Legal software suppliers examine howe buying reforms

The Legal Software Suppliers Association (LSSA) held a special member meeting in London this week to follow up on the Government’s latest updates on home buying reform,

Members also examined the role legal technology will play in delivering change across the sector.
The meeting built on earlier engagement between the LSSA and the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, with this latest session focused on the published roadmap and the practical considerations for implementation.

Held at the Royal Air Force Club on 30 June, the special LSSA members’ meeting included representatives from leading legal technology businesses including LEAP, Access Legal, OneAdvanced, Bundledocs, Ochresoft, TM Group, Dye & Durham and Timeslice, alongside newer members and emerging providers.

SUPPORTING HOME BUYING REFORMS

A central focus was how the reforms could work in practice for law firms, conveyancers and property professionals.

Representatives from the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government joined LSSA members to discuss the direction of reform and how software providers can support a more efficient, transparent and data-led conveyancing process.

The proposals include greater use of upfront property information, improved data sharing, digital property logbooks and work to reduce duplication in areas such as anti-money laundering checks.

For LSSA members, the meeting underlined a clear point: reform will only succeed if the systems used across the sector can support it effectively.

THE IMPORTANCE OF COLLABORATION

Members also shared updates on product development, customer needs and market activity. Key themes included conveyancing digitisation, workflow automation, compliance, client information management and integration between platforms.

The range of companies in the room showed how broad the LSSA’s membership has become over the past 30 years. Established suppliers serving thousands of law firms were joined by newer businesses developing AI-led legal guidance, cloud-based case management, digital client information platforms and collaboration tools.

That mix gave the meeting a useful operational focus, linking policy and market change with software development, law firm processes and the day-to-day delivery of legal services.

RESPONSIBLE AI

AI also featured prominently, with members considering how the sector can encourage innovation without creating unnecessary complexity for suppliers or law firms.

The discussion focused on the value of high-level guidance that helps organisations think clearly about data protection, accuracy, security, regulatory alignment and client confidence.

Members recognised that AI will continue to influence legal services, but that adoption needs to remain proportionate and aligned with the professional responsibilities of the sector.

Kevin Horlock, chief executive of the LSSA, says: “The practical delivery of reform depends on the systems law firms use every day. That is why it’s so important that legal software suppliers have a voice in these conversations.

“The LSSA brings together the companies building and supporting much of the technology used across the legal sector. By working constructively with government, regulators and each other, our members can help shape reforms that improve outcomes for law firms, consumers and the wider property market.”

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