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Employee conflicts happen. Two colleagues who used to work well together can’t be in the same room. A manager and team member have completely broken down. Someone’s threatening a grievance. Performance is suffering, absences are climbing, and the atmosphere in your team is awful.
You don’t always need lawyers and tribunal claims. You need workplace mediation. A structured, confidential process where an impartial mediator helps both parties talk it through, understand each other’s perspective, and reach a mutually agreed solution. Quick, cost-effective, and it actually works.
We’re Darwin Gray, employment law solicitors and qualified workplace mediators. We provide workplace mediation services to businesses across Wales and the UK, helping to resolve disputes, rebuild relationships and bring it back to a productive workplace for all parties involved.
Call 02920 829 100 for a free, no-obligation chat about workplace mediation, or get in touch using our Contact Us form.
TCM Accredited Mediator | Excellent rating by Review Solicitors | Ranked in Legal 500 and Chambers & Partners.
Workplace conflict isn’t just uncomfortable. It can be expensive. Every unresolved dispute costs your business in multiple ways:
Direct costs: Management time dealing with complaints, HR investigations, formal grievance procedures, legal fees if it reaches tribunal, settlement payments, recruitment costs if someone leaves.
Hidden costs: Reduced productivity from distracted employees, team morale dropping across the board, increased sickness absence (stress-related), customer service suffering, other employees taking sides, high-performing staff leaving because of the toxic atmosphere.
Long-term damage: Reputation damage if disputes become public, difficulty recruiting into a team with known conflicts, lost institutional knowledge when experienced staff resign, tribunal claims that could have been avoided.
The CIPD estimates workplace conflict costs UK businesses £28.5 billion annually. One in five employees report experiencing conflict at work in the past year. Most of these situations never reach formal grievances. They just fester, causing ongoing damage.
Mediation in the workplace resolves conflict early, before formal processes, legal action, or resignations. It’s faster than grievances, cheaper than tribunals, and preserves working relationships rather than destroying them.
Workplace mediation is a confidential, voluntary process where an impartial third party (the mediator) helps two or more people in dispute to reach a mutually acceptable resolution. It’s not about deciding who’s right or wrong. It’s about a structured approach to a constructive conversation that gets to the heart of the issue and finds a way forward both parties can accept.
How it works:
The mediator meets with each party separately first (pre-mediation), understanding their perspective, what they want to achieve, and whether they’re genuinely willing to try to resolve things. Then both parties come together in a structured session (typically one day) where the mediator’s role is to facilitate dialogue, help the parties involved understand the other’s viewpoint, identify common ground, and works towards a mutually acceptable solution.
What mediation isn’t:
The mediation process is not arbitration (the mediator doesn’t decide the outcome). It’s not a grievance hearing (no-one’s found guilty or innocent). It’s not counselling (though it can be therapeutic). It’s not appropriate for serious disciplinary matters like gross misconduct, violence, or discrimination where formal investigation is required.
When mediation works best:
Mediation can be used before conflicts escalate to formal grievances. When both parties want to continue working together. Where there’s been a relationship breakdown but no serious misconduct. When a manager and team member have communication problems. Between colleagues who used to work well but something’s gone wrong. In team conflicts where multiple people are affected. ACAS guidance on workplace mediation provides detailed information on when mediation is most effective.
Success rates:
Workplace mediation services typically report 80-90%+ success rates when both parties genuinely engage. Even when full agreement isn’t reached, mediation often improves the situation enough that formal processes aren’t needed. Relationships don’t always have to be perfect; they just need to be workable.
The best time for mediation in the workplace is before sides become entrenched. You’ve noticed tension between two employees. Someone’s complained informally to their manager. There’s an atmosphere but no formal grievance yet. This is the perfect time. Mediation prevents escalation, preserves relationships, and costs far less than formal processes.
Too many businesses only consider the mediation process after grievances, investigations, and months of formal procedures. By then, positions are entrenched, relationships are destroyed, and resolution is much harder. Don’t wait. Early mediation saves time, money, and relationships.
