Apprenticeship Improvement Service

Apprenticeship Improvement Service

Helping leaders bring clarity to apprenticeship provision that makes progress clearly visible, builds readiness deliberately and ensures achievement is not left to chance.


Andy Hillerby

Apprenticeship delivery often appears to be progressing well - until pressure reveals what was not clear earlier.


From a leadership perspective, everything appears to be in on track.


Apprentices are attending.

Off‑the‑job hours are being recorded.

Reviews are taking place.

Work is being produced.


Nothing yet suggests that progress is less secure than it appears.


Then pressure begins to appear.


Assessment readiness compresses

Gateway decisions become more difficult

End points are reached with less margin than expected


Explanations follow - often linked to limited workplace opportunity, incomplete apprentice submissions, or delays in employer input and sign‑off.


By the time this is visible, options are already limited.


The issue was present much earlier.

It simply was not clear at the time - and progress was never as secure as it appeared.


Where clarity begins to break down

There are specific points in apprenticeship delivery where this clarity should already exist.


Progress becomes reliable when leaders have clear line of sight at these points:


1. Intent clarity


Whether the training plan exposes dependency, sequencing and timing - so potential pressure can be understood from the outset.


2. Integration of on‑ and off‑the‑job training


Whether on‑ and off‑the‑job development is deliberately aligned to support timely development of knowledge, skills and behaviours - rather than left to opportunity.


3. Progress clarity


Whether progress is clearly visible against each knowledge, skill and behaviour through frequent indicators of development - not inferred from activity or completion.


4. Review traction


Whether reviews actively drive progress forward - using agreed intent to define next steps - rather than primarily recording what has already happened.


5. Assessment readiness


Whether readiness is being built deliberately over time - rather than compressed late in the programme, when competence can no longer be securely developed.


When clarity is weak at any of these points, risk does not disappear.


It accumulates - only becoming visible later, under pressure.


Where provision lacks the clarity leaders need

I work with CEOs and senior leaders to bring clarity to their apprenticeship provision:


  • Where risk is already building
  • Why it is building
  • What needs to change.


This provides a clear line of sight - and the ability to act before pressure limits options.


What this creates for ambitious providers

For providers who want more than programmes that simply appear compliant, this leads to something stronger:


  • Individuals who are competent, independent and trusted in critical roles
  • Consistent workplace impact.


That is what ultimately makes apprenticeship provision valuable - and sustainable.


One question worth asking

What might already be happening in your provision that you do not have a clear line of sight on - and therefore cannot yet control?


Request a confidential conversation to discuss your provision.


No obligation.

Just clarity.

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