Back to work efforts by the DWP are failing dismally, according to a report by the BBC.  Work coach appointments with each jobseeker last just ten minutes, that the number of work coaches has been reduced and that a smaller proportion of claimants are finding work each month.

Research by the BBC that has revealed that appointments are too short to be of value to jobseekers.  Mark Byers, a work coach for 15 years explained:

"All appointments are 10 minutes, and once you've got through the security checks there is not much time. These short appointments mean you're just being a benefits policeman."

The number of work coaches has dropped from 23,000 in 2021 to 16,640 in August 2025, leading to the DWP to claim earlier this year that there was a shortage of staff.

Astonishingly, just a few months later the DWP now claim they have too many work coaches. But this is solely because they have shortened appointment times and reduced the number of follow-up meetings.

It’s not surprising then, that the proportion of claimants finding work each month has fallen from 10% in 2022 to 7.6% in the year to April 2025.

Work coach Saul Cahill told the BBC that, not surprisingly, people with health conditions and disabled people are often the most difficult to support into work.

One of his “really engaged” clients with long-term health conditions has been on his caseload since he started the job four years ago.

Saul says that he can’t help them as much as he would like because of time constraints.

"I might be sitting with someone who is, on paper, doing all the right things and doesn't seem to be getting any response," he says.

"I'd love to sit down with them [and] go through the job applications together, and that's not necessarily possible.

"People get very frustrated."

You can read the full report on the BBC website.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 hours ago
    This is pretty bad, if you problems attending these appointments, bus far, health problems etc. better to make the appointments longer so all the effort has more value to it.  This doesnt sound much different to the old go to the job centre to sign on.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    What? What's that you say? An ill thought out government 'initiative' is not working out? Surprise!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Postion: DWP work coach
    Qualifications required: None
    Experience requireed: None
    Aptitude test: Answers easily found online
    Pay: Low
    Training: Minimal, staggered on the job so take one to two months.
    Working environment: Poor, some claimants maybe distressed or abusive, and the DWP have unofficial targets you need to meet
    Best thing about the job: Virtually impossible to get sacked, regardless of how incompetent you are and how much harm you cause.
    What people say about this job: Ideally suited for people who despite failing in life want to sit in judgement of others, be condescending, and have the opportunity to be vindictive. Or people who just want to show up and do the minimal possible. Those who care generally do not last long in the job. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 4 hours ago
      @Denby  Oh I should have made clear while a DWP work coach usually only works 37 hours a week they get paid their full salary, that is based on a notional 42 hours a week. If they do extra work they do not get paid extra unless they go over their notional 42 hour week.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 4 hours ago
      @Denby
      In the UK the average salary for someone working full time is about £37.4k. DWP work coaches earn less than that. £35k is the top end of the pay scale for an Civil Service Executive Officer (DWP work coach) job in Inner London. Outside London you are talking about £28-30k. The DWP work coach salary is based on a notional 42 hour week, they usually work 37 hours a week. For comparison outside London someone working 40 hours a week as a shop assistance at Aldi can be on £27k. 


    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @John Don't work coaches earn around £35k per annum.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @John To the down voter while my post maybe a bit cruel it is meant as a joke.
      I do find it funny that DWP work coaches think they are in a position to give people employment and carers advice. Seeing as their job requires no qualifications, no experience and pays below the average UK wage. Most people they give advice to would be better qualified to give the DWP work coach advice. And picking on the ill and disabled which seems to be the way their job is going, is not a job my conscience would would permit me to do. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    It is very difficult to see the value of a short 10 minute discussion. It often  appears to be a tick box exercise. If I were being cynical I would say that this is probably a way of sanctioning more claimants as not attending JC appointments is the main reason for a sanction. It would be a much better use of Work Coach time to focus their efforts on a smaller group of clients who actively want support or have a good chance of getting back into work within a relatively short period of time.  Alternatively they need more work coaches so case loads can be reduced. This would surely be more cost effective.  
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