News and Announcements
App Turns Entire Conveyancing Process Into a Visual Timeline
- Published April 30, 2015 11:37AM UTC
- Publisher Wholesale Investor
- Categories Company Updates
28th April 2015, Legal Practice Intelligence
Australian startup, Conveyance Genius, has launched a world-first mobile phone app that turns the entire conveyancing process into a simple, visual timeline. Buyers, sellers, agents and conveyancers can all see the exact status of the transaction, as well as next steps, all on their phone. And they’re warned immediately – with a push notification – if something needs attention, before it becomes a problem.
• The Conveyance Genius mobile app keeps everyone in the loop about conveyance status
• Real-time status updates & push notifications
• User-friendly timeline with colour-coded milestones
• Dashboard for real estate agents, property investors & conveyancers shows how many transactions need attention
According to the app’s inventor, Shaneal Sharma, “Every day, thousands of property sales fall through simply because someone doesn’t know about a potentially deal-breaking issue. Critical dates and correspondence constantly go unnoticed. “And when they do, the buyer loses their dream home, the seller loses the sale, the agent loses their commission, and the conveyancer has to chase partial payment. Usually because of something as trivial as a missed call or lost email.”
Sharma says Conveyance Genius changes all of that. It’s a world-first, patented app (and website) that distils the entire
transaction down to a user-friendly, interactive timeline on a mobile phone. It shows all parties the important milestones, and colour-codes them blue (in progress), red (needs attention) or green (done).
With just a few taps, the conveyancer updates the status whenever it changes, and buyers, sellers and agents can all see the change immediately. If the conveyancer flags a problem, everyone is sent a push notification instantly. (They can also tap through for more info.) They can also upload important documents and give access to certain users.
To read the full article, please click here.