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Harrods Estates shuts up shop after 130 years as tax raids on wealthy overseas buyers take their toll
Business

Harrods Estates shuts up shop after 130 years as tax raids on wealthy overseas buyers take their toll

by April 9, 2026

The iconic property arm of the Knightsbridge department store has closed its last remaining office after a perfect storm of stamp duty hikes, the scrapping of non-dom tax status and a shift in tastes among ultra-wealthy buyers left it fatally exposed.

For the best part of 130 years, Harrods Estates occupied a rarefied corner of the London property market. Founded in 1897 on the ground floor of the famous Knightsbridge department store, it spent decades connecting British aristocrats and wealthy international buyers with some of the capital’s most desirable addresses. Princess Diana’s stepmother, Countess Raine Spencer, served as a director for a decade, lending the brand a touch of genuine celebrity cachet.

Now, however, the final chapter has been written. The agency has confirmed what it called a “very difficult” decision to close its last remaining office on Brompton Road, bringing an end to operations that once stretched from the Home Counties to Monte Carlo.

Shaun Drummond, Harrods Estates’ residential director, said the closure was part of a broader group strategy to refocus on luxury retail. Service will continue for existing tenants, landlords and those with sales already under way, but even these arrangements will wind down in phases, ceasing entirely by March next year.

The demise of such a storied name is being attributed to a confluence of forces that have battered the top end of the London market. Chief among them is the government’s decision to abolish non-dom tax status, a move that has proved a significant disincentive for wealthy overseas buyers considering a move to the capital. Coupled with stamp duty surcharges of up to 19 per cent for foreign purchasers, the effect has been stark: Savills calculates that average prices for homes valued at £4.5 million and above fell by 4.8 per cent last year.

The geographical dynamics of prime central London have shifted, too. Knightsbridge, once the undisputed pinnacle of luxury living in the capital, has been overtaken in the affections of wealthy buyers by Mayfair, Belgravia and Notting Hill. According to Rosy Khalastchy, a director at Beauchamp Estates, a younger generation of Middle Eastern purchasers no longer shares the desire of their parents and grandparents to live within walking distance of the Harrods store.

Then there is the shadow cast by the late Mohamed Al Fayed, who owned Harrods until selling it to the Qatar Investment Authority for £1.5 billion in 2010. Allegations of historical sexual abuse against Al Fayed, who died in 2023, have caused reputational damage that some industry figures believe drove clients towards rival agencies.

Others point to strategic confusion under Qatari ownership. The property arm is said to have become overly dependent on a narrow pool of international buyers and sellers whose preferences can shift rapidly. One telling anecdote emerged in the summer of 2024, when a visiting lawyer found a large section of the Knightsbridge store given over to a pop-up exhibition advertising luxury homes in Saudi Arabia — a curious choice given the well-documented rivalry between Qatar and Saudi Arabia.

For those who remember the agency’s heyday under managing director Mark Collins, who built an enviable client roster of high-net-worth individuals and opened four London offices, the closure will feel like the end of an era. As Khalastchy recalled, there was a time when every serious seller in prime central London wanted to list with Harrods Estates, and Countess Spencer’s presence at property launches added genuine star power.

The brand’s website now carries a stark banner in capital letters confirming it is no longer accepting new enquiries. A Harrods spokesman said the wind-down followed the natural end of the office lease and that plans were in place to ensure no disruption for remaining clients.

For the wider London luxury property sector, the closure of Harrods Estates serves as a cautionary tale. A brand name alone, however illustrious, offers little protection when the tax environment turns hostile, buyer demographics shift and the competition is hungry. The era of wealthy foreigners beating a path to Knightsbridge simply because the Harrods name was above the door appears to be well and truly over.

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Harrods Estates shuts up shop after 130 years as tax raids on wealthy overseas buyers take their toll

April 9, 2026
Britain smashes solar records as ministers greenlight country’s largest solar farm
Business

Britain smashes solar records as ministers greenlight country’s largest solar farm

by April 9, 2026

Britain’s solar sector delivered a statement of intent this week, smashing generation records on back-to-back days as ministers gave the green light to the country’s biggest solar installation.

Solar farms across England, Wales and Scotland produced 14.1GW of electricity at midday on Monday, eclipsing the previous benchmark of 14GW set last July. That mark lasted barely 24 hours before Tuesday afternoon’s output pushed the bar to 14.4GW.

The milestones landed on the same day the government confirmed approval for Springwell, a vast solar farm in Lincolnshire expected to generate enough power for roughly 180,000 homes at peak capacity. Energy minister Michael Shanks framed the decision as central to shielding consumers and businesses from volatile international fossil fuel markets, calling solar “one of the cheapest forms of power available.”

Springwell follows the approval of Tillbridge, another large-scale Lincolnshire installation backed six months earlier,  a notable doubling down in a county where Reform UK’s anti-renewables stance has been gaining traction. Together with 23 other major clean energy projects approved since Labour took office in 2024, the pipeline could supply the equivalent of up to 12.5 million homes.

