How to Commission Implementation (Not Just Training)

By Innovating Minds Innovating Minds
How to Commission Implementation (Not Just Training)

Because training doesn’t change systems, implementation does.

 

In the previous article, we explored an uncomfortable but necessary question for commissioners:

 

What are we tolerating that needs to stop?

 

One answer comes up again and again:

We commission trauma‑informed training, but practice doesn’t change.

 

This is not because trauma‑informed approaches don’t work. It is because training without implementation leaves a critical gap, the space where most initiatives quietly fail.

 

This article focuses on that gap: the missing middle between learning and lasting change.

The Pattern Commissioners Know Too Well

 

A familiar pattern plays out across systems:

 

  • Training is commissioned
  • Staff attend sessions and feel inspired
  • Feedback is positive
  • Practice briefly shifts
  • Pressure builds
  • Old ways of working return

 

From a commissioning perspective, the activity has taken place. But from a child, family, or practitioner perspective, very little has changed.

 

This is where commissioning needs to evolve: from purchasing training to commissioning implementation.

 

What Implementation‑Ready Commissioning Actually Requires

 

Implementation is not a single add‑on. It is a deliberate design choice that requires ownership, cadence, and support at every level.

 

1. Start With the Right People. Not Everyone at Once

 

Effective trauma‑informed implementation does not begin with system‑wide rollouts.

It begins by training practitioners who are already aligned:

 

  • Working directly with children and families
  • Curious about behaviour rather than focused on stopping it
  • Not wedded to punitive or consequence‑led approaches
  • Using relational, empathic, non‑judgemental language
  • Actively seeking to put theory into day‑to‑day practice

 

These are often described as “the people that get it.”

 

Starting here:

 

  • Builds credibility
  • Reduces resistance
  • Creates internal champions
  • Prevents trauma‑informed practice being dismissed as “another initiative”

 

Training becomes the beginning of practice change, not the end of a training day.

 

2. Commission With Service Managers. Not Around Them

 

One of the most common implementation failures comes from disconnect:

 

Commissioners commission training. Managers are expected to “make it work”. Practitioners are left to bridge the gap alone.

 

Implementation‑ready commissioning works differently.

It involves working closely with service managers and line managers to:

 

  • Identify practitioners already practicing using trauma-informed principals (even if they don’t’ know they are)
  • Understand workforce pressures and constraints
  • Align expectations between commissioning and delivery
  • Create shared ownership for embedding change

 

When managers are part of commissioning decisions, implementation becomes supported, not enforced.

 

3. Embed Professional Standards. Not Just Principles

 

Trauma‑informed practice cannot survive on values alone.

Implementation requires clear professional standards, including:

 

  • Use of evidence‑based tools and resources, not outdated materials
  • Access to high‑quality supervision
  • Collection of pre‑ and post‑outcome measures to demonstrate impact
  • Ongoing CPD, not one‑off learning events
  • Access to coaching and clinical supervision

 

These standards move trauma‑informed practice from:

 

“Something we believe in” to “Something we can evidence, sustain and improve.”

 

Healing Together is designed as an implementation‑ready model, embedding these standards into practice, not bolting them on afterwards.

 

4. The Overlooked Lever: Line Manager Capability

 

One of the most underestimated barriers to implementation is line management supervision.

Too often:

 

  • Line managers have not received trauma‑informed training
  • They are unclear how trauma‑informed practice should “land” in daily work
  • Supervision reverts to task‑driven, case‑management styles

 

The result? Frontline practitioners attend trauma‑informed training, then return to supervision structures that pull them back to old ways of working.

Implementation‑ready commissioning addresses this directly.

By commissioning coaching and supervision for line managers, commissioners ensure that managers are equipped to:

 

  • Guide reflective practice
  • Support the teams emotional wellbeing and minimise the risk of vicarious trauma
  • Reinforce trauma‑informed practice within service delivery
  • Move supervision beyond compliance into learning and growth

 

When line managers change how they supervise, frontline practice changes with them.

 

5. Monitor Fidelity Without Crushing Practice

 

Commissioning implementation does not mean rigid enforcement.

 

It means light‑touch fidelity checks that:

 

  • Support practice rather than police it
  • Focus on learning, not blame
  • Surface challenges early
  • Protect the integrity of trauma‑informed approaches

 

This keeps implementation alive, without overwhelming already stretched services.

 

From Training to Transformation

 

When commissioners commission implementation:

 

  • Training becomes a launchpad, not a conclusion
  • Managers become enablers, not blockers
  • Practitioners feel supported, not scrutinised
  • Impact becomes visible, and measurable

 

This is where trauma‑informed commissioning moves from intention to reality.

 

Coming Next:

 

“But what if you’ve ‘already had trauma‑informed training’?”

 

Because the question isn’t whether training happened, It’s whether practice truly changed.

 

Want to read the previous articles in the series? You can read them all on our website .

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