DSE Assessors: Capacity, Resilience and the Real Cost of Getting It Wrong

Posted on 4 May 2026

Introduction

When organisations think about DSE compliance, the focus is often on having trained assessors in place.

But in reality, the bigger question is:

Do you have enough capacity and resilience in your assessor model to actually support your workforce?

Because having assessors on paper and having assessors available, responsive and effective are two very different things.

The Reality: Assessors Have Other Jobs

Most DSE assessors are not full-time in that role.

They are:

  • Administrators
  • HR staff
  • Managers
  • Clinicians

DSE assessments sit alongside their day job, which means:

  • Limited time
  • Competing priorities
  • Delays in responding

So when organisations say, ‘we have three assessors’, what they often actually have is:

Three part-time, stretched resources

The Risk No One Plans For

Let’s look at a very real scenario:

  • One assessor is on annual leave
  • One is off sick
  • One has left the organisation

Suddenly, there is no one available to carry out assessments.

Or worse:

  • One person is left trying to manage everything
  • Assessments become delayed
  • Employees in pain are waiting

This is where organisations move from proactive risk management to reactive problem-solving – and that’s when MSK issues escalate.

This Isn’t a Numbers Problem – It’s a Capacity Problem

The mistake many organisations make is relying on a simple ratio:

‘We have enough assessors for our numbers.’

But the real question should be:

Can your system cope when people are unavailable?

If the answer is no, then the model is fragile.

What’s needed is:

  • Depth, not just numbers

  • Coverage, not just names on a list

  • Time allocation, not just training certificates

The Next Question: Train or Outsource?

Once organisations recognise the capacity issue, the next decision is:

Do we bring in external assessors or train our own staff?

Option 1: Bringing in External Assessors

This can work well:

  • For complex cases
  • For specialist input
  • When internal resource is limited But it often leads to:
  • Delays in booking
  • Higher ongoing costs
  • A reactive approach

It solves problems – but doesn’t build capability.

Option 2: Training Internal Assessors

Training your own staff (for example, via a £220 DSE Assessor course delivered via Zoom) offers:

  • Immediate access to support
  • Better understanding of internal roles
  • Faster response times
  • Long-term cost control

But only if:

  • There are enough assessors trained
  • They are given time to carry out the role
  • They are supported and confident

Otherwise, it becomes a tick-box exercise.

Cost vs Value: A Reality Check

Let’s look at this practically.

External model:

  • Pay per assessment, ongoing cost
  • Costs increase as demand increases

Internal training model:

  • £220 per person (one-off investment)

  • Builds internal capacity

  • Reduces long-term spend

Training 5 assessors = £1,100

That could cover what you might spend on external assessments in a short period of time.

But again – training alone isn’t the solution.

The Best Approach: Build Capacity, Then Add Support

The strongest organisations don’t choose one or the other.

They:

  • Train a pool of internal assessors
  • Ensure enough coverage and resilience
  • Use external expertise when needed

This creates:

  • Proactive support
  • Faster response
  • Better outcomes for employees

Final Thought

DSE compliance isn’t about ticking a box or having a certificate on file.

It’s about having a system that actually works in real life – when people are busy, when they’re off sick, and when staff leave.

  • If your assessors aren’t available, your system isn’t working.
  • If your employees are waiting in pain, your system isn’t working.
  • If your organisation is constantly reacting instead of preventing, your system isn’t working.

The real question is no longer:

‘Do we have assessors?’

It’s:

‘Do we have enough capacity, resilience and support to make a difference?’

If you need advice on improving the facilitation of DSE Assessments at your organisation we invite you to contact us.

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