The solar records come barely a fortnight after wind generation hit its own new peak of 23.9GW, pushing gas-fired output to a two-year low and providing a dry run for the government’s ambition of a virtually carbon-free grid by 2030. The electricity system operator is understood to be preparing to run the network without any gas generation for short spells as early as this summer.

For the thousands of smaller firms watching their energy costs with understandable anxiety, the direction of travel matters. The government has streamlined planning for so-called plug-in solar installations and updated building standards to require solar panels on all new homes from 2028, measures that should, in time, ease the burden on businesses operating from newer commercial and mixed-use premises.

Whether the pace of deployment proves fast enough to deliver the bill reductions ministers are promising remains the critical question. But with records tumbling and consents flowing, the trajectory is difficult to argue with.

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Britain smashes solar records as ministers greenlight country’s largest solar farm

April 9, 2026
John Lewis chairman’s pay climbs 21% to £1.2m as 3,300 roles disappear across the partnership
Business

John Lewis chairman’s pay climbs 21% to £1.2m as 3,300 roles disappear across the partnership

by April 9, 2026

There is never an easy way to announce a hefty pay rise at the top while headcount is falling on the shop floor, and the John Lewis Partnership’s latest annual report lays that tension bare.

Jason Tarry (pictured), who took the chair of the employee-owned retailer in September 2024, saw his basic salary lifted from £990,000 to £1.2m for the year to January, a rise of just over a fifth. Factor in a modest annual bonus worth 2 per cent of pay, plus other benefits, and his total package nudged close to £1.26m.

The partnership justified the increase by pointing out that Tarry now combines the roles of chairman and chief executive, following the departure of Nish Kankiwala, whose position was scrapped. His predecessor Sharon White was on the same base salary of £990,000 throughout her tenure and took home a total of £1.12m in each of her last two full years, during which no bonus was paid at all.

For context, Tarry’s remuneration remains some way below the £1.53m peak reached by former chairman Charlie Mayfield in 2015, and well short of the nearly £2m paid to the Co-op Group’s former chief last year. A reduction in the number of senior roles also meant the total bill for key management, including directors, held steady at £8m.

Yet it is the workforce numbers that will attract closer scrutiny. The partnership now employs 65,700 people, down from 69,000 a year earlier, with Waitrose losing roughly 1,800 full-time positions and John Lewis shedding around 1,500. A spokesperson said the vast majority of departures reflected natural attrition, with fewer than 0.5 per cent of partners leaving through redundancy.

The trajectory, however, tells a starker story. The group had 76,400 staff on its books in 2023, and has now cut some 10,700 roles in the space of three years — broadly in line with earlier reports that it was considering the removal of up to 11,000 positions by 2029. In March the business signalled it would continue to pursue efficiencies, including greater use of electronic shelf labels and artificial intelligence, though it declined to say whether further reductions were on the cards.

There are brighter notes in the report. The partnership paid an annual bonus to all staff in March for the first time in four years, after underlying profits rose 6 per cent. Every employee, the chairman included, received the equivalent of 2 per cent of their salary.

Tarry’s first 18 months have been defined by a return to retail fundamentals: better stores, improved product availability and higher pay for frontline workers. The group is investing £800m across its estate and has already refurbished 23 Waitrose branches and five John Lewis stores over the past year. The department store chain has drawn queues with the high-street revival of Topshop and seen renewed footfall thanks to the return of its famous “never knowingly undersold” pledge.

While 16 John Lewis department stores have closed in recent years, the chain remains the largest of its kind in Britain, buoyed by the collapse of former rivals Debenhams and Beales and the radical downsizing of House of Fraser.

It has not all been smooth sailing under Tarry, however. The partnership faced criticism after letting go an autistic man who had volunteered as an unpaid shelf stacker at a Waitrose branch for years. More recently, the dismissal of a 17-year employee who intervened to stop a shoplifter stealing Lindt gold bunny Easter eggs attracted widespread attention, and a prompt job offer from rival grocer Iceland.

For a business built on the principle that every worker is a partner, squaring executive pay rises with a shrinking workforce will remain one of the defining challenges of Tarry’s leadership. The numbers may add up on paper, but the optics require careful handling in a retailer whose brand is inseparable from the people who run it.

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John Lewis chairman’s pay climbs 21% to £1.2m as 3,300 roles disappear across the partnership

April 9, 2026
The spectre of stagflation returns as Britain’s private sector grinds to a near-halt
Business

The spectre of stagflation returns as Britain’s private sector grinds to a near-halt

by April 9, 2026

The uncomfortable echoes of 2022 are growing louder. Britain’s private sector expanded at its weakest pace in six months during March, with the final composite purchasing managers’ index slipping to just 50.3, barely a whisker above the line that separates growth from contraction and well below the 51 reading analysts had pencilled in.

