Personal Injury Negotiator (MOJ / OIC)

Flexible Solutionz Careers
Salford
11 months ago
Applications closed

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Personally Injury Executive (EL/PL)

Third Party Claims Agent

Litigation Solicitor - Fully Remote

Associate Solicitor - Fraud and claims

NQ Personal Injury Solicitor (Defendant)

Senior Claims Handler


My client is a leading insurance company with offices in central Manchester. They are looking for 3 x PI Negotiators to join their team.

  • £28-30k basic plus generous bonus and pension
  • Hybrid working - up to 4 days from home
  • Award winning training
  • Monday to Friday, 9-5

Candidates should have a working knowledge of the OIC and MOJ portals. The role will involve management of lower value personal injury claims submitted via the OIC and MOJ portals,indemnity validation, accurate reserve setting, liability resolution, quantum assessment;

Utilising settlement techniques to effectively negotiate, as appropriate, with customers, suppliers, Unrepresented Claimants and all relevant Third-Party representatives.

There will be a big focus on development so will allow the successful applicants the opportunity to push their careers forward!

Want to know more? Apply now by sending a CV to James via this advert who will be in touch with further details on this opportunity and company!


AMRT1_UKTJ

...

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.

Quantum Computing Jobs for Career Switchers in Their 30s, 40s & 50s (UK Reality Check)

Quantum computing is exciting. Headlines about qubits, quantum advantage and futuristic breakthroughs can make it seem like the preserve of physicists in high-tech labs. But for career switchers in their 30s, 40s or 50s in the UK, the truth is both broader and more practical: there are real job opportunities connected to quantum computing that don’t require you to come straight out of a PhD programme. This article gives you a grounded UK-focused reality check on quantum computing jobs, what roles genuinely exist, which ones are suited to career switchers, what skills employers actually hire for, how long retraining realistically takes and how to position your experience for success. Whether you’re coming from IT, engineering, project management, research support, operations, compliance or even sales & communications — there are ways to pivot into this fast-growing field if you approach it strategically.

How to Write a Quantum Job Ad That Attracts the Right People

Quantum computing is no longer confined to university labs and research papers. UK companies are now actively hiring quantum software engineers, physicists, hardware specialists, cryptographers and commercial leads as the sector moves closer to real-world deployment. But while demand for quantum talent is rising, many employers are struggling to attract the right candidates. Roles attract either underqualified applicants who see “quantum” as a buzzword, or highly academic researchers who are a poor fit for commercial environments. The problem often isn’t the candidate pool — it’s the job advert. Writing a strong quantum job ad requires a very different approach to traditional tech hiring. Quantum professionals are highly specialised, sceptical of hype and acutely aware when an employer doesn’t truly understand the field. In this guide, we’ll break down how to write a quantum job ad that attracts the right people, filters out the wrong ones and positions your organisation as a serious, credible player in the quantum ecosystem.

Maths for Quantum Jobs: The Only Topics You Actually Need (& How to Learn Them) Linear algebra essentials, probability, complex numbers, basic optimisation.

If you are a software engineer, data scientist or ML engineer looking to move into quantum computing or you are a UK undergraduate or postgraduate in physics, maths, computer science or engineering applying for quantum roles, the maths can feel like the biggest barrier. Job descriptions often say “strong maths” but rarely spell out what that means in practice. The good news is you do not need a full maths degree’s worth of theory to start applying. For most graduate & early-career roles in quantum software, quantum research engineering & quantum algorithms, the maths you actually use again & again is concentrated in four areas: linear algebra, probability, complex numbers & basic optimisation. This guide turns vague requirements into a clear, job-focused checklist. You will learn what to focus on, what to leave for later & how to build small portfolio outputs that prove you can translate the maths into working code.