Blog

Making The Legal Case for RFID
Despite the trend toward electronic documents, law firms can’t avoid generating thousands of paper originals. Clients and courts demand paper documents, and state bar associations set standards for law firms’ document retention. Even when documents are filed...

Laboratory Design: What’s a “Next Generation” Lab?
Until recently, life sciences labs were “seen one, seen them all.” However, the traditional rows of wet benches have lately been giving way to a new form of laboratory design – the next-generation lab. In Lab Design News, Jeffrey R. Zynda, principal and academic...

12 Tips To Becoming a Better Buyer
When you are making a major business purchase, you might feel like a tourist at a foreign bazaar – too many offers of something you’re not sure you want. What’s a buyer to do? According to these 12 tips from Renewable Energy Vermont, information is the key to being a...
![Secrets of Workplace Happiness: Order vs. Disorder [Video]](https://b4046312.smushcdn.com/4046312/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/open-office-licensed.jpg?lossy=1&strip=1&webp=1)
Secrets of Workplace Happiness: Order vs. Disorder [Video]
The neat-freaks and the sloppy slobs – we’ve all worked with them. In fact, we may be one or the other. Any business manager would agree that a well-organized workplace has benefits, including fewer distractions, less anxiety, and a reduction of the frustration...

Case Study: Workstation Installation Success at Sun Life
Toronto’s Sun Life Financial received an up-front return on investment when they installed their new office furniture – mobile workstations that could be set up in a fraction of the usual installation time. A time lapse video shows how the savings were achieved; watch...

“Mad Men” Office Cubicle Comes Full Circle
In the “Mad Men” heyday of the 1960’s, designer Robert Probst developed a modular, reconfigurable workstation – the now-despised office cubicle. Probst’s early cubicles were created as a system of adjustable wall panels, modular storage, and desk surfaces. They were...