For the thousands of small and medium-sized businesses that form the backbone of the UK economy, the message from the latest S&P Global data is stark: costs are rising sharply while customer demand is falling away. It is, in short, the textbook definition of stagflation, and it is back.

The principal culprit is the war in the Middle East. Five weeks of US and Israeli strikes against Iran have sent oil and gas prices surging, with the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil previously flowed, choking off a vital supply artery. The knock-on effect for British firms has been immediate and painful: material costs across the private sector rose at their fastest rate since February 2023.

Manufacturing businesses bore the sharpest pain, recording their steepest month-on-month rise in cost inflation since Black Wednesday in 1992. The manufacturing PMI edged down to 51 from 51.7 in February, still in expansion territory, but only just, and with margins under severe strain.

Yet it is the services sector, responsible for roughly 80 per cent of British GDP, that should concern business owners most. Services activity slumped to an 11-month low of 50.5, a dramatic fall from 53.9 the previous month and a significant downgrade from the earlier flash estimate. New business among services firms fell for the first time since November 2025, a worrying sign for any SME dependent on a healthy domestic order book.

Tim Moore, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, pointed to cutbacks in both business and consumer spending as the driving force behind the downturn, with rising uncertainty over the Gulf conflict further eroding confidence. Business optimism across the private sector fell to its lowest level since last June.

Thomas Pugh, chief economist at RSM UK, was blunter in his assessment, warning that another bout of stagflation now looks unavoidable, and that a prolonged conflict could tip Britain into outright recession.

The comparison with the aftermath of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, when soaring gas prices pushed inflation higher while growth stalled, is difficult to ignore. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development has already suggested that Britain stands to suffer the worst growth hit of any G20 nation from the current crisis, alongside the sharpest inflation rise in the G7. GDP managed just 0.1 per cent growth in the final quarter of last year, offering precious little cushion.

For businesses already grappling with thin margins and cautious consumers, the interest rate outlook offers scant comfort. Markets now expect the Bank of England to raise rates twice from their current level of 3.75 per cent this year, with analysts at Pantheon Macroeconomics forecasting a quarter-point rise in June before two cuts follow in 2027. UK government bond yields have climbed steeply since the conflict began, limiting the chancellor’s room for fiscal support.

There was one small crumb of comfort buried in the data: the pace of job cuts among services companies eased to its slowest since October 2025. But with inflation forecasts suggesting prices could breach 5 per cent this year and the conflict showing no sign of swift resolution, the outlook for British businesses remains deeply uncertain.

The picture across the Channel is scarcely more encouraging. The eurozone’s composite PMI fell to a nine-month low of 50.7, dragged down by weakness in Germany and contraction in France. Chris Williamson, chief business economist at S&P Global, warned of clear risks that the European economy could shrink in the second quarter without a rapid end to hostilities.

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The spectre of stagflation returns as Britain’s private sector grinds to a near-halt

April 9, 2026
New North Sea oil fields would “send a shock wave around the world”, climate experts warn
Business

New North Sea oil fields would “send a shock wave around the world”, climate experts warn

by April 8, 2026

Britain’s standing as a global climate leader faces a critical test as senior figures in international diplomacy have warned that any move to open new oil and gas fields in the North Sea would deal a severe blow to worldwide efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

The government is facing mounting pressure from the oil industry, the Conservative opposition, Reform UK, certain trade unions and factions within the Treasury to grant new drilling licences. This comes despite research showing that the two largest remaining fields, Rosebank and Jackdaw, would displace just 1% and 2% respectively of the UK’s gas imports, offering negligible benefit to either prices or energy security.

The North Sea basin is now more than 90% depleted, and extracting its remaining pockets of hydrocarbons is becoming progressively more costly and energy-intensive. Yet the political appetite for new licensing persists, placing Ed Miliband, the energy security and net zero secretary, in an increasingly uncomfortable position.

Nicolas Stern, professor at the London School of Economics, cautioned that fresh drilling would be damaging on multiple fronts, bad for growth, bad for energy security and a harmful signal to the international community. Lord Stern pointed to Britain’s track record as the first G7 nation to commit to net zero by 2050 and its influential climate legislation, arguing that the world pays close attention when the UK changes course.

The backlash from the developing world has been particularly fierce. A senior African negotiator, speaking anonymously, said the continent would reject any UK expansion of oil drilling, describing it as fundamentally at odds with the Paris agreement. Mohamed Adow, director of the Nairobi-based Power Shift Africa thinktank, warned that approval of new projects would signal that short-term interests were being placed above long-term responsibility, setting a precedent that could prove impossible to contain.

The timing is especially sensitive. Britain has been one of the principal supporters of a global conference on fossil fuel transition taking place in Colombia later this month. However, Miliband will not attend, with climate envoy Rachel Kyte going in his place, a decision likely to disappoint campaigners who credited the energy secretary with brokering a last-minute deal at the Cop30 summit in Brazil last November.

