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How do Homegrown Conveyancers Help Clients On The Move?

News
29th May 2019

Changing the career course of conveyancing

Taylor Rose came up with the idea to give their assistant administrators the opportunity to fast track their career by introducing a training programme that would give them everything they needed to become a conveyancer, including history, law, theory, practicalities, and processes as well as one to one support.

What is the Taylor Rose route to Conveyancer?

  • Join as a Junior Administrator

  • Progress to Assistant Administrator

  • Work a minimum of one year as an Assistant Administrator

  • Attend the Trainee Conveyancer Programme (six months from start to graduation)

  • Graduate as a junior conveyancer (after a supported period of handling own caseload)

  • Conveyancer

  • Contract leader team Leader

Who is the course designed for?

The course is designed for assistant administrators who have performed in that role for a minimum of one year. It is also open to assistant administrators and junior conveyancers entering the organisation from other firms, where no structured form of training is available, and who could benefit by attending the course as a refresher.

What information does the course contain?

The course provides a complete understanding of the role and how it came about, its human elements, and the procedures conveyancers need to follow. It also covers the more unusual aspects of conveyancing, such as unregistered land.

How are the candidates assessed?

Candidates are assessed via a mid-point and final exam. After graduating to ‘junior conveyancer’, they receive ongoing training and monitoring to ensure they feel comfortable and confident in dealing with their caseload.


Did you know?

Conveyancing uncovered

Conveyancing predates all other legal fields. In the UK, we can trace conveyancing back to Henry VIII’s period, whereas Roman property law existed long before that. In fact, some of the principles the Romans introduced then haven’t changed much over the years.

Although the bread and butter for most law firms, conveyancing has always been viewed as the ‘poor cousin’.

While other areas of the law profession demand a university degree, conveyancers do not require a qualification to practice.


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