41 days remaining to apply

  • Start date details

    1 January 2026 or sooner

  • Closing date

    23 June 2025 at 11:59pm

  • Date listed

    12 May 2025

Job details

Job role

  • Other leadership roles

Visa sponsorship

Visas cannot be sponsored

Working pattern

Full time: Full-time, permanent role, flexible working opportunities are available.

Contract type

Permanent

Pay scale

Leadership scale 25 to 30 £89830 to £101533

What skills and experience we're looking for

Essential experience

Qualifications and training

• Degree qualification and Qualified Teacher Status

• Professional development in preparation for a trust leadership role

Experience

• A proven track record of successful leadership within education.

• A credible and effective leader with demonstrable success in leading a team

• Experience of strategic planning, monitoring and ability to review progress against plans in terms of standards and performance and taking decisive action as necessary

• Experience and understanding of behaviour approaches and the personal development of pupils

• A successful track record of human and financial resource management

• Experience of successfully working within a governance framework, building strong and effective relationships

• Experience of leading schools through Ofsted

• Experience of managing budgets

Skills and knowledge

• High quality oral and written communication skills and approachable interpersonal style

• The ability to build a positive organisational culture, encourage reflection, delegate responsibility and build teams

• Ability to communicate a clear vision for the organisation’s development

• Ability to establish rigorous systems for monitoring impact

• Ability and commitment to working flexibly and collaboratively

• Awareness of the statutory educational framework, policies and legislation and knowledge of statutory assessment systems and how the curriculum is learned in schools

• High level of understanding and experience in research and best practices in curriculum, SEND, pedagogy and assessment

• An understanding of the needs of the most disadvantaged pupils including pupils with SEND and those in receipt of the pupil premium

• Ability to build effective partnership working including with partner agencies/organisations to achieve collaborative results

• Knowledge of risk management

Qualities

• Committed to safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children and young people

• Commitment to The Seven Principles of Public Life (Nolan principles)

• Ability to promote the principles and successes of the trust within and beyond the education sector

• Commitment to serve in the best interests of the trust’s pupils, staff and stakeholders, with the ability to build meaningful relationships to deliver tangible results

• Forward thinking and able to maintain a clear understanding of the current educational landscape

Preferred experience

Desirable

• Ofsted inspector trained / experience

• Experience of leading in a MAT

• Experience of leading school improvement at scale

What the school offers its staff

Benefits of working within our trust

When staff join us, they become part of the Brickfields Trust family. We are committed to supporting our team from day one, starting with a comprehensive induction package that includes key documentation, expectations and policies.

Our staff benefit from

• Flexible working opportunities

• An eye care voucher scheme for DSE users

• An Employee Assistance Programme offering confidential advice and support across a range of areas

• Access to Occupational Health services

• Trust-funded Professional Supervision for staff managing complex safeguarding matters

• A supportive Leave of Absence policy, including parental and other leave for staff

• Free tea and coffee for all

• Membership of two generous public sector pension schemes

• Free parking at all sites

• A positive, supportive working environment

• The opportunity to contribute to trust-wide workload reduction strategies

• Fair and supportive staff employment policies

• Clear expectations for staff conduct and personal safety

• Opportunities for staff to work across the trust schools and within the trust office

• An annual wellbeing survey and active participation in shaping the trust wellbeing strategy

• A structured Career Pathway for teaching staff

• Access to high quality professional development opportunities and training, including access to National Professional Qualifications - with dedicated time during the working day to complete

• Opportunities to influence the direction of the trust through participation in working parties, including Digital and People strategies

Further details about the role

Job Description

Job title: Chief Executive Officer and Trust Accounting Officer

Salary: Leadership scale 25 to 30 (England) £89 830 to £101 533

Contract type: Full time Permanent Flexible working opportunities are available

Reporting to: The Board of Trustees at The Brickfields Trust

Responsible for: The trust central team. Heads of Schools and senior school staff

The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) is also the Accounting Officer of the trust.

