OUR EXPERTISE

OfS Registration & Regulatory Compliance

Regulatory strategy and OfS compliance. For providers navigating registration, re-registration or ongoing conditions.

Regulatory Strategy

The Landscape Has Changed

The Office for Students has raised the bar significantly. Initial conditions are demanding, ongoing conditions actively monitored, and vigilance is paramount.

Initial conditions of registration are more demanding, ongoing conditions are actively monitored, and the consequences of getting it wrong have never been more serious. For new providers, the application process is complex, evidence-heavy and unforgiving of gaps. For established institutions, the regulatory environment requires constant vigilance and a clear-eyed understanding of where risk sits.

This is not a process to navigate alone.

What We Do

CEG brings direct, hands-on experience of the OfS registration process, not as observers, but as practitioners who have worked through it. We support providers at every stage, from initial readiness assessment through to full application and submission, and beyond into ongoing compliance management.

Registration readiness & gap analysis
Before anything is submitted, you need to know exactly where you stand. We conduct a thorough assessment of your current position against the Initial Conditions of Registration — identifying gaps, prioritising actions and giving you a clear picture of what the application process will require of your institution.
OfS application support
We work alongside your team to build the application, drafting narratives, reviewing evidence, stress-testing arguments and ensuring that what is submitted is coherent, complete and compelling. We understand what the regulator is looking for, and we bring that understanding to every section of the process.
Awarding Body approval
For providers seeking awarding organisation status, we offer the same structured, experience-led support from initial scoping through to submission.
Ongoing conditions of registration
Registration is not a one-time event. We support institutions to understand and manage their ongoing obligations reviewing policies, monitoring compliance, and helping leadership teams stay ahead of regulatory change rather than responding to it.
Regulatory strategy
For institutions facing specific regulatory challenges, conditions, interventions or significant changes to their operating model, we provide honest, strategic counsel on how to navigate the situation and protect the institution's position.

Why it matters

OfS registration is the foundation everything else is built on. Without it, a provider cannot operate. With it managed poorly, an institution's ability to grow, partner and innovate is constrained. CEG treats regulatory compliance not as a box-ticking exercise but as a strategic asset - one that, handled well, gives an institution the confidence and credibility to focus on what it is actually there to do.

Who this is for

  • New and emerging providers seeking OfS registration for the first time
  • Established providers managing ongoing conditions or facing regulatory scrutiny
  • Private providers entering the regulated higher education market
  • Institutions preparing for significant changes — new provision, new partnerships, change of control
Quality & Standards

Beyond Simple Compliance

Academic standard frameworks protect students, underplay regulatory standing, and establish deep corporate legacy.

The most resilient institutions understand that academic standards and quality assurance are not obligations to be managed, they are the foundation of everything an institution stands for. A robust quality framework protects students, underpins regulatory standing, and gives an institution the confidence to grow, innovate and partner.

Yet quality is also one of the areas where institutions most commonly find themselves under-resourced, under-documented or operating on frameworks that have grown organically rather than been designed deliberately. When scrutiny comes from the OfS, from a university partner, from students, the gaps become visible quickly.

What We Do

CEG works with providers to build quality assurance frameworks that are genuinely fit for purpose not lifted from a template, but designed around the institution's context, mission and regulatory obligations.

Quality assurance framework development
We work with institutions to design, review or strengthen their quality assurance frameworks covering assessment regulations, academic governance, approval and review processes, and the mechanisms that ensure standards are set, maintained and enhanced over time.
Validation and collaborative provision
For institutions operating validated programmes or in collaborative arrangements, quality management is particularly complex. We support providers to understand and discharge their responsibilities whether as the degree-awarding body or the delivering institution and to build the documentation and processes that make those arrangements sustainable.
Curriculum design and programme development
Strong academic standards begin at the design stage. We work with academic teams on curriculum frameworks, learning outcomes, assessment strategies and the alignment of programmes with sector expectations and regulatory requirements.
Degree-awarding powers
For providers seeking taught degree-awarding powers or research degree-awarding powers, the evidential and developmental requirements are significant. We support institutions to understand the criteria, build the necessary track record and infrastructure, and construct an application that makes the strongest possible case.
QAA alignment and enhancement
We help institutions understand and respond to QAA's UK Quality Code, not as a bureaucratic exercise, but as a genuine tool for improvement. This includes preparing for reviews, responding to findings, and developing cultures of enhancement rather than mere compliance.
Student protection planning
A credible, well-constructed student protection plan is both a regulatory requirement and a statement of institutional values. We support providers to develop plans that meet OfS expectations and genuinely reflect the institution's commitment to its students.

