Who we work with
- Companies and shareholders facing commercial disputes
- Founders and partners in early-stage conflicts that haven't yet escalated
- Families navigating divorce, custody, parental rights and inheritance
- Landlords, tenants and property co-owners
- Cross-border counterparties needing a neutral, language-flexible forum
Commercial mediation
- Shareholder and joint-venture disputes
- Supplier, distribution and licensing disagreements
- Construction and project disputes
- Founder break-ups, cap-table conflicts and exit negotiations
- Post-M&A earn-out and warranty claims
Family & personal mediation
- Divorce and separation agreements
- Child custody, contact arrangements and child-support terms
- Division of marital property (including cross-border assets)
- Inheritance and succession disputes between heirs
- Sibling and parent-child property co-ownership
Cross-border mediation
- Disputes where the parties sit in different jurisdictions
- Language-flexible sessions (EN, BG, DE, FR, ES, RU)
- Online and hybrid mediation — the parties don't need to travel
- Coordination with foreign counsel and notaries for enforcement abroad
- Recognition of mediated settlements under the Singapore Convention
How the process works
- Intake. Each party gives us the picture in confidence. We confirm mediation is a viable forum.
- Joint session. A neutral mediator facilitates the conversation — usually 1-2 sessions of 2-4 hours.
- Private caucuses. The mediator may meet each side separately to test options and find common ground.
- Settlement. The agreed terms are reduced to a written settlement. If desired, the court can approve the settlement, which makes it directly enforceable.
- Timing. Most matters resolve in 2-6 weeks. Litigation, by contrast, can take 1-3 years per instance.
When mediation works — and when it doesn't
Mediation works when both sides genuinely want a resolution and have something to gain from preserving the relationship or avoiding cost and publicity. It rarely works when one side is using the dispute strategically, when there is a fundamental power imbalance without counsel, or when an urgent injunction is needed first. In those situations, we move to arbitration or civil litigation — sometimes layered with mediation later in the case once positions are tested.