How to run a Companies House PSC search step by step
Start at the official Companies House service and search for the company by name or company number. Click into the company profile, then find the People tab. Under that, you will see Officers (directors and secretaries) and a link to Persons with significant control. If a firm has registered PSCs, you will land on a page listing each PSC with a quick summary. Click a name to see the details.
What details you get on the PSC page
The PSC page is compact, but it packs in important signals. For an individual PSC, you will typically see name, month and year of birth, nationality, country of residence, service address, and the nature of control. Residential addresses are protected and will not appear. For a corporate PSC (a legal entity controlling the company), you will see its name, registered office, legal form, and jurisdiction. If a trust or firm without legal personality is involved, you may see a trustee listed as the PSC and a note about the role.
Balancing Platforms, Forums, And Word-Of-Mouth
Different platforms have different strengths. Big review sites give you scale and recency. Neighborhood forums and local social groups surface context: which inspectors are great with century-old homes, which ones know local condo boards, who is patient with first-time buyers. Professional directories can help you verify credentials and certifications. Cross-reference a few sources rather than trusting a single leaderboard. When you see the same names praised across platforms, that pattern is meaningful.
From Shortlist To Hire: Questions, Expectations, Next Steps
Once you narrow your list, ask pointed questions. What is included in a standard inspection, and what costs extra? How long will it take for a home like yours? Can you attend? Do they carry errors-and-omissions insurance? How soon will the report arrive, and is there a phone debrief included? Ask for a sample report and a clear prep list. A solid inspector will share both without hesitation. Pricing is part of the picture, but clarity of scope is more important; a cheaper inspection that glosses over big-ticket systems is expensive in the long run.
Ordering Like a Regular
Speak clearly, lead with size and doneness, then list tags. A clean template: “Large hashbrowns, scattered well—smothered, covered, and peppered.” If you want to protect crunch, add: “Put chili on the side, please.” If you’re sharing, ask for a Large and tell them to keep wet toppings on the side so everyone can customize a spoonful at a time. If you like symmetry, you can also ask them to put certain toppings on half: “Onions and cheese on one side, jalapeños on the other.” It’s a simple request and most crews are used to making plates look intentional.
For Books, Poems, and Articles: Follow the Paper Trail
If you mean a written work, your best friend is the catalog trail. Library catalogs and union catalogs connect titles to authors, ISBNs, and publication years. If it is a book or chapbook, expect an ISBN or a publisher imprint on the title page or verso; if it is a poem or essay in a magazine, the masthead and table of contents will place the piece under a byline. Anthologies add a wrinkle: the editor’s name is big on the cover, but the author of the piece you want appears only in the contents list—flip there first.