Education Is Not for Sale: How Mutual Supply Models Put Pupils First
“Education is not for sale.”
It’s a powerful statement – and one that is increasingly shaping how schools think about procurement, staffing, and accountability.
Nowhere is this more relevant than in the supply staffing market.
The Problem with Profit-Driven Recruitment
For years, schools have relied on commercial supply agencies to fill staffing gaps. But this convenience has come at a cost.
Many agencies operate with:
- High mark-ups (often 50% or more)
- Opaque pricing structures
- Little alignment with national pay scales
This creates a disconnect:
- Schools pay more
- Teachers receive less
- Pupils see no added benefit
At a time when every pound matters, this model is increasingly difficult to justify.
A System That Should Work for Schools – Not Against Them
Education funding is public money. It should serve a public good.
Yet when large portions of school budgets are diverted into private profits, the system becomes misaligned.
The question is simple:
👉 Should education funding generate profit – or deliver impact?
The Rise of the Mutual Movement
Mutual, not-for-profit models like Schools Mutual Services are gaining traction because they answer that question differently.
They are:
- Owned by schools
- Run for schools
- Accountable to the education sector
This fundamentally changes incentives.
Instead of maximising profit, the focus shifts to:
- Quality of staff
- Fairness of pay
- Sustainability of school budgets
What Makes Schools Mutual Services Different?
Schools Mutual Services was created by education leaders who recognised the need for change.
Its approach is simple but transformative:
1. Reinvesting in Education
Any surplus stays within the sector – supporting schools, not shareholders.
2. Transparency at Every Level
Clear pricing, capped margins, and full visibility of costs.
3. Fair Pay for Educators
Aligned with national scales, improving morale and retention.
4. Focus on Quality
Investment in CPD, wellbeing, and long-term workforce development.
Better for Teachers = Better for Pupils
There is a direct link between how staff are treated and the quality of education delivered.
When teachers are:
- Paid fairly
- Supported professionally
- Valued as part of a system
They are more likely to:
- Stay in the profession
- Deliver consistent, high-quality teaching
- Build meaningful relationships with pupils
This is where mutual models create real impact.
Aligning with the “Maximising Value for Pupils” Agenda
The DfE’s guidance challenges schools to think differently about spending.
Not-for-profit supply models align perfectly with this by:
- Reducing unnecessary costs
- Improving transparency
- Delivering measurable impact in classrooms
They turn procurement from a transactional process into a strategic advantage.
A Moral and Financial Imperative
Choosing how to source supply staff is no longer just an operational decision.
It is:
- A financial decision – protecting stretched budgets
- An ethical decision – ensuring fair pay and transparency
- A strategic decision – improving outcomes for pupils
Schools that adopt mutual models are not just saving money – they are leading change.
The future of education staffing must be built on fairness, transparency, and value.
Profit-driven supply models have dominated for too long — but the tide is turning.
By partnering with organisations like Schools Mutual Services, schools can:
- Reclaim control of their budgets
- Support their workforce
- Deliver better outcomes for pupils
Because when education funding stays in education, everyone benefits.
Read the full “Policy Paper” here.
Contact the team –North East Hub
0191 933 8300
info@schoolsmutualservices.co.ukSouth East Hub
01865 597 771
oxford@schoolsmutualservices.co.uk