Why it matters

Academic quality is the lens through which regulators, partners and students judge an institution. It is also the area where reputational damage is most difficult to recover from. Investing in quality infrastructure is not a cost — it is the condition under which everything else becomes possible.

Who this is for

  • New providers building quality frameworks from the ground up
  • Established institutions whose quality systems have not kept pace with growth
  • Providers preparing for validation partnerships or collaborative arrangements
  • Institutions seeking degree-awarding powers
  • Any provider facing a QAA review or responding to quality-related regulatory concerns
Governance Oversight

Board Performance

Governance is where everything either holds together or falls apart. Regulators actively scrutinise board actions.

In higher education, governance has never carried more weight. Regulators scrutinise board composition, decision-making and oversight. Students and staff expect transparency and accountability. And the complexity of running an institution, managing risk, maintaining compliance, leading through uncertainty — places extraordinary demands on those at the top.

Weak governance does not announce itself. It accumulates quietly — in boards that are not asking the right questions, in leadership structures that have outgrown their original design, in risk frameworks that exist on paper but not in practice. By the time the consequences become visible, the options for remediation are narrower.

What We Do

CEG works with governors, executive teams and senior leaders to strengthen the foundations that allow institutions to lead and govern well.

Governance effectiveness reviews
A structured, independent review of how your board and governance structures are performing — examining composition, culture, decision-making, oversight and the relationship between governance and executive leadership. We provide an honest assessment and a clear set of recommendations, not a report that tells you what you want to hear.
Board development and training
We work with boards to develop the knowledge, confidence and capability to govern effectively in the higher education context — covering regulatory responsibilities, financial oversight, quality and standards, and the particular demands of governing a higher education provider.
Risk frameworks and assurance
We support institutions to build risk management frameworks that are genuinely embedded in how the institution operates — not a compliance document that sits on a shelf, but a living tool that informs decision-making at every level.
Leadership development and coaching
For senior leaders navigating the demands of institutional leadership, we offer structured support — drawing on deep sector experience to help individuals and teams develop their effectiveness, manage complexity and lead with clarity.
Governor and senior leader identification
Strong governance starts with who is in the room. Through years of working across the sector, we have built a network that runs deep. When institutions need the right governor, the right chair or the right senior leader around the table, we know where to look — connecting institutions with individuals whose skills, values and experience are the right fit for the role.
Fit and proper persons assessments
For providers subject to OfS requirements around fit and proper persons, we support institutions to understand the criteria, assess their current position and put in place the processes and documentation that demonstrate compliance.

Why it matters

Effective governance is not a regulatory obligation to be discharged — it is the condition under which good institutions become great ones. The right people, asking the right questions, making decisions with the right information: that is what governance is for. CEG helps institutions get there.

Who this is for

  • Institutions preparing for or responding to governance-related regulatory scrutiny
  • Boards seeking an independent assessment of their effectiveness
  • New providers building governance structures for the first time
  • Institutions undergoing significant change — new leadership, mergers, growth — that places governance under pressure
  • Providers who need to strengthen their leadership team or board composition
Resilience & Sustainability

Institutions That Last

True sustainability is organizational. It runs deeper than the accounts and requires operational precision under pressure.

The institutions that endure are not simply the ones with healthy balance sheets. They are the ones with the right people in the right roles, the cultures that retain and develop talent, the operational structures that function under pressure, and the strategic clarity to make good decisions when the environment changes around them.

