B2: Future Forward Workplaces: How do we get there?  
As we move from a pandemic to an endemic, the world of work has changed. We are now dealing with an echo pandemic of poor mental well-being, and an era of ‘the great contemplation’ as people evaluate their purpose in life, meaning and work. It’s also a time to envision how we can build a workplace that better serves and supports its people – our whole selves. Join us in an interactive session to learn a bit more about the factors that impact mental health at work, and how to build back better by diving into simple yet powerful ways that we can build a better future of work that is stronger than it was before. Come to this session prepared to brainstorm and share your vision, and leave with a list of ideas that you and your team can start working on when you get back to the office. 
Meet your Presenters

Bio to come.

Victoria Grainger, She/Her, MBA, BPE, CPHR, PTS, HWL

Victoria is an educator, entrepreneur, fitness enthusiast, mom, and passionate advocate for the impact well-being has on performance. She is the founder of Wellness Works Canada, the only non-profit workplace health and performance association that empowers, educates, and supports organizational well-being practitioners and employers in building healthy, high-performing work cultures.

 

She has worked in the field of health promotion and population health for 20 years. She has supported countless public, not-for-profit and private organizations in developing, implementing, and evaluating comprehensive organizational well-being strategies to create environments where people and business thrives. She has an executive Master’s in Business Administration and a Bachelor's in Physical Education. She is also a trained Personal Trainer Specialist, Nutrition and Weight Loss Coach, Triathlon Coach, and a Chartered Professional in Human Resources (CPHR). 

Workplace mental health conference contact

Phone

1-866-655-8548
Tansi — Cree | Oki — Blackfoot | ​Aba washded — Stoney (Nakota) | ​Ɂedlanet’e — Dene |  We respectfully acknowledge that we are on the traditional lands and territories of Indigenous people in Alberta. We want to recognize the significance of our relationships with the land and the peoples who call this ‘home.’ We commit to a reciprocal relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous worldviews that honour and respect ways of knowing and being.