Two employees who need to work together can’t be in the same room. They’re emailing when they sit 10 feet apart. Others are getting dragged in, taking sides. Team performance is suffering. Whether the cause is a specific incident or gradual breakdown, mediation can reset the relationship to something workable.
When a manager and direct report have broken down, it affects the whole team. The employee feels targeted, unsupported, or bullied. The manager feels undermined, disrespected, or unable to manage performance. Both perspectives are probably partly valid. Successful mediation helps them understand each other and agree on how to move forward professionally.
If a grievance has been investigated and concluded but both parties remain in the business, mediation can repair the working relationship. The formal process has determined the facts; mediation addresses the aftermath and creates a workable future. Without this step, resentment festers and problems recur.
Grievance dismissed but the employee still feels unheard. Disciplinary completed but resentment remains. The formal process has concluded but the conflict hasn’t actually resolved. Mediation addresses the emotional and relational aspects that formal procedures miss. It’s often the missing piece that allows everyone to move forward.
Contact us and explain the situation. We listen carefully: who’s involved, what the conflict is about, whether both parties are willing to try mediation. We advise honestly whether mediation is appropriate for your situation or whether other approaches (formal investigation, management intervention, HR support) are better suited.
If mediation is appropriate and both parties agree to participate, we contract with the business (confidentiality, fees, logistics) and arrange pre-mediation meetings. These individual meetings (typically 1 hour each, by phone or video call) allow us to hear each person’s perspective privately, explain the process, and assess willingness to engage constructively.
The mediation itself typically lasts a full day (or can be split over two sessions if schedules require). Both parties attend (usually at your workplace or neutral venue). The mediator facilitates structured discussion: joint sessions where both parties speak directly to each other, private sessions = where the mediator meets each party separately, and problem-solving sessions where solutions are explored.
When agreement is reached, we document what’s been agreed (in writing, signed by both parties). This isn’t a legal contract; it’s a mutual commitment to specific actions and behaviours going forward. We also schedule a follow-up session (typically 4-6 weeks later) to check progress, address any issues, and consolidate the resolution.
The best workplace mediation services include aftercare. We provide follow-up support to both parties for an appropriate period post-mediation. Quick check-in calls, advice if issues arise, reinforcement of agreed behaviours. This ongoing support significantly improves long-term success rates.
Timeline: Initial assessment (same week) | Pre-mediation meetings (1-2 weeks) | Mediation day (scheduled at mutual convenience) | Follow-up (4-6 weeks post-mediation) | Total process (3-8 weeks start to finish typically)
We’re employment law solicitors and trained workplace mediators. That combination matters. We understand the legal context (what’s grievance-worthy, what’s potentially discriminatory, where employment law boundaries are), but we approach mediation as mediators, not lawyers. We facilitate resolution, not adjudicate rights.
Many mediators have HR backgrounds but limited legal expertise. Many employment lawyers mediate occasionally but aren’t specialist mediators. We combine both: deep employment law knowledge and dedicated mediation training and practice accredited by recognised professional bodies. The Civil Mediation Council sets standards for professional mediators across the UK.
As mediators, we’re impartial. We don’t represent the business or either party. Our role is to facilitate resolution in a way that’s fair to everyone. Both employees and the business benefit when conflicts resolve constructively.
We understand business realities. You need people back at work, productively, without ongoing conflict. We focus on practical, workable solutions, not perfect relationships. The goal isn’t for everyone to be friends; it’s for everyone to work together professionally. That’s achievable, and that’s what we deliver.
Conflicts escalate quickly. When you decide mediation is the right approach, you need it to happen quickly, not in three months. We respond fast, schedule pre-mediation within days, and conduct mediation within 2-4 weeks of initial contact typically. When situations are urgent, we can move faster.
No hourly billing uncertainty. We quote fixed fees for the entire mediation process (pre-mediation meetings, mediation day, follow-up). You know exactly what you’re spending before we start. Typical costs are a fraction of the cost of an employment tribunal claim or losing a valued employee.
Workplace mediation works well for workplace issues such as: personality clashes between colleagues, manager-employee relationship breakdowns, communication problems, team conflicts, disputes following reorganisations, disagreements about work allocation or responsibilities, conflicts after grievances where both parties remain employed, and post-investigation employment relationship repair. Mediation isn’t appropriate for serious disciplinary matters (gross misconduct, violence, fraud), where there’s clear evidence of discrimination requiring investigation, or where a power imbalance makes voluntary mediation unfair.
