This website offers general workplace education only—not medical care, diagnosis, treatment, devices, medicines or supplements. We do not guarantee health or productivity outcomes. If you feel unwell or it is urgent, contact your GP or call NHS 111, use emergency services when needed, or speak to your occupational health team for work-related health questions.

Little moves through the day beat one big push

We frame movement as short pauses during deep-work stretches, not punishment for sitting. People learn joint-friendly reaches, slow neck and upper-back exercises they can copy, and how to tweak chair height mid-afternoon without calling attention to themselves. Facilitators never shout “push harder”—invitations stay optional at every step.

Props are optional where storage is tight. Circuits can use doorframe calf raises, calm breathing with a timer (phone on silent again straight after) and partner stretches only after you explain personal space out loud before anyone reaches.

Team member stretching near a workstation between meetings

Session outline you can copy onto a handout

Start with exits, loos and headphones during demos. Reset feet and chair locks early, then show gentle upper-back twists with eyes at a natural height—no forcing range. Close with anonymous tokens (“standing session next week: yes / no”) so you learn preferences without naming people.

See full programme pack

Facilitator guardrails

  • Avoid suggesting someone’s posture is a personal failing.
  • Offer blazer-friendly options in neutral language.
  • Note heels can change balance—never demand someone remove footwear.

Microbreak examples

Thirty-second shoulder circles · seated weight shifts · a quiet corridor walk · calf pumps while a large file saves.

Small office tweaks that encourage movement

Place recycling a short walk from desks so people stand more often. Light floor markers can suggest a window loop—keep routes away from glass where confidential work happens. A few adjustable monitor arms often matter more than another glossy poster.

If hot-desking rotates, a simple card in the tray (“last user set screen here”) speeds handovers—no biometrics, just notes your cleaning policy allows.

Saying why furniture moved beats surprising people with overnight desk shuffles nobody explained to champions.

Health & Safety Guidelines

Check ceiling kit before anyone reaches overhead; pause that part if cables look stressed. Leave space near glass so people walking with trays are not surprised by gentle arm movements.

Follow your own rules for shared mats and cleaning. If unsure, stick to carpet-friendly moves in shoes and keep a visible cleaning log.

  • Watch for slick floors when winter condensation builds—warm the route or choose another room.
  • Show first-aid points on handouts, not only in the room corner.

Example movement-themed dates

Spring walking slots

Twenty-minute lunchtime loops when the weather allows—keep pace relaxed.

Summer quiet stretch

Very low background music optional; invite noise-cancelling headphones where people prefer silence.

Year-end reset

Seated options when desks are packed before holiday leave.

FAQs

Keep work seated and mobile; log fixed furniture or layout issues through your facilities helpdesk.

No hands-on correction—spoken cues and mirrored demos only, unless you already run a different signed consent process.

Leaders keep normal speaking volume; use room mics only where you already have them.