The CEO has responsibility for informing and supporting the work of the board – including the board’s setting of the trust’s vision and strategy. The CEO is responsible for delivering the agreed strategy; overseeing all operations of the trust – including enabling educational and organisational improvement at scale; ensuring sustainability, compliance, and the mitigation of risk; and building strategic partnerships with a range of stakeholders to ensure both strong educational outcomes for pupils and the sustainable development of the trust.

The CEO will be accountable to the trust board for;

• Leading and overseeing the efficient, effective and compliant management of the trust and its member academies

• Providing strong strategic leadership towards the trust’s vision and goals

• The performance of all academies within the trust

• The safeguarding of children across the trust

Qualities

The CEO will:

• Uphold public trust in trust leadership and maintain high standards of ethics, behaviour and professional conduct, by modelling the Seven Principles of Public Life

• Build positive and respectful relationships across the trust and its wider community

• Promote the qualities, principles and successes of the trust both within and beyond the education sector

• Serve in the best interests of the trust’s pupils, staff and stakeholders

Duties and responsibilities

The duties and responsibilities listed below are indicative of the tasks the CEO will perform and are not intended to be an exhaustive list. The post holder will be expected to take on additional responsibilities appropriate to the role as they arise.

1. Strategic leadership and development of the trust

The Chief Executive Officer leads through:

• Articulating a clear narrative for the organisation’s growth and development – based on the board’s vision and reflecting the trust’s definition of a high-quality education.

• Developing a clear organisational strategy and goals (created with the board) that reflects the board’s vision and the CEO’s leadership narrative.

• Providing dynamic, motivational and inspirational leadership at all levels of the organisation.

• Undertaking regular and meaningful engagement with staff (at all levels), stakeholders and end-users to both share the narrative and to inform and refine it where appropriate.

• Identifying opportunities to communicate the leadership narrative – externally and internally – through speeches, blogs, media (including social media), external meetings and otherwise.

• Accessing opportunities to develop and stretch their own thinking by engaging with thought-leaders, sector specific and wider research and trend analysis, and appropriate professional development. This informs their ongoing work on strategy.

• Ensuring a healthy balance between central strategy and accountability, and the ability of each school to develop a sufficient sense of individuality and ability to respond to local needs.

• Modelling and actively promoting commitment to the trust’s values and, more broadly, commitment to ethical governance, leadership, and practice across the organisation. The CEO adheres to and embodies the Framework for Ethical Leadership in Education and the Seven Principles of Public Life (The Nolan Principles).

• Identifying opportunities to celebrate and share practice within the trust that contribute to furthering the trust’s vision, values and strategy.

• Lead the growth and development of the trust, including due diligence and supporting converting schools

2. Build an open, transparent and effective relationship with the governing board and its committees

The Chief Executive Officer leads through:

• Investing sufficient time in developing relationships with the board; including regularly meeting with the Chair and keeping them informed of key developments, successes, risks and challenges.

• Ensuring they and the executive team have developed clear and appropriate reporting mechanisms that contribute to efficient governance of the trust.

• Welcoming accountability from the board and robust performance management, while encouraging the board to discharge this across all aspects of organisational delivery and performance.

• Embracing the support and advice of the board, recognising the value of good governance.

• Supporting the board to meet their duties as company directors and as trustees of a charitable body, working with the board to ensure operational compliance and fulfilment of all statutory responsibilities.

• Ensuring there is no overlap in the work and responsibilities of the executive team, and those of committees and local governing bodies; ensuring awareness of and adherence to the scheme of delegation.

3. Be accountable for all aspects of school improvement, quality of education and pupil outcomes across the trust

The Chief Executive Officer leads through:

• Providing a compelling narrative around improvement priorities and what is valued or considered to be success, aligned with the trust’s vision and the CEO’s leadership narrative.

