Why Education Leaders Must Challenge the Status Quo
By Nick Hurn OBE, Chairman, Schools Mutual Services
In education, we are constantly striving to improve outcomes for children and young people. We challenge teaching practices, review curriculum delivery, analyse performance data, and seek new ways to support our staff and pupils. Yet one area often escapes the same level of scrutiny: the services that support our schools.
As leaders, we have a responsibility to ask difficult questions. Not because something is broken, but because improvement rarely comes from accepting the status quo. It comes from challenging it.
Too often, services are renewed because they have always been there. Contracts continue because they are familiar. Processes remain unchanged because they are comfortable. However, in a sector facing increasing financial pressures, workforce challenges, and rising expectations, familiarity should never be mistaken for effectiveness.
The question every school and trust leader should ask is simple:
“Are the services supporting our organisation helping us achieve our goals, or are they simply maintaining the way things have always been done?”
At Schools Mutual Services, we believe education deserves a different approach. As the UK’s only not-for-profit supply agency, our purpose is not to maximise profit but to maximise value for schools. Every decision we make is driven by the needs of the education sector and the organisations we serve.
We know that staffing remains one of the greatest challenges facing schools today. Rising costs, recruitment shortages, and the need for continuity in classrooms require innovative solutions and genuine partnership working. Schools need providers who understand their challenges, share their values, and are committed to long-term sustainability rather than short-term gain.
This is why collaboration between schools and trusts has never been more important. By working together, sharing resources, and building dedicated supply banks, we can create staffing models that improve quality, reduce costs, and provide greater stability for pupils and staff alike.
The most successful organisations are not those that accept existing systems without question. They are the ones prepared to challenge assumptions, explore alternatives, and embrace new ways of working when they can deliver better outcomes.
My challenge to education leaders is this: take a fresh look at the services supporting your organisation. Ask whether they are delivering the value, quality, and partnership your schools deserve. Be prepared to ask difficult questions and consider different approaches.
Because meaningful improvement does not come from maintaining systems.
It comes from questioning them.
And when we challenge the status quo with the best interests of children and schools at heart, positive change becomes possible.
