Photo by Joachim Köhler.

In the famous story of Noah’s Ark, Noah questions God about how he will find the animals he has been instructed to put in the ark. God replies, ‘If you build it, they will come’.

The consistent repetition of this quotation throughout history (think of Kevin Costner’s movie Field of Dreams ) has created something of a business mantra about pursuing our dreams, however improbable – the idea that if we build something and provide the right resources people will be drawn to it, see the value of it and be prepared to pay for it.

How this connects to mediation

The mediation world offers the perfect example.

In the early days of mediation, the dream of a mediation-led conflict resolution framework seemed an easy win – create a large pool of mediators and the parties would come, bring their conflicts for us to resolve and reward us generously.

It was a great dream and numbers of dispute resolution bodies quickly emerged whose primary work (and source of income) was training new mediators. It was slow to take off and the parties with their conflicts did not come in great numbers as the biblical phrase had encouraged us to believe they would.

However, many would-be mediators who were keen to reinvent themselves, were still drawn to the promise, so training proceeded apace. The idea of differentiation also began to emerge as training bodies recognised that accreditation was another offering in which they could encourage mediators to invest.

But have they come?

If we fast-forward to today it is obvious that the mantra has not delivered on its promise.

Thousands of new mediators (my estimation – hard data is elusive) continue to be trained by the growing number of mediator training bodies around the world. Training is a cash cow.

Many universities have now entered the space offering academic qualifications as well as training.

So the pool of available mediators keeps growing and growing……

But the empirical and anecdotal evidence tells a disappointing story.

This year the Mediator Standards Board (MSB), the peak standards-setting vehicle in Australia which manages the national accreditation system, received the outcome of a far-reaching Review that it commissioned. This will culminate in enhanced rigour in the accreditation process.

The Review has also provided us with a trove of empirical data about what mediators do in their mediation practice. Significantly this confirmed that ‘for a large proportion of mediators, it is a low-paid, insecure and low-demand industry that is difficult to enter’.

There is evidence everywhere that this is not limited to Australia.

I have regularly had the pleasure of attending meetings of The Mediators New Breakfast Club (MNBC), an informal networking club in London for mediators since 2008. Now available online, the Club’s growing membership continues to report information in line with the Australian research.

Anecdotal exchanges with mediation colleagues around the world tell a similar story.

It is a huge disappointment – not just that mediation has failed to become an occupation with significant career-building opportunities for new entrants but that as Dr Anna Howard’s important research exposes, the promise of mediation we all believed in has not been realised.

So what went wrong?

We have always known that few conflicts actually reach the doors of the court but that does not mean that conflict is in short supply.

Exploring the significant Civil Litigation Research Project Final Report, we get some understanding of the huge number of perceived injurious events happening all around us.

The problem is not an absence of conflicts needing resolution. The problem is that mediators and problems requiring resolution have not readily found each other.

What we failed to do (as a collective)

In the early days we missed a lot of opportunities to band together to:

  • Build widespread community and commercial recognition of what mediation is and how it works. Even today, I am constantly surprised at the ongoing confusion with meditation – Google is constantly confused!
  • Identify the broadest possible sources of potential demand and build effective referral networks
  • Persuade politicians and bureaucrats that mediation is a ‘value-adding’ pursuit, featuring durability and relationship repair rather than a ‘cheap and quick’ fix. This could have meant, for example, that mediation schemes rewarded mediators appropriately – recognising and valuing the long-term benefits rather than offering insultingly low fees over which mediators compete fiercely
  • Recognise that competing on price is always a race to the bottom
  • Build rigorous and effective training programs in business building including the kind of startup hubs from which other entrepreneurs derive significant benefit
  • Create robust, centrally managed and readily accessible mentoring
  • Use social media to build brand recognition, not just for individuals (which many do use effectively) but for the greater good of the collective.

It is not too late but we do need to change a lot of our thinking around supply and demand. Work will not magically come to us.

There are opportunities all around us to lend our skills to those needing support in dealing with the many faces of conflict and there is no shortage of conflict!

 

 

 


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6 comments

    1. Very kind of you John. I think it remains the elephant in the room and it does need us to think collectively about the solution.

  1. Dear Rosemary
    I used to be sceptical about the imbalance between the training market and practice and concerned that there was a false promise at the bottom of it. I have come to change my mind.
    When mediation training does not promise a direct path to a career in mediation, and does not focus solely on deal and settlement mediation as an alternative to litigation, but offers broader life, communication, and professional skills that can be used in many different contexts then the benefits of training mediation are enormous. Many of the people who trained with me and who I have been involved in training since never wanted to become professional mediators, but to use mediation skills for their present careers in social work, planning, project work, management, NGOs, in-house conflict advisory services, and many more. Some trainees made a career in mediation, but they were the exception, while most of the others never intended to, and yet noted significant benefits. Empirical research on two mediation training programmes at two universities in Denmark and Germany has shown this: https://mediationblog.kluwerarbitration.com/2020/07/24/coming-home-a-study-on-the-effects-of-mediation-training-in-two-masters-programmes-in-denmark-and-germany/
    Your point that mediation needs to be an occupation with career-building opportunities remains very valid, of course.
    All the best, Greg

    1. You point is well made and it delights me that many who have no intention of a mediation career see the lifelong benefits of the training. However the empirical evidence (in my jurisdiction at least) indicates that only about 10% of those who train with the intention of a mediation career manage to become full-time mdeiators. So once again we are in complete agreement!

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