Propp launches academy for specialist finance advisers
The Academy has been designed to fast-track talent into the specialist finance market.
Propp has introduced its Propp Academy as a permanent part of the business, helping to develop the next generation of specialist property finance advisers.
Following the success of its initial academy programme, the business has now embedded the initiative into its long-term growth strategy, with five new recruits joining the latest intake.
The Academy has been designed to fast-track talent into the specialist finance market, combining structured learning with real deal exposure from day one.
It will focus on supporting advisers with training spanning specialist lending, deal structuring, client management, and market insight.
To support this next phase, Propp has appointed a dedicated training and development manager.
Peter Williams, CEO of Propp, said: “We’ve always believed the industry needs better training, better standards, and better people coming through. The success of our first academy proved what’s possible when you invest properly in talent, making it a permanent part of Propp was the obvious next step.”
Breaking news
Direct to your inbox:
More
stories
you'll love:
This week's biggest stories:
Offa
Offa joins Iress XPM and Trigold
Inflation
Bank of England set to hold interest rates as inflation remains at 2.8%
FCA
FCA mortgage reform plans set out affordability assessment changes for borrowers with past credit problems
Housing Market
Government unveils major homebuying reforms to slash delays, cut costs and stop fall throughs
This week's biggest stories:
Offa
Offa joins Iress XPM and Trigold
Inflation
Bank of England set to hold interest rates as inflation remains at 2.8%
FCA
FCA mortgage reform plans set out affordability assessment changes for borrowers with past credit problems
Housing Market
Government unveils major homebuying reforms to slash delays, cut costs and stop fall throughs
Interest Rates
Case for hiking rates is growing, MPC member says
Bank Of England
Bank of England holds interest rates at 3.75% in 7-2 vote