Overview
Expertise is not created by a job title, a membership badge or attendance at occasional meetings. It comes from knowledge, experience, judgement and the ability to solve real problems consistently.
That is especially true in party wall work, where the Act is short but its practical administration can be difficult.
Knowledge of the fundamentals
An expert must understand the foundation of their field. In party wall matters, that means understanding: - when the Act applies; - what each notice requires; - how disputes are deemed to arise; - the limits of surveyors' jurisdiction; - how costs and fees should be assessed; - how awards should be written clearly and lawfully.
Without the basics, experience can simply become repeated bad practice.
Practical experience
Expertise requires repeated exposure to real problems. That includes ordinary residential projects, difficult neighbours, non-responsive owners, damage claims, excessive fees, third surveyor referrals and defective notices.
The ability to apply judgement under pressure is what separates a true expert from someone who merely knows the theory.
Continuous learning
The best professionals keep learning. They read cases, follow developments, review their own work and refine their documents.
Party wall practice changes through court decisions, technology, market behaviour and the practical lessons learned from difficult files.
Problem-solving ability
An expert should make complicated matters clearer. They should be able to identify the real issue quickly and avoid wasting time on points that do not matter.
In party wall work, that means knowing when to push, when to compromise and when a point is outside the Act altogether.
Recognition by substance, not volunteering
Peer recognition can matter, but it should be treated carefully. Holding a role in a club, committee or professional body is not the same as expertise.
Ask what the person has actually done and how often they have done it.
Communication
An expert should be able to explain complex concepts in plain English. If clients, neighbours or professionals cannot understand the advice, the advice is of limited value.
Integrity
Real expertise includes honesty. An expert should not exaggerate risk, hide fees or use complexity to create dependency.