A Manager's Guide to the Operations & Departmental Manager Apprenticeship (Level 5)

How to support your senior leader's development and unlock strategic business value

Published: 28 March 2026
Reading time: 8 minutes
Category: Apprenticeship Support

Your employee has been selected for the Operations & Departmental Manager Level 5 apprenticeship. This is a significant investment—not just in their development, but in your organisation's leadership capacity.

At Level 5, your apprentice isn't learning to manage for the first time. They're likely already running a department, managing budgets, and leading a team. This apprenticeship transforms them into a strategic leader—one who thinks beyond operations, understands P&L, leads cross-functional initiatives, and ultimately, moves closer to Chartered Manager status.

But here's the critical bit: their success depends heavily on your engagement. Not because they need hand-holding, but because they need exposure, challenge, and space to apply what they're learning in real time.

This guide will help you understand each phase of the 18-month programme, show you how TESS Group partners with you throughout, and give you practical ways to coach and support your L5 apprentice to deliver real business value.

Why Your Support Changes Everything

At Level 5, the learner is typically managing a department. They're responsible for budgets, resource allocation, team performance, and increasingly, cross-functional initiatives. This is different from lower-level apprenticeships.

The L5 apprentice needs more than a trainer—they need a strategic mentor. Someone who can:

When you engage deeply with the apprenticeship, something shifts. The learner moves from "doing a course" to "solving real business problems." The learning becomes embedded in their everyday work. And crucially, they become a more confident, strategic leader—faster.

The Power of Partnership

Research shows that apprentices with actively engaged managers complete programmes faster, apply learning more effectively, and stay with their organisations longer. At L5, your involvement is the single biggest lever for success.

What Your Manager Will Learn—Phase by Phase

The L5 apprenticeship runs for 18 months on-programme, followed by 5 months of End-Point Assessment (EPA). It's structured in four intensive phases, each building on the last.

Here's what to expect and what you might notice changing in your apprentice:

Phase 1: Foundations & Self-Awareness (Months 1–3)

Focus: Leadership style, emotional intelligence, personal brand, blind spots

Your apprentice will start to reflect deeply on how they lead. They'll ask themselves hard questions about their strengths, gaps, and impact on others.

What you might notice:

  • More open conversations about their leadership approach
  • Questions about their team dynamics and feedback
  • Early experiments with different coaching styles

Your role: Provide honest, constructive feedback. Encourage self-reflection. Share your own leadership journey.

Phase 2: Operational Strategy (Months 4–8)

Focus: P&L management, resource allocation, budget planning, departmental governance

Now they're learning the business fundamentals. P&L management, cost control, investment justification, resource planning.

What you might notice:

  • More structured approach to planning and budgeting discussions
  • Sharper questions about resource efficiency and ROI
  • Early drafts of departmental strategy documents

Your role: Involve them in your own strategic planning. Show them how you think about trade-offs and priorities.

Phase 3: Leadership at Scale (Months 9–13)

Focus: Cross-functional leadership, change management, data-driven decision-making, influence

This is where they step up to leading beyond their department. Cross-functional projects, managing change, using data to persuade.

What you might notice:

  • Confidence in leading projects outside their area
  • Proposals backed by data and analysis
  • Better handling of stakeholder management and conflict

Your role: Give them real cross-functional challenges. Introduce them to peers in other departments. Let them lead change.

Phase 4: Advanced Practice (Months 14–18)

Focus: Workplace project, advanced strategic thinking, embedding innovation

They're pulling it all together. This phase culminates in a significant workplace project—something strategic, real, and high-impact.

What you might notice:

  • A fully scoped, strategic project underway
  • Confident stakeholder management and communication
  • Advanced problem-solving and innovation

Your role: Help them pick the right project. Give them air cover. Make sure they have access to the people and data they need.

Phase 5: End-Point Assessment (Months 19–23)

Focus: Consolidation, professional discussion, final assessment

This is the formal assessment phase. They'll present their workplace project and participate in a professional discussion with an independent assessor.

What you might notice:

  • Focus on documenting learning and outcomes
  • Preparation for their final presentation
  • Confidence in articulating their strategic thinking

Your role: Support their preparation. Review their project presentation. Be ready to discuss their impact and capability.

How We Work With You

At TESS Group, we don't train in isolation. We partner with you, the manager, because we know that's where real development happens.

Here's how we make that partnership work:

Pre-Course Manager Briefing

Before your apprentice starts, we'll meet with you—either 1-to-1 or in a group with other managers. We'll explain the programme structure, how you can support each phase, what to expect, and how to keep the learning practical and applied.

