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Business Conflict Strategy: Choosing Resolution Over Litigation with Sam Imperati

As seen in B2B Vault

AI Overview 

The B2B Vault Podcast, featuring resolution strategist Sam Imperati, tackles the necessity of leaders moving past panic to resolve business conflicts effectively. Imperati’s core teaching is that leaders must choose Resolution Over Litigation, focusing on “building a relationship and fixing the problem” rather than assigning blame. The process involves his ICM Method, which shifts adversarial Positions to collaborative Interests, and the use of strategic alternatives like BATNA/WATNA/MILANTA. By using language shifts, codifying partnership expectations, and bringing in a neutral mediator early, businesses can create durable, win-win agreements and avoid the high costs and loss of opportunity associated with court battles.

 

Business Conflict Strategy: Choosing Resolution Over Litigation with Sam Imperati

 

Sponsored by Nationwide Payment Systems

The B2B Vault: The Biz-to-Biz Podcast, sponsored by Nationwide Payment Systems and powered by our ClickBillR Smart Invoicing tool, tackles one of the toughest realities in business: conflict. Host Allen Kopelman sits down with seasoned trial lawyer, judge, and resolution strategist Sam Imperati to unpack how leaders can move past panic, avoid costly lawsuits, and craft durable agreements that protect Relationships and results. Ultimately, the key to success is choosing Resolution Over Litigation.

As Sam Imperati notes: “You can build a relationship and fix the problem—or build a case and fix blame. Your choice determines your outcome.”

sponsored by

Business Conflict Strategy: Choosing Resolution Over Litigation With Sam Imperati &Raquo; B2B 300X89 1

Why Conflicts Spiral (and How to Stop the Spin)

 

When disputes hit, founders and partners often react poorly. Specifically, they: panic and oscillate between logic and emotion, regress to high-school conflict habits (like blame or avoidance), and let misdemeanors become felonies (small frictions escalate).

Crucially, first aid for leaders involves pausing, taking a breath, and deciding your true north: Are you here to build the relationship and fix the problem—or build the case and fix blame?


 

The Four-Step Resolution Framework (ICM Method)

 

Imperati’s process turns adversarial debates into collaborative design by shifting focus away from surface-level demands:

  1. Unpack Positions → Interests:

    Go “below the waterline” to uncover the real needs and constraints on both sides. For instance, a position might be “I need $10,000,” but the interest is “I need working capital to make payroll.”

  2. Generate OPTIONS:

    Only proposals that include others’ needs succeed. Therefore, if your idea serves only you, it is not a genuine option.

  3. Co-Create the Path to “Yes”:

    Sequence steps, owners, and timelines that satisfy both sets of needs in a functional way.

  4. Document a Durable Resolution:

    Aim for a resolution (sustainable, fair, relationship-preserving)—not merely a “mutual misery” settlement.


 

Two Language Shifts That Calm the Room (Try These Tomorrow)

 

These simple reframes shift the conversation from blame to collaborative design:

  1. Change the Verb Tense:

    Move the dialogue From past (“You promised…”) To present (“Here we are…”) To future (“What’s next?”).

  2. Ask the Umbrella Question:

    “How can we address your needs while also addressing my needs—so we can achieve our shared goal?”


 

BATNA, WATNA, and “MILANTA”: A Clear-Eyed View of Alternatives

 

Litigation is pricey, slow, and highly distracting—even “winners” lose time and opportunity. As a result, smart leaders model all three alternatives before choosing a path:

  • BATNA

    — Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement

  • WATNA

    — Worst Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement

  • MILANTA

    — Most Likely Alternative (Sam’s reality check: includes outcomes, costs, and probabilities)


 

Why Partnerships Break (and How to Fortify Yours)

 

High-performing teams align on certain critical factors:

  • Mutually agreed goals and common values.

  • Clearly defined expectations (who/what/when/where/why/how).

  • Trust and respect are baked into the operating system.

Ultimately, vague promises lead to future friction. Therefore, leaders must write expectations down and review them often.


 

Three Moves When Conflict Hits

 

  1. Stop the Spin:

    Advise yourself like you would a wise friend to regain perspective.