Financial viability matters enormously. But an institution can be financially stable and still be fragile: over-dependent on a single income stream, led by a team without succession planning, operating on processes that cannot scale, or carrying a compliance burden it does not fully understand. True sustainability is organisational. It runs deeper than the accounts.

What We Do

CEG takes a whole-institution view. We support providers to build the financial rigour, people strategy, operational infrastructure and compliance frameworks that allow institutions to not just survive scrutiny but to grow through it.

Financial sustainability and viability
We conduct honest, independent assessments of financial position, income diversification, cost structures and long-term forecasting. For providers seeking OfS registration, we support the development of the financial narrative and evidence that demonstrates viability to the regulator. For established institutions, we provide the stress-testing and strategic analysis that keeps financial risk visible and manageable.
People strategy and workforce planning
An institution is only as strong as the people within it. We work with providers on people strategy, workforce planning and organisational design, helping institutions ensure they have the right skills, the right structures and the right capacity to deliver on their mission, both now and as they grow.
Succession planning and leadership pipeline
Overreliance on key individuals is one of the most common and least acknowledged risks in higher education. We support institutions to identify that risk, plan for continuity and build leadership pipelines that reduce vulnerability and strengthen long-term resilience.
Operational compliance frameworks
Financial compliance does not exist in isolation. We support institutions to develop the operational policies, procedures and controls that underpin good governance, from financial regulations and procurement through to treasury management and internal audit arrangements.
Organisational design and change management
Growth, restructuring, new provision, new partnerships: change places institutions under pressure. We work with leadership teams to design organisational structures that are fit for purpose and to manage change in ways that maintain stability, morale and regulatory compliance throughout.
Private and public provider compliance
For private providers, navigating the expectations of a regulated higher education environment while maintaining commercial viability requires a particular kind of expertise. We understand both worlds and support providers to meet the standards of one without losing sight of the realities of the other.

Why it matters

Regulators, partners and students all need to trust that an institution will still be there tomorrow. That trust is built not just through financial statements but through the quality of leadership, the depth of the team, the robustness of operations and the clarity of strategy. CEG helps institutions build the kind of organisational foundations that make that trust well-founded.

Who this is for

  • New providers building financial and operational governance frameworks for OfS registration
  • Established institutions facing financial pressure, regulatory scrutiny or significant organisational change
  • Private providers seeking to meet the compliance expectations of the regulated HE market
  • Institutions with people strategy gaps, succession risks or workforce planning challenges
  • Governing bodies seeking independent assurance on organisational sustainability and resilience
Lifecycle & Due Diligence

Consequential Partnerships

A well-structured partnership opens doors to new markets and income. A poorly managed one carries reputational risk.

Partnerships are among the most consequential decisions an institution makes. A well-structured partnership opens doors to new students, new markets, new programmes and new sources of income. A poorly managed one carries risk at every level: reputational, financial, regulatory and academic. The stakes are high in both directions, and the consequences of getting it wrong can take years to unpick.

Yet the landscape for collaborative provision in UK higher education has never been more complex. Regulatory expectations around due diligence, quality assurance and student protection have increased significantly. The OfS scrutinises partnership arrangements closely. And the operational demands of managing franchise arrangements, validation partnerships and strategic alliances are substantial, often underestimated at the outset.

What We Do

CEG supports institutions through the full lifecycle of partnership development and management, from the first conversation about a potential relationship through to ongoing oversight and, where necessary, a managed exit.

