Corporate wellbeing, made practical

Helping teams build healthier daily habits at work

We design structured, non-medical challenges and educational guidance that make small, sustainable routines easier to keep across busy office life. Everything we publish is general information, written for organisations exploring workplace wellbeing.

Colleagues gathered around a table during a workplace wellbeing planning workshop
Movement challenges Step, stretch and stairs prompts for teams

2016

Year our studio began running workplace sessions

120+

Team challenges facilitated across UK workplaces

40k

Employees who have joined a session or guide

9 / 10

Participants say the format is easy to follow

How we work

A calm, structured way to think about workplace habits

Rather than chasing intensity, we focus on rhythm. Each programme is built around clear steps, gentle reminders and honest information that respects how people actually spend their working day.

Guidance, not prescriptions

We share general, educational ideas about routines such as movement breaks and hydration. We do not offer medical advice or individual treatment.

Designed for teams

Challenges are shaped for groups, so colleagues can take part together at a pace that suits their schedules and comfort levels.

Plain, honest content

Our written material avoids jargon and sensational claims. We explain ideas clearly and point to where you can read more.

Focus areas

Themes we explore in our material

Everyday movement

Ideas for adding light activity into a desk-based day, from walking meetings to stretch reminders.

Hydration habits

Simple prompts that help teams remember to drink water through the day.

Rest awareness

General information about winding down.

Mindful pauses

Short breaks to reset focus.

Balanced choices

Talking points for shared lunches.

Programmes & challenges

Structured challenges your team can join together

A challenge is a light, time-boxed activity that invites colleagues to try a small routine for a set number of days. We provide the framework, the prompts and the educational notes, while your team decides what feels right for them.

  • Clear timelines

    Every challenge has a defined start, middle and reflection point.

  • Optional participation

    Taking part is always voluntary, with no pressure to perform.

See how challenges run
A shared progress board where a team tracks a voluntary movement challenge
Why teams trust our material

Experience you can read, question and verify

Real facilitation

Our notes come from years of running sessions in offices, not from theory alone.

Reviewed writing

Content is checked for clarity and to keep claims general and honest.

Clear ownership

Our company details and contact information are published in full.

Privacy first

We explain how data is handled across every policy page.

Notes & reading

Short, practical reading from our studio

Movement

Making walking meetings feel natural

A look at how some teams introduce short walking catch-ups without disrupting the day.

Routines

Why small habits are easier to keep

General thoughts on building gentle routines that fit around real work.

Culture

Talking about wellbeing at work

How open, low-pressure conversations can help teams support one another.

Good to know

Questions teams ask us first

Is your content a form of medical advice?

No. Everything we publish is general informational and educational content about workplace routines. It is not medical advice and should not replace guidance from a qualified professional.

Do employees have to take part?

Participation is always voluntary. Our challenges are designed so colleagues can opt in at a level that feels comfortable for them.

Which organisations do you work with?

We collaborate with offices and teams of varying sizes that are interested in exploring general wellbeing themes through structured, optional activities.

Curious whether a challenge could suit your team?

Send us a short message and we will share more about how our programmes are structured. There is no obligation to continue.