19 March 2026 5pm – 9pm Community Manchester, UK

Overview

The workplace is changing fast – and Gen-Z is accelerating that change.

Join us for an exclusive evening of insight, discussion, and networking as industry experts explore how workplaces must evolve to attract, engage, and retain the next generation of talent.

From AI and technology to culture, wellbeing, and workspace design, this panel discussion will challenge traditional thinking and offer practical perspectives on what the modern workplace should look like.

What to expect

  • A live panel discussion with industry experts
  • Real-world insights into Gen-Z expectations and behaviours
  • Audience Q&A and open discussion
  • Drinks, networking, and informal conversations with peers

Event agenda

5:00pm – Welcome drinks
5:45pm – Sponsor introduction
6:00pm – Panel discussion
6:45pm – Audience Q&A
7:00pm – Drinks & networking
9:00pm onwards – Networking may continue at a local bar

Sponsors

Speakers

Mark Eltringham

European Director, Work&Place journal

Mark Eltringham is the publisher of Workplace Insight, IN magazine, Works magazine and is the European Director of Work&Place journal. He has worked in the office design and management sector for over thirty years as a journalist, marketing professional, editor and consultant.

Ella Gladwin

Degree Apprenticeship & Rising Star IWFM

Ella is a self-motivated, determined, and hardworking individual with a strong sense of ambition. Her professional and volunteer experiences demonstrate her leadership capabilities and commitment to personal growth. She successfully funded her Gap Year travels to North and South America, Asia, Europe and Australia, showcasing her resourcefulness and tenacity.

She is an aspiring entrepreneur, currently developing her foundational knowledge in the workplace and facilities management industry. She is a degree apprentice working full time in a FM service delivery company and studying a Business Chartered Management degree part time. She is also Secretary of the IWFM Rising FMs Network, where she volunteers with likeminded individuals to bridge the gap between younger generations and the aging workforce, promoting FM as a career of choice.

Jaideep Matharu

Executive Officer, SBFM

Jaideep Matharu is Executive Officer at SBFM, working closely with the CEO and leadership team on growth, strategy, and organisational change. Her role centres on leading specialist projects and supporting board-level initiatives, with a strong focus on workplace culture and leadership capability.

Jaideep began her career at SBFM while studying psychology at university, starting on the helpdesk and gaining first-hand experience of frontline operations. She progressed across operational delivery, client engagement, business support, and project management, now earning a trusted executive position through her active understanding of the business.

She was recently featured in Facilitate Magazine (link here: https://www.facilitatemagazine.com/content/news/comment/2026/01/06/what-makes-good-leader), where she explored the hidden realities of leadership, including imposter syndrome, emotional pressure, and self-doubt among emerging leaders. Her article highlighted the need for stronger support structures and more self-aware leadership to help individuals manage both the practical and emotional demands of their roles.

Emma McLaughlin-Edwards

Founder, Inner Works

Emma McLaughlin-Edwards has spent more than 20 years working across Facilities Management operations and boardrooms, building a practical understanding of what makes workplaces succeed — and what quietly holds them back. She brings a rare ability to see organisations commercially, operationally, and culturally, at the same time.

She is the Founder of Inner Works, a consultancy that works closely with senior leadership teams to align strategic intent with operational reality and the human experience of work. Emma supports leaders to turn what they say matters into deliberate actions, clear ownership, and consistent ways of working — so commitments don’t stall at strategy, and people feel the difference in how work is led and experienced.

Her work is shaped by both professional credibility and lived experience — leading in male-dominated environments, balancing senior responsibility with family life, and building a business of her own. Emma brings empathy and humour alongside rigour, and challenge without ego. She is known for helping leaders understand the real impact of their decisions on people, while still holding focus on outcomes and accountability.

As Co-Chair of LGBT+ in FM and a committee member of the IWFM EDI Steering Group, Emma advocates for workplaces where people don’t have to bend themselves to fit the system. She brings warmth, honesty, and intent to conversations about the future of work — because meaningful change only sticks when it’s felt by the people doing the work.