Unlock now.

Please add to cart and purchase to enjoy this video.

$20.00Add to cart

There are only 100 places available for this must-attend workshop!

Don’t miss out – purchase now!

$20.00Add to cart

Striking the right balance between managing your professional obligations and your personal health and wellness is becoming increasingly harder in this fast-paced, technology-driven era. To achieve business success, it is now more important than ever to maintain a sustainable and positive career in law. This lively panel session will give you the top tips, traps and strategies to remain successful, happy and healthy in an industry filled with stress and long hours. You will be better informed to:

  • Identify triggers and build better management procedures
  • Understand the environmental factors you didn’t even know were there
  • Effectively develop strong connections and a valuable support network
  • Why cultivating a great culture in the office is paramount
Nancy Youssef
Founder, Mentor and Author, Classic Finance
Kate Cliff
Founder, Kate Cliff Meditation
Alexia Houston
Head of Insurance & Risk, Clayton Utz

CPD

Practice management and business skills: 0.17

RSS Lawyers Weekly latest news

  • ‘Disturbing’: Tax lawyers push back on proposal to register with regulator
    Taxation lawyers have slammed the “ill-advised and regrettable” that they register with the Tax Practitioners Board to provide tax advice, with one BigLaw partner warning he is “certain” that lawyers will opt out of providing such advice if registration is forced upon them.
  • Morae, ContractPodAi team up to launch MorAI
    Morae and ContractPodAi have entered a partnership to transform legal work through the embedding of the latter’s legal generative AI technology stack, Leah.
  • Is play the missing link for small firms?
    Let’s press play on our professional lives and rediscover the power of fun. After all, a workforce that plays together stays together, and businesses that prioritise play are better positioned to innovate, grow, and thrive, writes Dr Kate Renshaw.
[]