Christiana Figueres, former executive secretary of the UN framework convention on climate change, acknowledged the geopolitical pressures driving the energy security debate but argued that expanding drilling risked locking in infrastructure that was increasingly out of step with the direction of the global energy system. True energy independence, she suggested, lay in scaling up clean domestic energy rather than prolonging the life of declining industries.

The strategic concern for Britain’s business community is clear. Many developing nations are weighing whether to exploit their own fossil fuel reserves rather than invest in renewables. If they choose the former path, the world would far exceed the carbon limits scientists say are necessary to avert the worst consequences of climate breakdown. A senior development official put the matter bluntly: developing countries are already asking why they should forgo their own resources if the UK will not do the same.

An ally of Miliband defended the government’s position, describing the decision to halt new exploration licences as a landmark stance for a major oil and gas producing nation. A government spokesperson confirmed that clean energy and climate action remained at the heart of the agenda, including what it called a world-leading commitment to stop issuing licences for new fields.

Whether that commitment holds in the face of political and industrial pressure will be one of the defining questions of Britain’s energy policy in the months ahead.

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New North Sea oil fields would “send a shock wave around the world”, climate experts warn

April 8, 2026
SpaceX woos the small investor as Musk eyes the biggest flotation in stock market history
Business

SpaceX woos the small investor as Musk eyes the biggest flotation in stock market history

by April 8, 2026

Elon Musk has never been one for convention, and his plans for the SpaceX initial public offering are no exception.

The aerospace-to-artificial intelligence conglomerate is preparing to court retail investors on an unprecedented scale as it targets a valuation of $2tn (£1.5tn) in what would be the largest stock market flotation ever attempted.

In a move that harks back to the great British privatisations of the 1980s, SpaceX has earmarked up to 30 per cent of its shares for non-professional investors rather than reserving the bulk of the offering for the City institutions and Wall Street heavyweights that typically dominate such deals. The company is banking on Musk’s devoted following to help it raise $75bn (£56bn) when it lists later this year.

Details of a summer roadshow emerged this week after SpaceX briefed the 21 banks retained to manage the deal. Analysts from the underwriting syndicate will receive their first formal briefing on 7 June, followed four days later by an event for 1,500 retail investors at a venue yet to be disclosed. Shares will also be offered to investors in the UK, the EU, Australia, Canada, Japan and South Korea.

Bret Johnsen, SpaceX’s chief financial officer, is understood to have told the banks that retail participation would be larger than in any previous IPO, describing the company’s individual supporters as people who have been “incredibly supportive of us and of Elon for a long time”. The approach echoes the way Margaret Thatcher’s government sold British Telecom shares directly to ordinary savers in 1984, giving millions their first taste of share ownership.

Industry observers have compared the excitement surrounding the listing to the frenzy that accompanied Google’s debut in 2004. The company’s implied valuation has climbed sharply in recent months, rising from $1.25tn when SpaceX merged with Musk’s artificial intelligence venture xAI in February to $1.75tn a month ago and now $2tn according to Bloomberg.

Whether that figure can be justified remains a matter of heated debate. George Ferguson, a senior analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence, noted that the only publicly available financial data is top-line revenue, making a precise valuation difficult. He forecast revenues of $20bn for SpaceX this year but cautioned that xAI, which accounts for just $1bn of that figure, is “a laggard in the AI race right now” and represents a significant portion of the overall valuation.

SpaceX generated between $15bn and $16bn in revenue last year, with the satellite broadband service Starlink and US government defence and space contracts providing the lion’s share. A full prospectus is expected in late May, at which point investors will get their first detailed look at the company’s profitability.

Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Citigroup, JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs are leading the fundraising, underscoring the sheer scale of the transaction.

Perhaps the most intriguing element of the investment case is Musk’s pivot from his long-held ambition of colonising Mars to a newer, arguably more commercial vision: datacentres in space. Proponents argue that orbiting facilities powered by a constant supply of solar energy could solve some of the terrestrial power constraints bedevilling the AI industry.

The concept remains untested, however, and the technological hurdles are formidable. Solar radiation, space debris and the sheer difficulty of transporting and assembling datacentre components in orbit all present challenges that would likely require advanced robotic systems not yet in existence. SpaceX’s new Starship rocket, billed as the world’s most powerful launch vehicle, is central to the plan, though a test launch scheduled for this week has been pushed back to mid-May.

Ferguson struck a cautious note. The further away space-based datacentres are from commercial reality, he suggested, the more the concept becomes a drag on valuation rather than a driver of it.

For UK investors tempted by the hype, the message is clear: this will be an IPO unlike anything seen before, but the gap between Musk’s soaring ambitions and proven financial performance remains considerable. As with all things Musk, the potential rewards are vast, but so too are the risks.

