Examples
Realistic situations. Real mediation challenges.
These fictional but grounded examples show how Mediator.ai resolves tough mediations.
Selling the shop to the guy who's been running it
Joe wants to sell the auto body shop he's run for thirty years to Marcus, his head mechanic of twelve. The price gap is big, the non-compete question is worse, and the four commercial customers who carry 40% of revenue are really Joe's friends, not the shop's.
Caring for Mom after the fall
Rachel lives 20 minutes from Mom and has quietly been the default caregiver for three years. Thomas lives in Boston and sends money. After Mom's fall, the neurologist is clear: she can't live alone. The siblings have 30 days to decide what happens next, and Rachel has privately decided she's done being the only one who shows up.
Buying a house together
Ben and Priya have been together four years and are closing on a house in six weeks. Ben is putting down 70% of the down payment; Priya is putting in every dollar she has. After closing, Ben will still have $200,000. Priya will have $2,000. Neither has been willing to write anything down, because it sounds like one of them is hedging against the other.
A freelance project that kept growing
Nina bid $12,000 for a fixed-fee website: 8 pages, 80 hours. She's now 142 hours in on a 14-page site, two weeks from launch, and her client Derek just approved another new section with the message: 'We can figure out the billing later, let's just ship.' She's close to walking. He's out of political capital with his CFO. Neither has said so out loud.
Disclaimer: Mediator.ai uses among the most capable AI models currently available, but AI can still produce inaccurate information. This platform does not provide legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney before entering any binding agreement.