I’ve spent over 20 years working inside the RTO sector. Setting up organisations, managing compliance, managing staff, coaching leaders, and right now, working inside an RTO delivering TAE40122. That’s a lot of time in a lot of rooms with a lot of RTO owners and CEOs.
And there are things I see consistently, across organisations of every size, that I’ve begun to realise almost nobody talks about openly. Not at industry events. Not in the trade publications. Not even between peers.
So, I’m going to talk about them here.
1. Most RTO leaders are deeply isolated
Running an RTO can be a lonely job. You’re responsible for compliance, staff, students, funding, strategy, and culture and in my experience, this often all lands at once, especially in smaller RTOs. Some leaders still love the training side of things too, which adds even more to the load. And yet, who do you actually talk to about it?
Most of the leaders I work with don’t have a trusted sounding board. You can’t be fully honest with your team as it would undermine confidence in the business and your own credibility. You can’t always be fully honest with your board or owners as this might look like weakness. LinkedIn is a great place to gather information, but it’s not exactly where you’d post about feeling isolated. And while friends and family want to support you, they often simply don’t understand the world of vocational training.
So, you carry it. Quietly. And that isolation, that lack of someone to think out loud with… costs you more than you realise. In your decision-making. In your energy. In your clarity.
There is something genuinely powerful about saying a problem out loud. When thoughts stay inside your head, they loop. They grow. They distort. The same concern that felt manageable on Monday can feel overwhelming by Friday – and it is not because it got bigger, but because it’s been circling without anywhere to land.
The moment you speak it out loud to someone who is genuinely listening, not someone who needs reassurance from you, not someone with a stake in the outcome, something shifts. The problem becomes smaller. The path forward becomes clearer. And you realise that what felt tangled and impossible in your own head is actually something you can work through.
This isn’t just good for your business. It’s good for your mental health. The weight that RTO leaders carry in silence is real – and it accumulates. Having a space where you can be honest, think out loud, and not have to manage how you’re perceived is not a luxury. For a leader operating at your level, it’s a necessity.
2. Busyness is being mistaken for progress
This one is uncomfortable to say, but I’ll say it anyway: being busy is not the same as moving forward.
I see RTO leaders who are genuinely working themselves into the ground – early mornings, late nights, weekends – and yet their organisation isn’t growing. Or it’s growing, but they’re not – which ultimately puts more pressure on the leader. The hamster wheel is spinning faster, but the destination hasn’t changed.
Busyness can actually be a way of avoiding the harder, more important questions.
Questions like:
- What do I actually want this business to look like in three years?
- Am I building something sustainable, or just surviving?
- Is the way I’m working right now something I can keep doing?
When you’re flat out, those questions feel like luxuries. But they’re not. They’re the whole point.
But there’s something deeper going on too. This is what I’m seeing and hearing. For many RTO leaders, busyness isn’t just a symptom of having too much to do. It’s a way of maintaining control. If you’re the one doing everything, nothing can go wrong without you knowing about it. Delegating feels risky. What if someone does it differently to how you would? What if they get it wrong? It’s easier, and often faster to just do it yourself.
And then there’s the identity piece, which is even harder to sit with. When you’ve built something from the ground up, being busy can feel like proof that you matter – that you’re needed, that you’re contributing. The idea of slowing down, of stepping back, can quietly raise an uncomfortable question: if I’m not doing all of this, then who am I in this business?
Both of these patterns – control and identity – are completely understandable. But unchecked, they take a serious toll on your mental health. Chronic busyness without space to think, reflect, or simply breathe doesn’t just slow your business down. It wears you down. And leaders who are worn down don’t make good decisions, don’t show up well for their teams, and don’t enjoy what they’ve built. That’s a high price to pay for staying in control.
3. What you think is happening and what’s actually happening are often two very different things
This is perhaps the most consistent thing I’ve observed across my entire career — and it still surprises me every time.
You believe your team is across compliance. Your team thinks someone else is handling it. You believe your trainers are engaged and delivering quality. Walk the floor and a different picture emerges. You believe the business is on a growth trajectory. The numbers tell a more complicated story.
This isn’t about blame. It happens because you’re stretched thin, because your team tells you what they think you want to hear, and because there are simply not enough honest conversations happening at the top.
The gap between perception and reality is where most RTO problems are born — and where they quietly grow until they become a crisis.
So what do you do with this?
I’m not sharing these observations to make you feel uncomfortable — although if something above has landed, that’s worth sitting with.
I’m sharing them because these are the exact things that change when you get the right support. A trusted person in your corner who asks the hard questions, closes the gap between perception and reality, and helps you get out of the weeds and into the role you actually built this for.
Here’s the challenge: be honest with yourself about which of these three things is showing up in your business right now. Not the version you’d present at a board meeting. The real version.
Because that honest answer is exactly where change begins.
If you’re ready to have that conversation with someone who understands your world, I have one or two coaching spots available. Book a free 30-minute call and let’s talk.