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SpaceX woos the small investor as Musk eyes the biggest flotation in stock market history

April 8, 2026
How Aleksandr Loginov Is Redefining Design in the Age of AI
Business

How Aleksandr Loginov Is Redefining Design in the Age of AI

by April 8, 2026

A former Chief Design Officer at Prequel, who led its photo and video apps to repeated No. 1 rankings in the App Store’s Photo & Video category, on why manual design is losing value.

Recent releases made the shift in design impossible to ignore. Google DeepMind’s Nano Banana Pro showed how far image generation has moved toward precise, controllable editing, with tools that let creators adjust camera angle, focus, depth, and color treatment. For video, Seedance 2.0 combined audio-visual generation with much more direct control over performance, lighting, shadow, and camera movement.

These tools are turning design into a controllable production system, so the designer’s role is moving towards that of a systems architect, says Aleksandr Loginov, a product designer and creative leader who combines broadcast visual craft, technical fluency, and product thinking. As Chief Design Officer at Prequel, a consumer app company in photo and video editing whose 4 apps repeatedly reached No. 1 in the App Store’s Photo & Video category in markets including the US, the UK, France, and Canada, he helped shape the strategy behind the company’s rapid expansion. Before moving into product and AI design, Aleksandr was a broadcast designer at STS,  a popular Russian entertainment television channel, where he led his team to a silver PromaxBDA award in the UK in 2015 for high-level work in TV promotion and broadcast design. Now, as he has just joined Lazarev Agency as Art Director for agent-based AI product interfaces, he moves into an award-winning B2B design company with more than 600 shipped products, focused on complex, data-heavy platforms such as AI copilots, decision engines, and vertical SaaS.

Across all those roles, Aleksandr observed that as AI absorbs more of the manual craft, the real competitive edge is shifting elsewhere: toward judgment, system design, and making complex tools usable.

The New Creative Engine

To understand the shift in design, start with the stack itself. Creative teams are no longer using isolated tools. They are assembling a production engine. As Aleksandr notes, Nano Banana Pro is especially strong when the goal is a polished image with better lighting, composition, localized edits, and cinematic texture. But consistency of faces is not its main advantage. That is where Seedream is stronger. Right now, its clearest edge is identity transfer: keeping faces recognizable and consistent across outputs better than any other model in the stack. Kling and Seedance add the cinematography layer, making it possible to generate video with synchronized audio, controlled motion, and more coherent shot sequences. ElevenLabs adds the voice layer, giving visuals a believable multilingual narrative.

“I have already noticed that even a small amount of coding knowledge is now becoming essential for designers. Not to turn them into engineers, but to help them connect models in the right order, speed up iteration, and work with far less dependence on long engineering cycles,” Aleksandr says. Once the stack can provide photorealistic visuals, identity consistency, motion, and voice, the advantage is the ability to turn those capabilities into a dependable pipeline.

That shift becomes easier to recognize when you have had to lead products at scale. At Prequel, where Aleksandr served as Chief Design Officer, he was responsible not just for visual quality, but for the workflow behind image, video, and audio technologies across R&D, Data Science, Art, and key parts of Mobile and Backend. Part of the job was to improve quality, speed, cost, and time to market at the same time. One result, as he describes it, was a workflow that eventually cut the release cycle for AI features from roughly three months to 30 minutes, giving the company a much faster way to respond to signals from marketing. Once a creative stack can deliver photorealistic visuals, preserve identity, and handle motion and voice, the real advantage lies in turning that complexity into a pipeline people can actually use.

What Is Fading and What Is Rising

The manual labor of design is being automated into oblivion. If your value was based on how fast you could mask an image or navigate a complex software menu, the market is shrinking.

What is fading

Technical Tool Proficiency: Knowing every shortcut in Photoshop is no longer a competitive advantage. The software is now a canvas for natural language and intent.
Stock Curation: Spending hours browsing libraries for the “right” image is obsolete. If it doesn’t exist, you generate it in 15 seconds.
Basic Asset Production: Routine tasks like resizing, color correction, and basic layout are now background processes.

What is rising

Intent Engineering: This is more than prompting. It’s the ability to translate a business goal into a technical aesthetic description, i.e., understanding lighting, lenses, and psychology.
Curatorial Judgment: When a machine gives you 50 perfect options, the designer is the one who knows which one actually resonates with the human heart.
Ethical & Legal Oversight: Navigating the complexities of AI copyright and ensuring that generated content remains unbiased and original.

Aleksandr has witnessed this shift while building the kinds of systems that are redefining the designer’s role. In a multi-agent workflow for marketing, he did not focus on producing each asset by hand. He defined the creative logic, structured the sequence of models, and decided where human judgment needed to stay in the loop. Instead of scaling output by hiring dozens of designers, Aleksandr and his team built a system around Gemini and Nano Banana in which the designer began by describing the image and the criteria it had to meet. The model then generated 10 to 20 options. A separate vision-language model reviewed those outputs, identified the ones that matched the original brief most closely, and surfaced the strongest candidates for the designer to evaluate.