Yes. Both parties must agree to participate. Forcing people into mediation doesn’t work. However, businesses can strongly encourage it, explain the benefits, and make clear that refusing mediation without good reason might affect how the situation is viewed later. Most people agree when they understand mediation is confidential, impartial, and focused on finding solutions rather than blame.
The business can proceed with formal processes (grievance, capability, disciplinary as appropriate). Refusal to engage with reasonable conflict resolution can be a factor in later decisions, though not determinative. Sometimes the refusing party changes their mind once they understand mediation better. We can speak to reluctant participants to address concerns and explain the process.
Pre-mediation meetings: 1 hour per party (can be phone/video). Mediation session: typically 6-8 hours (full day), though can be split into two half-days if needed. Follow-up: 1 hour session 4-6 weeks later. Total calendar time from initial contact to mediation day: typically 2-4 weeks depending on schedules.
Yes. Everything said in mediation is confidential and cannot be used in any subsequent formal process. The only exception is if someone discloses serious safeguarding concerns or criminal conduct. The written agreement reached in mediation is shared with the business (both parties agree to this), but the discussions that led to it remain confidential.
Yes. Mediation can run alongside a grievance (suspending the grievance while mediation is attempted), or after a grievance has concluded (to repair the relationship). Many businesses now include mediation as a formal step in their grievance procedures. ACAS guidance encourages mediation at any stage of workplace disputes, and GOV.UK provides guidance for employers on using mediation to solve workplace disputes as an alternative to formal processes.
Industry-wide, workplace mediation services report 75-85% full resolution rates when both parties engage genuinely. Even when full agreement isn’t reached, mediation often improves the situation sufficiently that formal processes aren’t needed. Success depends heavily on willingness to engage.
Usually yes, for at least part of the mediation. Face-to-face dialogue is powerful. However, we use “shuttle mediation” (separate rooms, mediator moving between) when: parties are too distressed to be together initially, there’s a significant power imbalance, or one party requests it. We can also conduct mediation remotely (video call) when geography or Covid concerns require it. Online mediation works well.
Skilled mediators manage power imbalances by: ensuring both parties have equal speaking time, addressing any intimidating behaviour immediately, using separate sessions where needed, and focusing on future working relationship rather than past blame. Manager-employee mediation works when both genuinely want to find a way forward. If the power dynamic is too severe, mediation may not be appropriate.
It depends. If the allegation is serious and requires formal investigation to establish facts (sexual harassment, physical intimidation, serious discrimination), investigate first. Mediation can then address the relationship after investigation concludes. For lower-level interpersonal conflicts where “bullying” is alleged but it’s really communication style or management approach issues, mediation can be very effective at addressing the real problem.
The mediation agreement isn’t legally binding. It’s a mutual commitment. If someone breaches it, the business can address that through normal management processes. However, mediation agreements have high compliance rates because people commit to outcomes they’ve created themselves (ownership effect). Follow-up sessions catch drift early before agreements collapse completely.
You can, if you have trained internal mediators. However, external mediators often achieve better results in serious conflicts because: they’re seen as truly impartial (no organisational loyalty), parties speak more freely to someone outside the business, external mediators bring fresh perspective, and they’re not constrained by organisational politics.
Based in Cardiff and Bangor, we provide mediation in the workplace services throughout Wales and across the UK. We travel to your premises or arrange neutral venues as appropriate. We also conduct remote mediations via secure video conferencing.
Cardiff: Serving South Wales including Swansea, Newport, Bridgend, the Valleys, and surrounding areas.
Bangor: Serving North Wales including Wrexham, Anglesey, Flintshire, and Gwynedd.
Don’t let conflicts fester. Early mediation resolves issues before they become formal grievances, tribunal claims, or resignations. Quick, confidential, effective.
Call 02920 829 100 for a free, no-obligation discussion about workplace mediation. Email hello@darwingray.com or get in touch using our Contact Us form.