Catastrophic Injury Indemnity Lawyer

Sacco Mann
Southampton
10 months ago
Applications closed

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Serious Injury Solicitor

PI/Clinical Negligence Fee Earner

PI/Clinical Negligence Fee Earner

Are you an experienced lawyer with a strong background in indemnity, liability, and complex medical issues? Are you looking for a role that offers high-value, multi-track casework and the chance to work on claims exceeding £1 million?

We're looking for a Large Loss Lawyer to join our dynamic team based in Southampton. This is a fantastic opportunity to assist on RTA personal injury claims while managing your own caseload of complex injury claims.

As a Catastrophic Injury Lawyer, you will:

  • Handle a caseload of up to 45 large loss claims, ensuring a thorough approach to liability, quantum, and indemnity issues.
  • Assist on high-value, catastrophic injury cases.
  • Advise insurer clients on policy coverage, liability disputes, and indemnity matters.
  • Develop strong relationships with senior claims handlers and insurer clients.
  • Mentor junior team members and supporting their development.

What they are looking for:

  • A qualified solicitor, CILEX, or equivalent relevant legal experience.
  • Strong experience in indemnity, liability, and complex medical issues.
  • Multi-track personal injury experience, preferably involving large loss and catastrophic claims.
  • Excellent critical thinking and quantum analysis skills.
  • Ability to build and maintain client relationships at a senior level.
  • A proactive approach and strong advocacy skills.

In return, the firm offers a competitive salary and comprehensive benefits package, including private healthcare, discounts, income protection and more.

If you are an ambitious Complex Injury Lawyer seeking a new role in Southampton, we encourage you to apply. You can contact Nadine Ali at Sacco Mann for further information, or apply with your CV directly to this advert.

#J-18808-Ljbffr

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

How Many Quantum Computing Tools Do You Need to Know to Get a Quantum Computing Job?

Quantum computing is one of the most exciting frontiers in science and technology — and the job market reflects that excitement. But for aspiring practitioners, the sheer number of tools, frameworks, programming languages and hardware platforms can feel overwhelming. One job advert mentions Qiskit, another talks about Cirq or Pennylane. You see references to quantum annealers and superconducting qubits, to measurement hardware and simulators, to noise mitigation libraries and cloud platforms. It’s easy to conclude that unless you master every quantum tool, you’ll never get a job. Here’s the honest truth most quantum computing hiring managers won’t explicitly tell you: 👉 They don’t hire you because you know every tool — they hire you because you can apply the right tools to solve real problems and explain why your solutions work. Tools matter, but context, understanding, judgement and results matter more. So how many quantum computing tools do you actually need to know to succeed in a job search? The real answer is significantly fewer than most people assume — and far more focused by role. This article breaks down what tools really matter in quantum jobs, which ones are core, which are role-specific, and how you can build a coherent toolkit that employers actually value.

What Hiring Managers Look for First in Quantum Computing Job Applications (UK Guide)

Quantum computing is one of the fastest-evolving fields in technology, blending physics, mathematics, computer science and engineering. Roles in this space — from Quantum Algorithm Developer and Quantum Software Engineer to Quantum Research Scientist and Quantum Hardware Specialist — are highly sought after, and hiring managers are exceptionally selective. Because quantum computing is complex and multidisciplinary, recruiters and hiring managers look for clear, concrete evidence of relevant expertise and impact right at the start of your application. They often decide whether to read your CV in detail within the first 10–20 seconds, based on a handful of high-value signals. This guide breaks down exactly what hiring managers look for first in quantum computing applications, how they assess CVs and portfolios, and what you can do to optimise your application to get noticed in the UK quantum job market.

Riverlane Jobs in Quantum Computing

If you’re looking for Riverlane jobs in quantum computing, you’re aiming at one of the most important layers in the quantum stack: quantum error correction (QEC). In simple terms, Riverlane focuses on the software, methods & tooling that help quantum computers produce reliable results despite noise. That matters because as quantum hardware scales, the ability to correct errors becomes the difference between “interesting experiments” and “useful quantum computing”. This guide is written for UK job seekers who want to understand: what Riverlane does (in job-seeker language) the roles they hire for the skills that map best to their work how to tailor your CV & LinkedIn how to prepare for interviews how to find & land Riverlane vacancies in the UK You do not need to be a quantum PhD to have a realistic pathway in. But you do need to understand the problem they’re solving & position your experience around it.