This way, Aleksandr shaped the next stage of the workflow. After the designer made a selection, the team animated the chosen images in Kling and assembled them into a single creative or a broader pack of creatives. They then tested that set either in Facebook ad accounts or through SplitMetrics to see which approaches attracted users most effectively. Aleksandr treated that stage not as a final checkpoint, but as part of the system itself: the team fed the performance data back into the workflow so the next round of creatives could build on what had already proven effective.

In practice, that workflow increased creative output many times over while sharply reducing the designer’s manual workload. Under Aleksandr’s leadership, the work that remained essential sat at a higher level: setting intent, defining quality, evaluating outputs, and steering the system as it iterated. For him, that is where the profession is moving. The designer’s value no longer lies mainly in making each asset by hand but in shaping the process that can produce strong creative results at scale.

He argues that this is also why consistency is becoming one of the hardest requirements in AI design:

“When a system produces many versions of the same person, the question is not whether it can generate an image, but whether it can preserve identity, recognizability, and stability across outputs. That is where the designer’s role changes most. The job is no longer just to make things look good, but to define the process, control the edge cases, and make sure the system produces results that are consistent enough to trust and ship,” he says.

From T-Shaped to Blob-Shaped Designers

For years, the ideal creative professional was T-shaped: broad across disciplines, with one deep specialty. In generative design, that model is starting to loosen. The role is becoming more fluid. A designer may move from visual direction to product logic, from interface structure to content behavior, depending on what the system needs at that moment. The craft does not disappear, but it stops living in one fixed place.

Aleksandr’s own career helps explain the shift. Early in his career, he worked in a television medium where images had to register at once (with precision, clarity, and emotional force), and that work led his team to a Silver PromaxBDA in the U.K. Later, at Prequel, he was no longer focused only on frames or campaigns. He concentrated on product systems that had to hold up across millions of user interactions while remaining intuitive enough to help the company’s apps repeatedly rise to the top of the App Store’s Photo & Video category in major markets. The role had expanded from making images to defining how creativity operates inside the product.

As Art Director for agent-based AI product interfaces at Lazarev Agency, he is not confined to one design lane. One week, the work is about understanding what AI capabilities can realistically support in a product. The next step is about shaping those capabilities into a usable flow with the right controls, review points, and product logic. Then the focus moves back to creative direction: defining what quality should look like when images, video, and audio are generated at scale. That is the new reality of generative design teams. Depth still matters, but it now means the ability to shape, connect, and govern systems across disciplines, not just master one static craft.

The Future Horizon of a Designer’s Career

The next shift in design is not just better media, but a different kind of interface, Aleksandr is sure.

One direction is generative UX. Instead of designing fixed pages, designers will increasingly define rules, states, and priorities. The system will assemble the right interface in real time based on the user’s intent and context. In that model, software becomes less like a set of screens and more like a temporary control surface that appears when needed.

Aleksandr has already seen the logic in product work built around ordinary users, not specialists. One of the central ideas he pushed at Prequel was that editing should help people express the feeling of a moment without forcing them to master the mechanics behind it. That same principle, he argues, can shape the next generation of interfaces: systems that infer intent, surface the right controls at the right moment, and ask for confirmation only when the stakes are high:

“When a complex capability is reduced to a simple action, adoption improves because users do not have to learn the system first. The same principle can shape the next generation of products: interfaces that infer intent, surface the right controls at the right moment, and ask for confirmation only when the stakes are high,” he says.

Further ahead, the profession may change again. Neural interfaces could make it possible to sketch ideas directly from thought into digital space. At the same time, fully human-made design may gain premium value as a mark of authorship and authenticity.

AI is not eliminating designers. It is stripping value from the most repeatable parts of the craft. What remains valuable is judgment: the ability to structure workflows, preserve coherence, define limits, and steer a product when the model becomes unstable. Aleksandr has moved in exactly that direction. He started by making visuals himself. He began with visuals. Now he works on systems that determine how creative work gets produced, scaled, and experienced. That is also the direction he is choosing deliberately: building tools that let people without design training create strong content, while giving experienced creators a way to move faster and produce far more. For him, the point is not automation for its own sake. It is to make creative expression more accessible on one side and more powerful on the other.

Read more:
How Aleksandr Loginov Is Redefining Design in the Age of AI

April 8, 2026
UK petrol prices approach 155p a litre as Iran conflict drives fuel costs to highest level in over two years
Business

UK petrol prices approach 155p a litre as Iran conflict drives fuel costs to highest level in over two years

by April 8, 2026

Petrol prices across the United Kingdom have climbed to an average of 154.65p per litre, marking the highest level since October 2023 and representing a rise of nearly 20p since the outbreak of hostilities with Iran six weeks ago.