• Providing strategic direction and leadership for teaching and learning across the trust, especially in response to sector changes or changes to government policy

• Overseeing school-to-school support across the trust

• Commissioning external support for trust and academy improvement, and assess the effectiveness and impact of the support provided

• Ensuring effective identification, resourcing and provision is in place for pupils with SEND

• Fostering a culture of ‘collective commitment’ to all the trust’s schools among senior team members and more broadly across the trust’s Heads, leaders, and staff.

• Ensuring quality curriculum, teaching and assessment of pupil learning across the trust both through central systems and through the clear setting of standards and expectations across all schools.

• Ensuring that their role is about enabling improvement at scale and as an organisational habit

• Ensuring that the data captured is consistent with the organisation’s view of success, relevant, timely, triangulated and used formatively and actively to inform ongoing improvement both across the wider organisation and in individual schools.

• That the systems and processes that define the scalable improvement model – including project and process management – ensure that improvement becomes ‘an organisational habit’ and that staff at all levels feel empowered to inform and contribute towards improvement where possible.

• Fostering a culture of disciplined innovation, where staff are empowered to engage in external and/or internal research and development activity that furthers the organisation’s vision and strategy and ensures that specialist staff stay at ‘the cutting edge’.

• Ensuring a deep commitment to safeguarding and compliance with safeguarding responsibilities across the trust, through effective leadership, training, systems and monitoring both centrally and in all schools.

4. Ensure that the organisation is an ‘employer of choice’ and is staffed by talented and skilled individuals at all levels

The Chief Executive Officer leads through:

• Building and developing an executive team of experts – across a range of appropriate disciplines – through whom they can adequately develop and deliver strategy and ensure organisational delivery, improvement and compliance across the trust’s operations.

• Head hunting and recruiting talented and sufficiently skilled and experienced people to senior leadership positions within the organisation, ensuring a commitment to equality, diversity and inclusion in doing so.

• Line management of the senior executive leadership team and Heads of Schools and through them ensuring high performance and effectiveness across each aspect of the trust’s operations.

• Confidently and sensitively addressing underperformance or behaviours that are inconsistent with the values and culture the organisation stands for.

• Demonstrating a commitment to developing leaders and ensuring a succession planning strategy is in place both across the senior executive team and for Heads and key specialist leaders across the trust.

• Establishing an ‘employer of choice’ culture, with a strong sense of purpose, commitment to talent management and development, sustainable workload, flexibility, and other key employment benefits. The CEO models a positive and sustainable workplace culture.

• Fostering a cultural and operational commitment to equality, diversity and inclusion in order to thrive; setting an example from the top down and acting as a catalyst for achieving inclusion at all levels.

• Bringing about organisational change and improvement through a careful approach to engaging and involving staff, ensuring a ‘done with’ rather than ‘done to’ model where possible.

5. Secures organisational sustainability and compliance

The Chief Executive Officer leads through:

• Discharging their financial responsibilities as accounting officer, including ensuring financial compliance, robust checks and balances, a commitment to achieving value for money, and financial probity at all times across the organisation.

• Working with the Chief Financial Officer to ensure that the trust's strategy is supported by effective, responsive and integrated central services, as well as high-quality operational delivery across all schools.

• Engaging the board on sustainability issues, including strategic discussions and decisions as to how to invest resources to best serve the trust’s medium to long-term needs and ensure value for money over time.

• Encouraging an ‘investor’ culture, whereby the organisation takes a strategic and long-term view as to where returns can be achieved that both reduce cost and improve quality.

• Seeking economies of scale, not simply through scaled procurement, but also through a culture where internal talent is maximised, and resources are deployed strategically – saving on external costs and building internal capacity in doing so.

• Building relationships with other local and regional MATs to share expertise, resources and to embark on shared procurement where appropriate.

• Developing a culture that values, encourages, and ensures compliance for volunteerism, fundraising and sustainable income generation to further enhance the educational offer for pupils and contributes to improved outcomes.

• Ensuring that risk management systems and compliance monitoring systems are in place so that the organisation can anticipate and plan for risks and fulfil all its statutory duties and responsibilities.

