Most apprenticeship provision looks like it is working.
Off-the-job hours are on track, reviews happen, evidence is collated and achievement rates hold. From a leadership perspective, there is little immediate cause for concern.
But those signals do not tell you whether performance is actually working as a system - or relying on people to keep it on track.
WHAT THOSE SIGNALS DO NOT SHOW
They confirm that activity is happening and that outcomes are being achieved. What they do not show is how those outcomes are being sustained - or how secure that performance actually is.
In many organisations, performance continues to improve while visibility of what is happening throughout the programme remains limited.
FALSE ASSURANCE
This is where risk begins.
Strong outcomes are often sustained through increasing delivery effort, late-stage intervention and recovery that becomes routine.
It works, but it relies on people compensating for weaknesses that are not visible early enough.
As a result, performance can feel stable while becoming harder to explain, harder to predict and more difficult to sustain over time.
LATE INDICATOR
This often only becomes clear towards the end of the programme, when readiness compresses, gateway decisions become more pressured, and preparation accelerates.
Outcomes are still delivered - but with far less control than expected.
The pressure is real, but it is not where the problem started. It is simply where it becomes visible.
WHAT THIS MEANS
The issue is not whether apprenticeships are achieving.
It is whether that performance would still hold without increasing pressure, effort or intervention.
When performance depends on people to keep it on track, it becomes harder to manage consistently, more dependent on individuals and less predictable under pressure.
EMPLOYER EXPERIENCE
Employers experience this directly - not through achievement data, but through day-to-day performance.
They judge apprenticeships on whether apprentices can be relied upon in the role.
When capability takes longer to develop, or varies across individuals, confidence builds more slowly, value becomes less consistent and engagement begins to weaken.
Over time, this affects more than delivery.
When performance is inconsistent or takes longer to translate into workplace capability, employer confidence becomes less predictable.
Not immediately, but gradually - through weaker repeat demand and less certainty about future programmes.
CORE QUESTION
Are things working because the system is strong - or because people are keeping it on track?
WHAT I DO
I work with CEOs to make that visible.
That means identifying where performance depends on effort, workarounds and late intervention - and where the underlying system is not holding consistently in practice.
Specifically, I look at how learning is structured and applied in the workplace, whether progress reflects developing capability rather than recorded activity, how employer involvement contributes to real development, and how readiness is built from the start rather than recovered at the end.
The focus is not on adding more activity. It is on making sure the system works as intended - without relying on increasing effort to sustain outcomes.
DIAGNOSTIC
Executive Apprenticeship Performance Diagnostic
A focused, senior-level review built around a simple question:
Are you confident your current performance would hold without relying on increased effort or intervention?
You leave with a clear view of:
No audit. No extended report.
Just a clear, senior-level view of how your provision is actually performing - and whether current success will hold.
If you want a clearer view of whether your apprenticeship provision is genuinely stable, get in touch.