Partnership due diligence
Before entering any formal arrangement, a thorough due diligence process is essential. We conduct independent assessments of potential partners, examining academic standards, financial stability, governance structures, regulatory standing and reputational profile, and provide a clear, honest recommendation to inform the institution's decision.
Partnership development and structuring
We support institutions to develop partnership arrangements that are well-structured, clearly documented and genuinely sustainable, covering contractual frameworks, governance arrangements, quality assurance responsibilities and the operational infrastructure that makes partnerships function in practice.
Franchise arrangement support
Franchise partnerships carry particular complexity and particular risk. We work with both active awarding bodies and delivering institutions to ensure that arrangements are properly governed, that quality is actively managed, and that the responsibilities of each party are clearly understood and discharged.
Collaborative provision reviews
For institutions with existing partnership portfolios, we conduct structured reviews of collaborative provision, assessing the health of individual partnerships, identifying risk, and providing recommendations for strengthening arrangements or, where necessary, bringing them to an orderly close.
Partnership preparedness assessments
For institutions considering entering the partnership market for the first time, we assess readiness across governance, academic infrastructure, operational capacity and strategic alignment, and provide a clear picture of what needs to be in place before any formal arrangement is pursued.
Exit and transition management
When partnerships end, for whatever reason, the process needs to be managed carefully to protect students, maintain regulatory compliance and preserve institutional reputation. We support institutions through structured, well-managed exits that minimise disruption and risk.

Why it matters

The right partnerships, managed well, can transform an institution's reach and impact. The wrong ones, or the right ones managed poorly, can define an institution for the wrong reasons. CEG brings the experience to tell the difference, and the expertise to make good partnerships work.

Who this is for

  • Institutions considering entering into franchise or validation partnerships for the first time
  • Established providers with existing partnership portfolios who want independent oversight
  • University partners seeking assurance on the quality and compliance of their collaborative provision
  • Institutions managing the end of a partnership arrangement
  • Providers preparing their partnership infrastructure for OfS scrutiny
Global Access & Pathing

Reaching Further

The best higher education institutions do not stand still. Realising potential requires equitable and ambitious pathways.

They ask who they are not yet serving, and why. They look beyond their immediate geography, their established student base and their familiar partnerships, and they build deliberately toward something more ambitious and more equitable. That is what internationalisation and widening participation share, at their core: a commitment to extending the reach and impact of higher education to those who can benefit from it most.

Neither is straightforward. Internationalisation without strategy becomes expensive and ineffective. Widening participation without genuine institutional commitment becomes a compliance exercise. Done well, both have the power to transform an institution and the lives of the students it serves.

What We Do

CEG brings hands-on experience of both internationalisation and widening participation, not as abstract strategies but as practical realities, developed in some of the most demanding and under-resourced contexts in the world.

Internationalisation strategy development
We work with institutions to develop internationalisation strategies that are coherent, realistic and genuinely aligned with the institution's mission and capacity, covering international student recruitment, transnational education, partnership development and the internationalisation of the curriculum.
International partnership development
We support institutions to identify, develop and manage international partnerships, drawing on our network and experience to connect providers with the right opportunities in the right markets, and to structure arrangements that are sustainable and mutually beneficial.
Transnational education
For institutions developing programmes and provision overseas, whether through franchise arrangements, branch campuses or online delivery, we provide strategic and operational support to ensure that quality, compliance and student outcomes are maintained across borders.
Widening participation strategy
We support institutions to develop widening participation strategies that go beyond access and into genuine inclusion, addressing attainment gaps, retention, progression and the structural barriers that prevent underrepresented students from thriving in higher education.
Access and participation plans
We work with providers on the development, review and strengthening of access and participation plans, ensuring that commitments are meaningful, targets are credible and the interventions proposed are evidence-based and genuinely likely to make a difference.
Education for disadvantaged and underrepresented groups
Our team brings direct, international experience of designing and delivering education for students from disadvantaged backgrounds and underrepresented communities. We bring that experience to bear for institutions seeking to extend their impact, at home and abroad.

Why it matters

Higher education has the potential to change lives. Realising that potential, for students who might otherwise be excluded and in communities that might otherwise be overlooked, requires institutions that are genuinely committed to reaching further. CEG exists to help them do that with rigour, ambition and the honest recognition of what it actually takes.

Who this is for

  • Institutions developing or reviewing their internationalisation strategy
  • Providers building international partnerships or transnational education arrangements
  • Institutions seeking to strengthen their widening participation and access work
  • Providers preparing access and participation plans for OfS submission
  • Any institution that wants to extend its reach and needs experienced support to do it well

Work with us

If you are at any stage of development — or unsure where to begin — we would welcome a conversation. There is no obligation, and the first conversation is always without charge.

Get in touch