Following CMA intervention, ESS has offered and signed binding
  commitments meaning eligible schools can now apply to exit
  longer-term software contracts a year early.
  Education Software Solutions Limited (ESS) is the largest
  provider of school management information system (MIS) software
  in England and Wales. In the UK, most state schools are required
  to have an MIS in place to manage information on staff and
  students including for handling attendance and safeguarding.
  In April 2022, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA)
  launched an investigation into whether ESS’s conduct was
  anti-competitive by effectively limiting schools’ ability to
  choose an alternative MIS software provider and excluding its
  competitors. The CMA was concerned that customers of ESS –
  meaning certain schools in England and Wales – had to move from
  one-year contracts to three-year contracts, without having
  sufficient time to make alternative arrangements with other
  software providers. The CMA was concerned that these changes
  reduced schools’ choice of MIS software provider and made it
  difficult for other providers to compete with ESS to win
  business.
  To address the CMA’s concerns, the CMA has secured ESS’s offer
  and signing of legally binding commitments that will enable
  certain schools – meaning those which had genuinely considered
  switching providers but reasonably concluded that they did not
  have sufficient time to do so – to apply to an independent
  adjudicator for a 12-month break clause. If granted, the clause
  will allow them to exit their current three-year contract with
  ESS on 31 March 2024 and choose an alternative provider, should
  they so wish.
  Ann Pope, Senior Director of Antitrust at the CMA, said:
  This break clause will give eligible schools 12 months to decide
  whether to exit their current contract and, if they do, to switch
  to a new provider – longer than ESS originally offered. The
  commitments secured from ESS will also bolster competition in the
  MIS market, giving schools more choice and ESS’s rivals a further
  chance to compete.
  Schools can apply for a
  break clause from noon today until 10 February 2023. Any
  applicants will be notified by the independent adjudicator –
  Evelyn Partners – as to whether they have been successful by no
  later than 31 March 2023.
  The CMA’s decision to accept ESS’s legally binding commitments
  brings this investigation to a close. The CMA will continue to
  monitor ESS’s compliance with the commitments and intervene if it
  suspects a breach.
  More information can be found on the CMA’s investigation into conduct
  of Education Software Solutions Limited case page.
  Notes to editors
  - The commitments provided by ESS are done so voluntarily.
  Commitments are designed to address the CMA’s competition
  concerns; the giving of commitments does not imply a finding that
  competition law has been infringed. In this case, the CMA notes
  that ESS maintains that its behaviour was not anti-competitive.
  
 
  - Find out more information on how to apply to the adjudicator,
  Evelyn Partners, on the ESS website from noon today. Evelyn
  Partners has been appointed, with the CMA’s approval, as an
  entirely independent adjudicator.
  
 
  - The CMA opened its investigation as it had reasonable grounds
  for suspecting that ESS may have infringed the Chapter II
  prohibition of the Competition Act 1998 (Act) in the supply of
  MIS software in the UK.
  
 
  - The responses to the CMA’s consultation are summarised, on an
  anonymous basis, in the decision. As is usual process, the CMA
  does not intend to publish the full responses.