Why people don't move.
And what changes it.
For governments, local authorities, and funded delivery partners seeking a system that moves people from welfare dependency into sustained employment readiness. The infrastructure is built. It has been proven. It is ready to commission.
C-Coach has developed a complete framework for this gap. Not a course. Not a programme of advice. A structured change system grounded in how the human operating system actually works, already validated in one of the hardest possible contexts.
"What have you done to Wayne. He's a changed man."
NHS Social Prescriber · Dudley Prosper ProgrammeThe barrier is not
motivation
Before we built this, we asked the people who work inside the system every day. Social prescribers. DWP advisors. Citizens Advice workers. Food bank volunteers. Every one of them said the same thing: we can stabilise people, but we cannot move them forward. The tools do not exist.
Publicly funded employment programmes rest on an assumption that rarely holds at this level: that the people they are trying to reach want to move forward but need information, guidance, or incentives to get there.
For a significant proportion of people on Universal Credit, the barrier is not motivation. It is physiological and psychological. People who have experienced sustained pressure, financial strain, repeated failure, or long-term health difficulty are not operating from a position where forward movement is available to them.
Their human system has shifted into a protective state.
The cycle that standard employment support cannot interrupt.
In that state, the system prioritises safety over growth. Anxiety replaces agency. Avoidance is not resistance. It is a rational response to conditions that make forward movement feel genuinely dangerous.
Telling someone in that condition to take steps towards work does not help. It increases the sense of threat. They retreat further. The cycle continues.
What staying stuck
already costs
The financial cost of sustained welfare dependency is visible in published data. Long-term Universal Credit claimants, repeat A&E attendance, GP demand, social prescribing caseloads, housing instability, debt crisis interventions. Each is a downstream consequence of the same upstream failure.
The harder cost is what does not happen. The contribution that is not made. The tax not paid. The family that does not stabilise. The child who inherits the same pattern.
Every year a person remains in a protective state rather than moving toward independence represents a compounding cost to public services, and a compounding loss to that person. The system keeps meeting the symptom because no intervention has addressed the cause.
Knowing what to do is not
the same as being able to do it
Most employment support programmes rely on some version of the same mechanism: deliver knowledge, provide coaching or advice, and trust that understanding leads to change.
It rarely does. Not at this level of need.
A person in a protective state can sit in a workshop, understand everything that is said, and leave no closer to employment readiness than when they arrived. Because the barrier was never informational. Education, without the system around it, produces knowledge without change.
What changes behaviour at this level is a connected system. One that addresses the emotional, cognitive, and physiological conditions that precede motivation. One that creates safety before it creates momentum.
That is what C-Coach has built, and what the Prosper programme in Dudley demonstrated it can deliver.
Validated in the
hardest possible conditions
The framework was first deployed in Dudley, in partnership with Dudley Building Society, under the Prosper programme. Participants were referred through social prescribers, DWP, Citizens Advice, food banks, housing associations, and Jobcentre Plus.
The participants included individuals with long-term unemployment, anxiety, neurodiversity, chronic health conditions, bereavement, and significant social withdrawal. There was no organisational structure around them. No manager. No institutional reinforcement.
Strong to transformational improvement across all benchmark domains in twelve weeks. Outcomes measured against NESTA, Behavioural Insights Team, and Public Health England standards, and independently validated by Wolverhampton University.
Each dimension measured at entry and exit across all participants.
The Dudley programme demonstrated something important beyond the data. A human capability system that works without organisational infrastructure works anywhere. The conditions that produce change are not dependent on a corporate environment. They depend on the system.
The cycle that standard employment
support cannot interrupt.
Three layers that work
because they work together
Each layer has a distinct role. The change that sustains is produced by the combination, not by any single element working alone.
Facilitated Workshops
Six workshops, spaced across the programme, help participants understand how the human system works under pressure. Why anxiety and avoidance are rational. How habit forms. What energy and confidence actually depend on.
Each session builds on the last. The understanding is cumulative, and it is what makes genuine openness to change possible for people who have learned to protect themselves from it.
Light-Touch Mentoring
Mentor touchpoints alternate with workshops throughout the twelve weeks, providing accountability without pressure and reinforcement of the progress being made. Mentors are recruited from local businesses and community, and they attend the workshops alongside participants, not to teach, but to learn.
They leave with an understanding of what the people around them are navigating, and carry that insight back into their organisations. Over time this builds something no standard programme builds: a community economy where capability flows in both directions.
Personalised Digital Coach
Introduced at week two and running continuously from that point, the digital coach gives each participant an individualised journey. They identify where friction shows up in their own life, prioritise their top three change areas, and move through curated content in bite-sized pieces, at their own pace, on any device, 24 hours a day.
The coach does not stop at week twelve. It stays with the individual as permanent infrastructure, continuing to support the journey into work, education, or whatever forward movement looks like for them.
What the combination creates
Workshops build the understanding. The digital coach builds the capability. Mentoring builds the continuity. Together they produce conditions where change compounds, and where the individual who arrives in exhaustion and withdrawal leaves with the agency to move forward independently.
The digital coach remaining after the programme closes is not an afterthought. It is the difference between a twelve-week event and a permanent shift in what a person can do.
Built. Validated.
Ready to commission.
Dudley Building Society and C-Coach have made the foundational investment. What exists today is not a concept awaiting development. It is a complete operational framework — designed, tested, and refined across multiple groups of participants in a live public services context.
Each additional delivery runs at marginal incremental cost. The fixed investment has been made. What scales is delivery, not design.
The framework is available to local authorities, combined authorities, government departments, and funded delivery partners — deployable within existing referral infrastructure.
- Proven 12-week curriculumGrounded in behavioural science. Sequenced to restore the human conditions that precede employment readiness.
- Digital coaching platformAccessible on any device. Personalised to each individual. Available 24 hours a day throughout the programme.
- Trained mentor networksDrawn from business and community. Mentors attend the workshops, gaining insight they bring back into their own organisations.
- Referral partnerships in placeAlready operating within existing referral infrastructure: social prescribers, DWP, Citizens Advice, food banks, and housing associations.
- Validated measurement frameworkBenchmarked against NESTA, Behavioural Insights Team, and Public Health England standards. Independently validated by Wolverhampton University.
- Place-based delivery modelProven through partnership with Dudley Building Society. Designed to embed locally, not arrive and leave.
If this is the gap you are trying to bridge
The first conversation is a focused, direct discussion about your context and whether this framework fits. If it does not, we will say so.
We are open to conversations about commissioning, co-funding, and formal partnership structures with local authorities, combined authorities, and government delivery partners.
Start a conversation →