Case Study: ParentPay Group: What Defines a Well-Run School?
The challenge
What does a “well-run school” actually look like in today’s education system?
For ParentPay Group, answering that question meant going beyond assumptions. School leaders are operating in an environment shaped by funding constraints, rising expectations and increasing complexity.
To lead the conversation credibly, ParentPay needed robust, evidence-based insight, grounded in the voices of those running schools every day.
The approach
Arlington Research conducted a UK-wide study with 250 senior education leaders, combining quantitative data with real-world leadership perspectives.
The aim was not just to surface challenges, but to uncover what enables schools to operate effectively, and sustainably.
The insight
The research painted a clear picture: schools are operating under sustained pressure, with multiple challenges compounding at once.
- 79% say they are forced to “do more with less”
- 72% are struggling to recruit and retain staff
- 30% are considering leaving the profession within a year
But the deeper insight went further. Leaders weren’t lacking ideas or ambition: they were constrained by capacity, fragmentation and systemic pressure.
The outcome
ParentPay Group were able to turn these insights into a clear, actionable framework:
The 4Es: a blueprint for well-run schools
- Exceptional outcomes
- Effective operations
- Engaged communities
- Enhanced wellbeing
This shifted the narrative from diagnosing problems to defining solutions, giving school leaders a shared language for success.
The impact
The research positioned ParentPay Group as more than a provider, it established them as a strategic partner to education leaders.
- Elevated thought leadership across the sector
- Grounded messaging in real leadership experience
- Delivered a practical framework aligned to real-world needs
By putting leadership insight at the centre, ParentPay Group helped redefine what “well-run” really means, and how schools can get there.
Key takeaways:
- 94% of school leaders say admin burden is holding back strategic improvement