Andy Hillerby
Apprenticeships justify their place when employers can see their impact in day-to-day work.
Not progress through a training plan.
Not achievement in isolation.
But apprentices becoming trusted, capable and increasingly independent contributors in roles that genuinely matter to the organisation.
In a climate of rising costs, pressure on apprenticeship starts and competing demands on managers’ time, employers continue investing for one reason:
Because the apprenticeship is adding real organisational value.
I work with apprenticeship providers to design delivery that produces this level of impact - so employers choose to continue, expand, and recommend their programmes because they see the results at work.
Apprenticeships sit in a more demanding environment than they did even a few years ago.
If employers are going to keep investing - and if starts are going to remain stable or grow - apprenticeships must do more than lead to achievement. They must produce people who:
When apprentices reach this level, the apprenticeship earns its place.
Workplace impact does not happen by accident, and it is not created by compliance alone.
Apprenticeships that generate real value are deliberately designed to:
This is the difference between apprenticeships that run alongside the job - and apprenticeships that actively shape performance in it.
I do not bolt on initiatives or overlay additional processes. I work on the points in delivery where apprenticeships genuinely influence what happens at work.
That includes:
This is system‑level design, focused on how capability is built, exercised and trusted in real work.
When apprenticeships operate this way, the difference is visible in the workplace.
Employers experience:
Most importantly, apprentices reach a point where managers trust them to perform independently in critical aspects of their role - applying knowledge, exercising judgement and handling responsibility consistently.
That is the point where employers stop seeing the apprenticeship as a programme - and start seeing it as a reliable way to build organisational capability.
And that is when they choose to do more - with confidence.
In the current environment, apprenticeship starts cannot be sustained through persuasion or compliance alone.
They are sustained when employers can clearly point to impact:
Apprenticeships that deliver this level of value create advocates inside organisations - and that is what keeps programmes alive and growing.
If you want your provision to be experienced as a genuine route to building capability - not just achieving standards - the next step is a focused conversation.