Revolutionary tool promises to stress bust on the move

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A new handheld biosensor device monitors workplace stress in real-time by measuring changes in skin electrical properties. The Optimal Office tool alerts users when stress reaches a set threshold and provides relaxation techniques to manage it while working.

Storytelling in a business context

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Storytelling in business inspires creativity and drives innovation by helping teams retain information, build belonging, and communicate more effectively. Expert Preethi Nair shares how creative techniques unlock organizational potential and solve complex problems.

European business schools give the MBA some ‘va va voom’

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European business schools are expanding rapidly, with over 500 MBA programs now operating across the continent. Schools are differentiating themselves through specialization, international focus, and innovative features like specialized programs and personal coaching to compete in an increasingly crowded market.

HR tip: Offers subject to references

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Employment offers can be made conditional on satisfactory references by clearly stating this requirement in the offer letter. The employer alone determines whether references meet their standards, and you can require references from specific sources such as a current or previous employer.

Tales of the unexpected: Succession planning. By Matt Henkes

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Modern succession planning has shifted from slotting predetermined people into specific roles to assessing organizational talent across different role types, incorporating psychological profiling and skills analysis. This flexible approach enables businesses to adapt quickly to changing circumstances while matching the right capabilities to evolving business needs.

Minimum wage flouters in crackdown call

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Wales TUC is calling for stricter minimum wage enforcement after finding that 95% of caught employers simply repay owed wages with no penalties. The union wants the government to introduce per-worker fines and significantly increase maximum penalties to deter wage theft.

Colborn’s Corner: Dual loyalties

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Banks face public controversy over charges, raising questions about how negative publicity affects employee morale and whether staff feel equipped to defend their employer while managing their own customer relationships with the same organization.

The virtual reality of games-based learning

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Games-based learning offers HR departments a cost-effective and engaging solution for corporate training on complex or traditionally dull subjects. Available via desktop, this approach motivates learners and improves retention better than traditional e-learning or classroom training while also reducing workplace stress and boosting productivity.

Women no longer lone soldiers of discrimination

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Research reveals discrimination in senior positions extends beyond women to include age, disability, religion, ethnicity, and parental status. The study found that over 60% of respondents face risky positions without adequate support, with only 19% believing leadership advancement is truly accessible to them.

Argos worker sacked following Facebook rampage

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An Argos employee was fired for gross misconduct after creating a Facebook group criticizing his workplace and management. The 20-year-old’s dismissal from his £6.55-per-hour job came following a disciplinary hearing, highlighting risks of public social media complaints about employers.

A quarter of women to take home the ‘bread’ by 2030

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By 2030, women are projected to be the main earners in one in four households, despite currently earning less than men. The trend is driven by younger women’s rising wages and educational advantages, with women in their twenties potentially overtaking men’s earnings by 2015.

Be careful wot you rite: Warns CV police

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Ninety-five percent of job applicants are making spelling, grammar, and formatting mistakes on their CVs, according to Kelly Services. The recruitment firm offers nine essential tips to improve your CV, including avoiding overcapitalization, using correct spelling for your region, expanding abbreviations, and maintaining a professional email address.

Posture is a pain in the back for bosses

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Only 27 percent of UK employers provide posture-supporting chairs despite back pain costing the economy over £5 billion annually. Research shows most computer workers suffer from back, neck, and shoulder pain in silence, while businesses lose significant money through sick pay and reduced productivity.

World Duty Free flies high with customer coaching

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World Duty Free is investing £200,000 in a customer coaching program across 65 UK airport stores to enhance staff training and reinforce its “think customer” core value. The initiative, which follows a successful Heathrow pilot that generated £2m in additional sales, aims to improve customer experience through on-the-job training, workshops, and coaching sessions.

Net recruitment paves the way for new agencies. By John Stokdyk

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Internet-based recruitment agencies are transforming hiring by offering online job boards, applicant tracking software, and hybrid services that reduce costs by up to 90 percent. Traditional recruitment intermediaries face competition from web-driven solutions that provide faster accessibility and greater control over the hiring process.

What’s wrong with talking to staff? By John Pope

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Effective managers achieve true employee engagement through direct communication and listening to staff, rather than relying on expensive systems or surveys. Management consultant John Pope illustrates how personal approaches and regular dialogue build trust, identify problems early, and foster a progressive workplace culture.

All alone? The plight of vulnerable workers. By Annie Hayes

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Lone workers across multiple professions face significant safety risks, with over 655,000 violence incidents recorded in England and Wales in 2004/05. Nurses, social workers, and community healthcare staff are particularly vulnerable when visiting clients in isolated locations without immediate support from colleagues or managers.

Maternity extensions trap women

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Extended maternity leave policies are backfiring, with employers—especially small and medium-sized businesses—reluctant to hire women due to concerns about retention and productivity. A survey reveals that while 72 percent of companies plan flexible working arrangements, only 43 percent of SMEs have technology infrastructure to support remote work for working mothers.

Email snooping: Monitoring your employees

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Employers can legally monitor employee emails, but must follow strict legal requirements. Monitoring is only permitted when business benefits outweigh privacy intrusion, workers are warned in advance, and data is kept secure. Various laws including the Human Rights Act protect employee privacy rights in the workplace.

Early signs signal smoking success

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Two weeks after a smoking ban took effect, 97% of inspected premises were smoke-free, with 79% displaying proper no-smoking signage. The high compliance rates, comparable to Scotland and Ireland’s early success, demonstrate strong public and business cooperation with the new laws.

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