Throughout the programme, you're never in the dark. We're transparent about progress, we ask for your input, and we work together to make sure the apprenticeship delivers real value to your business.

Coaching Your L5 Manager

At this level, your apprentice is experienced. They don't need instructing—they need coaching. That means asking better questions, not giving answers.

Here are the principles that work at L5:

Coaching Questions That Work

"What's the core problem here?" / "What does success look like?" / "What's stopping you?" / "Who else needs to be part of this?" / "What would a senior leader do?" / "How will you measure the impact?"

The Workplace Project: Your Lever for Real Value

The workplace project is the heart of the L5 apprenticeship. It's a real project that sits in your business—something worth doing, worth assessing, and worth celebrating when it's delivered.

Unlike lower-level apprenticeships where the project might be process improvement, at L5 we're thinking bigger. Strategic projects that have real business impact.

What Makes a Good L5 Project?

Examples of Strong L5 Projects

Your Role in the Project

Ready to Discuss the Right Project?

Our team can help you and your apprentice scope a workplace project that delivers real value while developing their capability. Book a discovery call to explore how TESS can support this critical phase.

Book a Discovery Call

Chartered Manager Status: The Next Step

The Operations & Departmental Manager L5 is a direct pathway to Chartered Manager status.

Here's what happens:

As their manager, you can support this progression by:

100% Funded Through Apprenticeship Levy

The entire L5 programme—18 months on-programme plus 5 months EPA—is 100% funded through the Apprenticeship Levy. No cost to you. This is a risk-free investment in your leadership pipeline.

Best Practice: Creating the Right Environment

You can't force development. But you can create the conditions where it flourishes. Here are six practical ways to do that:

1. Give Them Autonomy

Don't hover. Your L5 apprentice needs room to make decisions, sometimes make mistakes, and learn through action. Your job is to set direction and remove blockers, not micromanage.

2. Create a Safe Space for Experimentation

They're trying new approaches—new leadership styles, new ways of thinking about strategy, new ways of solving problems. Make it clear that intelligent attempts that don't work out are fine. Fear of failure kills learning.

3. Give Them Access to Your Thinking

Talk through your decisions. Explain your reasoning. Let them see how you handle ambiguity, stakeholder management, and strategic trade-offs. This is where real learning happens.

4. Build Peer Networks

Introduce them to peers in other departments, other organisations, and your industry. L5 leaders think across systems. Peer networks expand perspective and create opportunities for collaborative learning.

5. Demand Excellence

Don't lower standards. Your apprentice is being developed for strategic leadership—that means expecting high-quality analysis, clear communication, and business-focused thinking. Push them to be better.

6. Communicate the 'Why'

Help them see how their learning connects to organisational strategy. "You're learning this because our competitive advantage depends on better resource allocation" is more motivating than "it's on the curriculum."

Frequently Asked Questions

How much time commitment is required from my team member? +

Typically, 6-8 hours per week across coaching sessions, learning activities, and workplace project work. This is built into their working time—not a bolt-on. We work with you to ensure this is managed so it doesn't disrupt day-to-day operations. Many organisations build this into their role design or project allocation.

What if my apprentice struggles with the academic side? +

Level 5 is academically rigorous, but most L5 learners are experienced professionals—they've got real capability, even if academic writing isn't their strength. Our coaches support them with structure, planning, and critique. They'll also help them understand what assessors are looking for. It's not about being brilliant at essays; it's about demonstrating strategic thinking. That's much more in their wheelhouse.

What happens if they complete early or face delays? +

18 months is the standard on-programme timescale. Some learners complete faster; others need the full timeline. We work flexibly around your business needs, but we won't rush assessment. The EPA gate ensures they're genuinely at Level 5 standard. If delays occur, we'll communicate with you and adapt where we can.

What happens post-apprenticeship? Are they locked into a role? +

No. An apprenticeship is an investment in them and your organisation. What happens next is entirely up to you. Some organisations use it as a stepping stone to senior roles; others retain talented managers in their current area with expanded responsibility. We encourage you to have that conversation with them early—what's their career trajectory? Where are they headed? That frames the apprenticeship as part of a longer journey.

How do I know if they're on track? +

We keep you updated throughout the programme with progress summaries and milestone reviews. You'll also see changes in their work—the way they approach planning, how they lead projects, the quality of their analysis. And crucially, you can reach out to their TESS coach anytime with questions or concerns. This isn't a black box.

Let's Talk About Your Leadership Pipeline

Whether you're thinking about nominating an employee or you're about to start the journey, our team can help you understand how to maximise the apprenticeship and support your team member's development. Every organisation is different—let's discuss what success looks like for you.

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