Diesel, meanwhile, has reached 186.75p per litre on average, a level not seen since November 2022, with some motorists reporting prices in excess of £2 per litre at individual forecourts.

The surge, which amounts to a rise of more than 17 per cent since the conflict began, has been driven largely by disruption to global supply routes, particularly through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint for international oil shipments. In the United States, average petrol prices have jumped more than 20 per cent over the past month alone, from $3.45 to $4.16 per gallon, adding to the political pressures facing President Donald Trump ahead of November’s mid-term elections.

However, there was a measure of relief for markets on Wednesday following news of a 14-day ceasefire agreement between Washington and Tehran. Brent crude fell sharply in response, dropping roughly 13 per cent to approximately $95 (£71) per barrel.

Despite the positive signals from the ceasefire, industry experts have cautioned that relief at the pumps is unlikely to arrive quickly. Prem Raja, head of the trading floor at Currencies 4 You, noted that petrol prices typically lag behind movements in crude oil, meaning the recent drop in wholesale costs will take time to filter through to forecourts.

Raja suggested that prices are likely near or at their peak, provided the ceasefire holds, but warned that the descent would be gradual. He pointed to the disruption in flows through the Strait of Hormuz as a factor that could keep prices elevated in the near term, and urged drivers to shop around for better deals, particularly by avoiding motorway service stations in favour of local forecourts.

Tony Redondo, founder of Newquay-based Cosmos Currency Exchange, described the dynamic as a classic example of the so-called “rocket and feather” effect, where prices rise rapidly but fall far more slowly. He indicated that petrol could remain above 145p per litre through the summer, even if wholesale costs stabilise, with the risk premium on Middle Eastern supply routes continuing to weigh on the market.

Redondo also flagged the scheduled tapering of the government’s 5p fuel duty cut from September 2026 as a further headwind for drivers, potentially offsetting any benefit from falling global oil prices. In the meantime, he advised motorists to favour supermarket forecourts, which on average charge 4.4p per litre less than branded stations.

Antonia Medlicott, founder and managing director of London-based Investing Insiders, struck a cautious note, arguing that the price spike reflects the market pricing in risk rather than an immediate supply shortage. She suggested that stabilisation could come sooner than previously anticipated, provided there is no further escalation, but warned against expecting swift relief at the pumps.

Medlicott emphasised the broader concern for household finances, noting that while individual price spikes may prove temporary, the cumulative impact of repeated shocks on everyday living costs can be both significant and enduring.

Perhaps the starkest warning came from Samuel Mather-Holgate, managing director and independent financial adviser at Swindon-based Mather and Murray Financial, who argued that petrol prices are likely to remain elevated for some time. He pointed to the continued involvement of Israel in the wider regional tensions as a source of ongoing market uncertainty, suggesting that a lasting peace may still be some distance away.

Mather-Holgate cautioned that despite the ceasefire, volatility in oil markets would persist, and did not rule out the possibility of fuel reaching £2 per litre even with peace talks on the horizon. His assessment serves as a reminder that for British motorists, the road back to cheaper fuel may be a long one.

Read more:
UK petrol prices approach 155p a litre as Iran conflict drives fuel costs to highest level in over two years

April 8, 2026
Monzo co-founder backs pension start-up Compound in £500,000 raise to shake up workplace savings
Business

Monzo co-founder backs pension start-up Compound in £500,000 raise to shake up workplace savings

by April 8, 2026

A workplace pension provider founded by two cousins has secured £500,000 in funding as it sets out to overhaul a market where the vast majority of employers say they are dissatisfied with their existing arrangements.

Compound, which targets growing businesses with a digitally native pension platform, closed the round with participation from Fuel Ventures and Paul Rippon, co-founder of the digital bank Monzo, who joins as a special adviser.

The timing looks shrewd. Workplace pension contributions across Britain are forecast to reach £480 billion by 2033, yet the sector remains dogged by outdated technology and disengaged savers. Some £50 billion in pension pots have already been lost track of entirely, whilst opt-out rates nationally sit at around ten per cent, climbing to fifteen per cent among millennials and seventeen per cent for Generation Z.

Auto-enrolment has succeeded in bringing millions of workers into pension saving since its introduction, but critics argue that poor user experience and impenetrable jargon mean many employees fail to grasp the tax advantages and long-term growth on offer. Research suggests that ninety-four per cent of companies encounter problems with their pension provider, a statistic that Compound’s founders believe represents a significant commercial opening.

The company, founded by Dan and Richard Klin, has built a platform that integrates directly with accounting and payroll software to reduce the administrative burden on employers. Alongside the business-facing product, Compound offers employees a mobile application with tools to find and consolidate old pension pots, a feature designed to tackle the lost pensions problem head-on.