6. Builds external relationships: fostering social and professional capital

The Chief Executive Officer leads through:

• Creating a sense of openness and proactive engagement with local, regional and national stakeholders, prioritising external relationships with reference to strategy and potential impact.

• Steering the organisation to engage with and embark on relationships that will add sufficient value to the organisation and pupils’ educational experience, while avoiding collaborative overload and ensuring there are mutual benefits for all involved.

• Encouraging the board to play their part in building and maintaining key stakeholder relationships, while also ensuring their impact on pupils and benefits of all external partnerships are demonstrable and relate sufficiently to core business.

• Building constructive relationships with politicians and civil servants; communicating in a way that engages key influencers and ensures they remain informed about the organisation’s work and progress.

• Accessing peer-to-peer networks (within and across sectors) that are relevant and add value to the CEO and the senior team’s professional development.

• Working with the board to generate a culture of ‘pure accountability’ to communities – including staff, parents and pupils – that ensures the trust is openly committed to understanding and meeting their general needs and expectations over time.

• Contributing to the development of the wider sector through taking part in the work of sector bodies and engaging in appropriate opportunities to inform the development of other trusts and to inform government policy.

Accounting Officer’s responsibilities

The Chief Executive Officer is the accounting officer of the academy trust. The responsibilities and duties of the accounting officer are set out in the Academy Trust Handbook 2024.

What does the accounting officer do

1.31 The accounting officer role includes specific responsibilities for financial matters. It includes a personal responsibility to Parliament and to ESFA’s accounting officer for the trust’s financial resources.

1.32 Accounting officers must be able to assure Parliament and the public of high standards of probity in the management of public funds, particularly regularity, propriety and value for money.

1.33 Accounting officers must adhere to The Seven Principles of Public Life.

1.34 The accounting officer must have oversight of financial transactions, by:

• ensuring the academy trust’s property and assets are under the trustees’ control and measures exist to prevent losses or misuse

• ensuring bank accounts, financial systems and financial records are operated by more than one person

• keeping full and accurate accounting records to support their annual accounts.

The accounting officer’s annual statement

1.35 The accounting officer must complete and sign a statement on regularity, propriety and compliance each year and submit this to ESFA with the audited accounts. The accounting officer must also demonstrate how the trust has secured value for money in the governance statement in the audited accounts.

The accounting officer’s duty to raise concerns

1.36 The accounting officer must take personal responsibility (which must not be delegated) for assuring the board that there is compliance with the funding agreement and handbook.

1.37 The accounting officer must advise the board in writing, if action it is considering is incompatible with the articles, funding agreement or handbook.

1.38 Similarly, the accounting officer must advise the board in writing, if the board fails to act where required by the funding agreement or handbook. Where the board is minded to proceed, despite the accounting officer’s advice, the accounting officer must consider the board’s reasons and, if the accounting officer still considers the action proposed by the board is in breach of the articles, the funding agreement or handbook, the accounting officer must notify ESFA’s accounting officer immediately in writing.

Commitment to safeguarding

Our organisation is committed to safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children, young people and vulnerable adults. We expect all staff, volunteers and trustees to share this commitment.

Our recruitment process follows the keeping children safe in education guidance.

Offers of employment may be subject to the following checks (where relevant):
childcare disqualification
Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS)
medical
online and social media
prohibition from teaching
right to work
satisfactory references
suitability to work with children

You must tell us about any unspent conviction, cautions, reprimands or warnings under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 (Exceptions) Order 1975.

Applying for the job

Please download the application form using the link below, and once completed send to enquiries@brickfields.org

CVs are not accepted.

Visas cannot be sponsored.
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Additional documents

If you need these documents in an accessible format, please contact the school.

About The Brickfields Trust

Type
Multi-academy trust

Arranging a visit to The Brickfields Trust

To arrange a visit and increase the chance of a successful application email enquiries@brickfields.org.

Head office location

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