them unable to concentrate properly. A third described how the pandemic had sapped their motivation. More →
June 2, 2021
by Jayne Smith • Flexible working, News, Working culture
Employees feel they need to go back into the office in order to be promoted according to new research conducted within the “Reinventing Work” chair at ESCP Business School. More →
May 28, 2021
by Jayne Smith • Flexible working, News, Working culture
Mobile access company Kisi has released their annual study examining which cities around the world promote the most holistic work-life balance. With the goal of enhancing an individual’s personal and professional life through technological innovation, Kisi has endeavored to find out which coveted metropolises worldwide are meeting their residents’ lifestyle demands to make their city a more attractive place overall to work and live. More →
May 27, 2021
by Jayne Smith • News, Wellbeing
St John Ambulance is to launch a new workplace mental health qualification as eight out of 10 (81 percent) workers say their mental health is worse or more variable as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. More →
May 27, 2021
by Jayne Smith • Flexible working, News, Working lives
As the UK lockdown eases and the nation slowly returns to the office, energyhelpline.com has conducted research into the cost of hybrid working. With the nation settling into a mix between office and home-based working, workers are expecting to pay out £890 a month on various work-related expenditure, with outgoings such as travel, after work socialising and rising energy bills set to ramp up monthly expenses. More →
May 26, 2021
by Jayne Smith • News, Property
New research from MRI Software, claims that 71 percent of commercial occupiers say the mass shift to remote working during the pandemic has fundamentally changed their long-term approach to space usage, and yet 69 percent of landlords expect no lasting impact from COVID-19. More →
May 26, 2021
by Jayne Smith • News, Wellbeing, Working culture
New research conducted by McCarthy Stone, claims to expose the true scale of Ageist Britain, reporting that over a quarter (27 percent) of over 65s in the UK – equivalent to more than three million people – have been victims of ageism. 60 percent of UK adults believe it’s a problem that needs fixing. More →
May 25, 2021
by Jayne Smith • News, Working lives
A large majority of the public are concerned about rising unemployment (82 percent), day to day living costs (80 percent), and low economic growth (77 percent), according to a PwC survey of 2,000 people across the UK. Pandemics and other health crises (84 percent), cyber crime (82 percent), and climate change (81 percent) were other key concerns according to the research, which looks at the UK public’s attitude to risk.
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