  2. Check Your Cognitive Biases:

    Be aware that biases like confirmation and availability can skew your judgment.

  3. Explore, Don’t Debate:

    Trade positions for interests, and focus on designing options that serve both sides.


 

Mediation, Facilitation, or Coaching — What’s Right When?

 

The appropriate intervention depends on the situation:

  • Facilitation:

    Used for structured decision-making (typically not confidential).

  • Mediation:

    A confidential, candid problem-solving process with a neutral third party.

  • Conflict Coaching:

    One-sided support to prep a party to perform better in negotiations.

Furthermore, most matters resolve efficiently over Zoom, although highly emotional cases may benefit from in-person work.


 

Sponsored Resource: Clean Invoicing = Fewer Conflicts

 

Cash-flow friction fuels disputes. Conveniently, ClickBillR (inside NPS1) automates smart invoicing, recurring billing, and payment links, thereby shrinking AR days and reducing “collections drama” that can lead to conflicts.

Book a demo: calendly.com/allen-nps

Talk with Allen: calendly.com/allen-nps


 

Key Takeaways

 

  • Choose resolution over “mutual-misery settlement.”

  • Use present/future tense and the umbrella question to reframe the debate.

  • Pressure-test your BATNA/WATNA/MILANTA before considering litigation.

  • Codify expectations in partnerships and review them on a regular cadence.

  • Bring in a neutral early—it’s cheaper than court and better for relationships.

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FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions

When should I bring in a mediator?

As soon as you see patterns of escalation, avoidance, or stalled decisions — before lawyers and lawsuits.

What’s the difference between a settlement and a resolution?

A settlement ends the fight; a resolution satisfies core needs, preserves relationships, and prevents relapses.

What if the other side refuses to meet?

Normalize the hesitation, invite exploration (not agreement), and offer agenda + guardrails. Neutral can help unlock the first meeting.


What is cited as the number-one reason why small businesses fail?

      The number-one reason Small Businesses fail is poor cash flow.


       

      How do we avoid “he-said/she-said” loops?

          Shift to present/future language and co-draft a written options list tied to both parties’ needs. 


           

          Does mediation work if there’s a big power imbalance?

              Yes — a skilled neutral equalizes airtime, reframes, and designs interest-based trades that feel fair. 


               

              How do we prepare for a resolution session?

                  List your interests, constraints, and “must-haves;” estimate BATNA/WATNA/MILANTA; bring data, not diatribes. 


                   

                  Is Zoom mediation as good as in-person?

                      For most business disputes, yes. Highly emotional/complex matters may benefit from in-person work.


                       

                      How do we make agreements stick?

                          Translate options into a crisp implementation plan: owners, timelines, milestones, audit/retros cadence. 


                           

                          When is litigation the right path?

                              When there’s bad-faith behavior, urgent injunctions needed, or no viable overlap in interests. Even then, model costs and probabilities first.


                               

                              The post Business Conflict Strategy: Choosing Resolution Over Litigation with Sam Imperati appeared first on Customized Payment Processing Solutions.

                              ALLEN KOPELMAN CEO, Nationwide Payment Systems | Host of the B2B Vault: The Biz to Biz Podcast

                              Allen Co-Founded Nationwide Payment Systems Inc. in 2001, with the plan to sell credit card processing services and equipment to merchants in the South Florida area and provide concierge style service for each client. Quickly the company grew to 1000 plus clients and we were had clients all over the United States.
                              The entrepreneurial bug started early in Allen’s life as comes from a family of business owners and learn about business from early age behind the cash registers at his father’s clothing stores in Miami. Later going to Culinary School in Atlanta and being a Chef, then Executive Chef for Metro Hotels in Dallas, Texas running food and beverage operations in Hotels. In 1992 a move back to Florida and opening a restaurant, catering company and consulting group.
                              After gaining a couple of years of experience selling merchant services, Allen Co-Founded Nationwide Payment Systems with David Burney. Together the company started and quickly grew, products were added, processing banks and the company became laser focused on technology that would help merchants. Along with that came a focus on hard to place businesses that many banks did not want to work with.

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