Early results appear encouraging. Compound reports an employee opt-out rate of just 1.6 per cent, comfortably below the national average and a figure its founders attribute to removing friction from the process.

Richard Klin said the company was built to address what he describes as a fundamentally broken system. He argues that most people who opt out of workplace pensions are not rejecting the concept of saving but rather walking away from platforms they find confusing and untrustworthy.

Dan Klin, meanwhile, is keen to challenge perceptions of pensions as dull. He positions them as among the most powerful wealth-building tools available to ordinary workers, provided the administration is simplified and the engagement improved.

Mark Pearson, managing partner of Fuel Ventures, pointed to the scale of the problem that incumbents such as NEST have struggled to resolve, describing Compound’s product-led approach and sector expertise as well suited to disrupting the space.

Whether Compound can translate a promising pilot into meaningful market share remains to be seen. The workplace pension sector is dominated by large, entrenched players with significant distribution advantages. But with financial anxiety running high across the country and a generation of younger workers demonstrably disengaged from retirement saving, the appetite for a credible challenger has arguably never been greater.

Read more:
Monzo co-founder backs pension start-up Compound in £500,000 raise to shake up workplace savings

April 8, 2026
One Year Online Master’s in Education Programs: 4 Top Options to Consider
Business

One Year Online Master’s in Education Programs: 4 Top Options to Consider

by April 8, 2026

Teaching is full-time work, and carving out time for a graduate degree on top of lesson planning and grading takes real commitment.

That’s why many educators turn to 1 year online master’s in education programs: you stay in your classroom, finish in around 12 months, and come away with a recognized qualification. According to UPCEA, 71% of prospective graduate students now prefer fully online programs, and that shift shows clearly in education.

Here are four programs worth looking at.

1. International Teachers University (ITU): Best for International Educators

ITU built its 1 year online master’s in education programs on international teaching benchmarks, which makes it particularly relevant for teachers who work across different curricula or in international school settings.

The program includes eight core pedagogy courses and two specialization courses. You’ll study learning theories and assessment methods that track student progress in real time, alongside questioning techniques that develop critical thinking. Technology integration runs through the core curriculum with a focus on practical classroom application. Specialization tracks cover Early Years and Primary Education, English Language and Literacy, and Teaching Mathematics and Numeracy. The full program costs $7,500, with no additional fees.

2. Walden University: Best for Flexible Scheduling

Walden is one of the more established names in online M Ed programs, with specializations in Teacher Leadership and Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment that work well for practicing educators. Courses run on seven to eight-week terms, which keeps the workload manageable alongside a full teaching schedule. The university holds regional accreditation and wide recognition across U.S. school districts.

3. Western Governors University (WGU): Best for Experienced Teachers

WGU runs on a competency-based model, where progress is tied to demonstrated mastery. Experienced teachers with strong subject knowledge can often move through the program faster than a fixed-semester schedule allows. WGU’s online masters of education degree carries CAEP accreditation, which employers across the U.S. and in many international schools recognize.

4. Grand Canyon University (GCU): Best for Rolling Intake

GCU offers online M Ed programs with multiple start dates throughout the year, which helps if waiting for a traditional intake doesn’t fit your schedule. Specializations cover educational technology, special education, and teaching and learning. The curriculum leans toward applied learning, with coursework connected directly to classroom practice.

How to Pick the Right 1 Year Online Master’s in Education Program

Before committing, check two things above all: whether the institution holds proper accreditation and whether the curriculum matches the kind of teaching you actually do. Scheduling flexibility matters too, especially if your school runs on a strict term calendar.

An online masters of education degree becomes a worthwhile investment when it points toward something specific, whether that’s a leadership role, a new school environment, or a qualification threshold you need to meet.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a 1-year online master’s in education program?

It’s an accelerated graduate degree in education completed online in around 12 months. It covers pedagogy, curriculum design, and educational leadership, giving working teachers a path to advanced qualifications without leaving their jobs.

Who should consider a 1-year online master’s in education program?

Any working teacher who wants to advance professionally without a career break. These programs work well for educators moving into leadership, refining classroom practice, or meeting qualification requirements for international or independent school positions.

What specializations are commonly offered in 1-year online master’s in education programs?

Common specializations include curriculum and instruction, educational leadership, early years education, educational technology, and English language teaching. What’s available varies by institution, so check each program’s course catalog before applying.

How do I choose the right 1-year online master’s in education program?

Start with accreditation, then look at how well the curriculum fits your teaching context and how flexible the scheduling is. For teachers in international settings, programs built on global standards tend to be more useful than those tied to a single national curriculum.

Are 1-year online master’s in education programs recognized by employers?

Yes, provided the institution holds proper accreditation. Most schools, districts, and international organizations recognize degrees from accredited universities. If you plan to teach abroad, confirm that recognition applies in your target country before enrolling.

Read more:
One Year Online Master’s in Education Programs: 4 Top Options to Consider

April 8, 2026
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