April 19, 2021
IN Magazine issue 6 has been published
It’s now a year since we launched IN Magazine and what a year it’s been. Issue 6 is now out. IN continues to explore the latest ideas from the world of work, speak to the most interesting people and feature the most pioneering ideas. In this issue: Kerstin Sailer casts a spell on the workplace; Microsoft’s Experience Centre in Amsterdam; what we can learn about the workplace experience from app design; the new emphasis on fresh air; the problem of managing people across borders; what happens to spaces when people abandon them; and why we must take the environmental impact of commercial property far more seriously. And, of course, much more. All back issues of IN Magazine can be found here. Illustration: Ian Pearsall








Employees experience more bullying on days with higher work pressure and passive avoidant leadership, finds 
Employees would worry about the security of their job if they were to report suffering an injury in the workplace, claims new research carried out by 


New office developments and major refurbishments in the UK will be able to formally register under the Design for Performance framework. The framework claims to help developers ensure that projects deliver against their design intent and overcome the well-evidenced performance gap between design and operation. This is achieved by requiring project teams to target an operational 
Research from 
A new global survey by CFO Research and 
As the UK prepares to return to normal in the coming months and industries reopen, research from 
More than a year after the coronavirus was first reported the UK, the impact on business is undeniable. Research conducted by 


Skills have become the new currency of workforce and talent strategies, as more than half of organisations that responded to the 
If a robot worker makes a mistake on the job, or annoys customers, businesses may not give it a pink slip and a cardboard box for its office belongings, but companies may be forced to shut down these expensive machines, according to a team of researchers. Knowing how to better design and manage these robots may help service industry firms both avoid losing their investments in the robots, as well as secure an increasingly necessary source of extra help, the team added. 
