From Forbes.com
This article is by Richard Shore, an attorney who focuses on the resolution of complex, multiparty disputes through alternative dispute resolution and litigation. He is a founding partner of Gilbert LLP.
If your business finds itself engaged in litigation, chances are that the dispute will be resolved in a conference room rather than a courtroom. Most lawsuits settle before judgment, and increasingly litigants are turning to mediation—negotiation assisted by a third-party facilitator —to resolve their disputes. They hope mediation will be faster and cheaper than litigation and yield a better result.
But the potential benefits of such alternative dispute resolution are often undermined by the participants entering the process with the same litigation-oriented, adversarial mindset they meant to leave behind. Here are four counterintuitive strategies that harness the strengths of mediation rather than treating it as litigation light. They may not be traditional, but properly employed, they work.
1. Let the other side pick the mediator.
Mediation should be speedy, economical, and conciliatory. But parties often kick things off with a mediator-selection process that is complex, expensive, time consuming, and adversarial. Avoid this opening skirmish by letting the other side pick the mediator. This engenders cooperation, generates good will, speeds up the process, holds down costs, and introduces you to new mediators you might actually like.
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I'm also not convinced if "Deal with hard issues last" is always the best approach.
On one hand I can see how dealing with less difficult matters first can create a good/better working environment, break down communicaton barriers and help establish trust.
On the other hand not addressing a hard issue can create the proverbial elephant in the room. If a core issue is not addressed appropriately at the outset it might create emotional barrieres that prevents disputants from working effectively. It could result in an "issue highjack"...
Maybe it's important to note that Shore distinguishes between "hard" issues and "key" issues. He does recommend to address key issues first. I'm not sure what he would suggest if the key issue was a hard one?
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