Families Thriving Together is a charity founded in Southeast England in 2022 by CEO Michelle Tucker, which brings parenting support to hundreds of families each year – most of them through referrals from the local authority. Michelle has years of experience delivering local authority settings and has a unique understanding of how local authorities and local charities can work well together.
Introduction
Families Thriving Together is a charity founded in Southeast England in 2022 by CEO Michelle Tucker, which brings parenting support to hundreds of families each year – most of them through referrals from the local authority. Michelle has years of experience delivering local authority settings and has a unique understanding of how local authorities and local charities can work well together.
The charity's mission is to normalise parenting support and remove barriers to access, delivering evidence-based programmes free of charge to all participants. Programmes include The Nurturing Programme, Keeping Your Child in Mind, Talking Teens, Welcome to the World, and Parenting Puzzle workshops, all developed by The Centre for Emotional Health.
This case study draws on a conversation between Michelle Tucker (Founder and CEO of Families Thriving Together), and Robin Lerner (Head of Impact and Research at the Centre for Emotional Health). Michelle and Robin explored how Families Thriving Together does and doesn't work alongside statutory services, what that relationship looks like in practice, and what Michelle would like to see change.
What does Families Thriving Together do, and how does it reach families?
The charity built its model around an open-door philosophy, something Michelle traces back to her experience of Sure Start Centres. The combination of open access, community collaboration, and free provision made parenting support reachable.
Crucially, the charity mainly works through partner agencies like statutory services, schools, children's services, adolescent services, family centres, who all refer families. Because the charity manages the entire delivery process and programmes are free to participants, the burden on referring organisations is minimal.
We don't ever advertise directly to parents. We work with our partners, we work with the statutory agencies, we work with the local authority. Because we do that, we get so many people come our way — via referrals, or just because they're sharing a poster and people register."
The charity delivers programmes both online and face to face. Michelle is clear that online delivery is not equivalent to in-person contact, but many parents say they simply would not have attended face to face. Parent feedback points to barriers like anxiety, time pressures, or the practicalities of working long hours.
What enables Families Thriving Together to keep doing groups when others can't?
The answer, Michelle says, is structural simplicity: the charity does one thing and does it well. There are no caseloads, no competing demands, no bureaucratic constraints pulling facilitators away from programme delivery. That focus is intentional and protected.
This is what we do. We don't do anything else. We know what we do and we do it well. I think that's probably why it works — because you're sticking to what you know works best."
The group facilitators are paid, experienced practitioners, many of whom Michelle has known through her years in the sector. A number still work part-time in statutory or school settings and take on facilitation work alongside that. What they share is a genuine investment in the programmes and the skill to hold a group: welcoming people, being perceptive to individual needs, nurturing participants through a vulnerable process, and building trust and rapport. For many facilitators, this work offers something their statutory roles no longer can: the energy and visible impact of group work.
Support with data collection and impact measurement
The charity collects outcome data from every programme: a simple Google Form in which most participants answer questions at the start and end of each course. There is also space for open-ended comments, which consistently produces rich qualitative feedback. The data sits in a spreadsheet, currently underused.
"I think they'd be shocked if they realised — if they saw some sort of research and evaluation as to what we've delivered and what that looks like across [the] Council."
Michelle has the data but not the time or resource to analyse or present it well. She is aware of its potential value both for demonstrating impact to funders and for informing the local authority about what is happening. But she is also cautious. Sharing data carries a risk that others will claim credit for work the charity has done.
"I don't want them to steal it. I'm not protective of the data because I want them to see it — but you just have to be a bit mindful that someone doesn't walk off and say, 'Oh, look what we've done.'"
Impact data
As part of this case study The Centre for Emotional Health agreed to analyse some anonymised feedback data from parents who attended programmes run by Families Thriving Together. Some of the results are below.
The people referred to programmes (over 950 since 2024) are on average 44 years old, have 2 children, with 22% of with a child under 5. Parents were from a range of ethnicities (78% White, 7% South Asian, 3% Black), and 20% identified as Fathers.
226 parents gave feedback after taking part in The Nurturing Programme (91), Talking Teens (112), Keeping Your Child in Mind (16), and Welcome to the World (XX), and The Parenting Puzzle (7). Parents reported their skills and confidence across key areas as part of the end of programme feedback.
For The Nurturing Programme the fraction of parents reporting higher confidence (4 or 5 out of 5) rose across all areas, including empathy and feelings (up from 25% to 88%):
"I am implementing some of the tools that I can do myself — more empathy, listening more, ignoring the little things."
and in listening and communicating clearly (from 13% to 69%):
"It has certainly made me stop and think more about my reactions and relationships within the family."
and being better able to nurture themselves (up from 18% to 62%):
"I have learned to much and have made lots of changes, not only to the way I parent, but also more reflection on how I parent and now actually looking after myself."
"In this past four weeks, I've completely changed as a person. These four weeks have completely changed my life."
Relevance for Best Start Family Hubs
The experience of Families Thriving Together illustrates the kind of voluntary sector partnership that Best Start Family Hubs and Healthy Babies guidance asks local authorities to build and sustain.
The guidance is explicit that local authorities should provide sufficient funding over a three-year period. In addition, local authorities should invite commissioned organisations to play an active role in governance and recognise them as vital partners in broadening the reach of support.
Families Thriving Together is filling a gap in group-based parenting provision, carrying none of the caseload pressures that constrain statutory teams, and delivering at scale.
The guidance also emphasises that community insight and family voice should drive the design of local networks, and that partners who are seeing service users directly are best placed to understand local need. The recent guidance asks local authorities to convene partners, share data, and build genuine collaboration.
For organisations like Families Thriving Together, a seat at a steering group table, support with impact measurement, and multi-year funding commitments would be very welcome.
More information
To learn more about Families Thriving Together or to contact Michelle, please visit https://familiesthrivingtogether.org.uk/
To learn more about The Centre for Emotional Health and the programmes they offer, please visit https://www.centreforemotionalhealth.org.uk/ or email [email protected]