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https://hmlandregistry.blog.gov.uk/2019/06/04/how-our-award-winning-system-is-speeding-up-casework/

How our award-winning system is speeding up casework

Rows of screens in an office with people working at them.

The Land Register of England and Wales contains more than 25 million titles covering more than 86% of the land mass. Any change to the register has to be processed by a member of staff in HM Land Registry. We receive around 20,000 applications every day, to be processed by more than 3,000 registration experts.

We want to make it quick and simple to deal with us

As outlined in our Business Strategy, we want to become the world’s leading land registry and we’re working on a new solution to automate the most straightforward applications and make complex applications easier to process. As part of one of the first steps in this journey, we have developed our Workflow project which routes work directly to the right people.

The mammoth task of sorting 20,000 applications each day used to rely on our caseworkers reviewing all cases to identify whether they were best placed to process this type of application. Given the legal complexity of some of our applications, this can be very time-consuming, delaying caseworkers from processing the applications. It was becoming increasingly evident this approach was no longer suitable.

Following extensive development and feedback from the members of staff who would be using it, the new Workflow system was initially launched in October 2016. Further testing and development followed until a live version was rolled out across the organisation in September 2017. By July 2018, one million applications had been processed through Workflow.

Introducing our Workflow system has been transformational for HM Land Registry. The new live system manages 45% of the organisation’s register update applications across all 14 of our offices. In addition:

  • 6 million applications have now been managed in the system
  • 2,500 users have access to the system, including processors and managers
  • an average of 6,000 new applications a day are processed by Workflow
  • Workflow enables the Operations department to identify the total number of caseworkers assigned to processing these applications in real time, allowing for better team management
  • the system is also being utilised by our Call Handling and Customer Service teams

But what does this mean for our customers?

By improving our internal systems we are able to complete more applications, more quickly. This means shorter waiting times for new applications and it means our backlog can be reduced at a greater pace. In fact, Workflow has directly contributed to our meeting and exceeding our key performance indicator to complete register updates within five days. Workflow also moves us one step closer to our strategic aim of automating 95% of daily transactions by 2022.

Three men in evening suits holding an award against a background saying 'Real IT Awards 2019'.
Colleagues proudly display our Real IT Award

In May 2019, the project was recognised at the Real IT Awards. We won the Product Innovation category against strong competition, including Centrica and Dubai Police, which demonstrates the scale and breadth of achievement by the team.

This project has challenged what we do and how we do it. We have enabled the organisation to control work at an organisational level and to provide benefits and a better service to both our staff and our customers. The Workflow system will sit at the heart of our ongoing work to automate and simplify how we process the thousands of applications we receive, all of which will continue to make conveyancing simpler, faster and cheaper.

 

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  1. Comment by John Harvey posted on

    Well done.

    I worked on the first Which? report into conveyancing in the late 1960s and, even then, home movers were demanding more use of computers to ease the process.

    In my time, LR has used technology to change proving ownership from an unpredictable paperchase to a matter of a few keystrokes. But this is the exception with things like service charges often remaining unknown until it is too late for flat buyers to do anything about excessive ones.

    Your achievements in getting information in the right place at the right time should be a model for improvements in the whole process of moving home.

    For example, the government is committed to turning property management into a profession This could require managers to use software for recording matters including day to day events (eg payments to contractors which will form part of the service charge) and transmitting this information to a national database where it is processed immediately to produce reports

    Getting a successor to LPE1 ( for example) should become as quick, cheap and easy as downloading copy entries