The UK employment landscape is evolving fast. From new legislation to hybrid working models and workplace expectations, staying compliant while supporting your team can be challenging. At Refreshing Law, we provide clear, practical employment law guidance for businesses and HR teams. We can help with any employment law issues including:
Disciplinary and grievance procedures
Redundancy and restructuring planning
Discrimination and harassment issues
Contract and pay disputes
Our focus is on pragmatic advice that balances legal compliance with real-world business needs. So, you can make confident decisions and protect your organisation.
Watch our latest YouTube video to discover more about the Refreshing Law relaunch as we move into an exciting new chapter.
CONTACT US
We’re here to help with any questions or concerns you may have. Whether you need expert advice or would like an initial conversation about our services, pricing, or the options available, please don’t hesitate to get in touch. At Refreshing Law, what sets us apart from other law firms is that you’ll get to speak to an experienced employment lawyer right from the very first call.
Now under the direction of experienced employment solicitor Lousha Reynolds, we’re pleased to introduce Refreshing Law’s new style.
We’ve rebranded, repositioned our social channels, and launched a new website, all to better reflect how we work and improve support for clients.
We continue to champion straightforward employment law advice, practical legal support, and clear guidance for employees, employers and HR teams. No jargon. No unnecessary complexity. Just lawyers who work for you.
Look out for more updates on our 2026 refresh and reset.
Refreshing Law | Voted one of the Top 200 legal practices in England and Wales by The Times
LOUSHA REYNOLDS
Lousha is a specialist, pragmatic employment lawyer, known for her personable approach and clear, practical advice. She helps clients navigate legal issues efficiently, focusing on achieving the outcomes that matter most.
Lousha has a wealth of experience in advising a diverse range of clients (both employers and employees) on the full spectrum of employment and HR related issues. She also has a proven track record at both the Employment Tribunal and the Employment Appeal Tribunal.
Lousha took the helm of Refreshing Law in October 2025, following the retirement of Anna Denton-Jones, continuing our mission of straightforward advice and practical support for employees and employers alike.
We’re here to help with any questions or concerns you may have. Whether you need expert advice or would like an initial conversation about our services, pricing, or the options available, please don’t hesitate to get in touch. At Refreshing Law, what sets us apart from other law firms is that you’ll get to speak to an experienced employment lawyer right from the very first call.
On 1 September 2025, I reached a milestone of 25 years qualified. So, 27 years of being a solicitor and 25 years practising employment law post-qualification. To make you laugh we were the first year in which trainees were given a computer of their own. The year before four people had to share one: can you imagine suggesting that to anyone now?
Having grown up in the days of ordering company information from Companies House on microfiche (obtain a cheque, send a letter by post, wait for the fiche to come in a little cardboard envelope, load it into a machine the size of a filing cabinet, scroll through very difficult to read data) whereas now it’s a two second search on an app, I thought it might be interesting to reflect on what has changed over that time and what I’d like to see us promote.
The biggest changes are of course the technology: email and the internet was an infant and we treated email very much like a formal letter whereas now people stream consciousness at you like they are tweeting.
We live in an age where you can buy something from Amazon in the morning and have it delivered by afternoon. This comes with a pressure to think and act very fast (I remember the days where we could acknowledge receipt of a letter with a letter saying we’d received it and would respond, buying us at least 7 days time).
The greatest piece of advice I’d give anyone is to not get caught up in the frenzy. Unless you are up against a court deadline, building in a pause is helpful: it can give everyone the time to reflect and think differently. It can be easy to cave in to the clamour coming ‘at’ you to feel like you need to react immediately. When you do that oftentimes you’ll react with an emotional response… pausing enables you to give a more measured and thought through approach. At the very least breathe deeply before you respond. Not reacting is often a valid response as much as reacting is: you don’t have to buy into deadlines set arbitrarily.
The internet has upskilled the recipients of anything we send; they have a much better knowledge of anything we are communicating about and will challenge us accordingly; we’ve had to up our game. This is a good thing; we have to do better.
Attention spans are smaller. I used to have a twenty page redundancy document. I can’t imagine sending that document to anyone now. That’s probably a good thing. My client can read that information on the internet. We can focus on adding value.
This technology has made it all to easy to not communicate or to communicate badly. I remember the days when lawyers would routinely call each other, explain who they were acting for and have a ‘how are we going to sort this one out?’ call. Now all too often I am imploring my opposition to speak to me but it is easier to hide behind email. Conversations enable you to get a better understanding of where someone is coming from: that is as important in litigation as in life.
The same goes of managers too: the more they actually speak to people the better chance they have of addressing issues early doors before they fester. Have meetings, look each other in the whites of their eyes. It is harder for someone to maintain a complaint if they are feeling heard and listened to. It is harder to be angry if you are meeting with the human involved. So when someone sends an email and you gauge things might be getting tense, call a meeting, face to face if you can, Teams if you really have to, rather than respond with another email. Promote phone calls and meetings instead of email. If things are challenging like performance needs to be managed: have the conversation don’t hide behind digital processes. In fact that would be my parting shot: HAVE THE CONVERSATION! Apply it to everything.
I’m retiring so this will be my last blog. It will be interesting for someone to write another one in another 27 years, telling us how AI has changed the world for the good and for the worse. I’ll leave that to you.
Our latest video is available to view on the Refreshing Law YouTube channel – please click here to watch the video in which Anna discusses a recent case (Woodhead v WTTV Ltd) that raises issues around the employer’s duty of care and also procedural fairness in employment cases.
Our latest video is available to view on the Refreshing Law YouTube channel – please click here to watch the video in which Anna discusses a change in the law that is happening in September 2025, for large companies, in relation to failure to prevent fraud.
This link takes you to the Economic Crime & Corporate Transparency Act 2023: Guidance to organisations on the offence of failure to prevent fraud.
Our latest video is available to view on the Refreshing Law YouTube channel – please click here to watch Anna’s video which discusses the recent ruling from the Scottish case that went to the Supreme Court and has given us a ruling on the meaning of the protected characteristic of ‘sex’ under the Equality Act 2010. This video discusses the potential issues and implications arising from this ruling.
Our latest video is available to view on the Refreshing Law YouTube channel – please click here to watch the video which discusses the situation where someone has been offered a settlement agreement where poor performance has been used as the context of the settlement agreement.
The Employment Rights Bill was introduced to Parliament on 10 October 2024.
The aim of the bill is to modernise employment rights legislation. Anna has prepared a number of videos which outline some of the changes the bill introduces:
This video discusses the duty to prevent sexual harassment and can be found here.
This video discusses the initial period of employment and can be found here.
This video discusses the removal of the 2 year qualifying period to claim unfair dismissal and can be found here.
This video discusses the position as regards the impact on redundancy and can be found here.
This video discusses the position as regards collective redundancy – so large scale redundancy and can be found here.
Our latest video is available to view on the Refreshing Law YouTube channel – please click here to watch the video which discusses anonymity of witnesses in disciplinary matters.
Our latest video is available to view on the Refreshing Law YouTube channel – please click here to watch the video which discusses the new preventative duty in relation to sexual harassment and the amendment to the Equality Act that is coming into force on 26 October 2024. This is Anna’s second video on the subject.
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