A partner dispute rarely starts with a "break-up." It begins with friction: a delayed decision, a slow validation process, a doubt about loyalty, or strategic misalignment. Then the tone shifts, exchanges harden, and the case becomes a battle of positions.
The danger: believing this is a "relationship" issue. In reality, it is a matter of governance, control, and trajectory. The longer you wait, the fewer options remain.
The Real Risk: Deadlock (Not the Dispute Itself)
A partner conflict rarely costs only emotions. It costs decisions:
- delayed strategic moves (investments, recruitment, divestitures),
- loss of credibility with teams, clients, and banks,
- information leaks and competing internal narratives,
- reflexive litigation, which freezes operations and erodes value.
When deadlock sets in, the company pays twice: it loses precious time, then it loses its ability to decide quickly when urgency strikes.
What Is Truly at Play
In partner disputes, visible arguments often mask the real stakes:
- Decision-making authority (and its basis),
- Information control (access to data, financial reporting, narrative),
- Risk exposure (financial, reputational, and liability),
- Exit liquidity (timing and valuation),
- Blocking power (bylaws, SHA, quorum, veto rights).
If these elements are not clearly addressed, a "moral" conflict quickly turns into a "structural" one. Structural conflicts are not solved by good intentions; they are solved by strategy.
Objective: Securing an Outcome, Not Just "Winning"
In these cases, "winning" can be a toxic victory: you might gain a point but damage the governance, the relationship, or the asset value. Our approach targets a defensible outcome:
- continuing together under a clarified framework (mandates, validation, ground rules),
- restructuring the shareholding (rebalancing, new clauses, revised governance),
- preparing a clean exit (pricing, timeline, conditions, non-disparagement),
- avoiding the escalation that destroys value (litigation, PR crisis, client churn).
Our Methodology: Frame, Test, Decide
We intervene to put the case back on a decisive path. Specifically:
- Leverage Mapping: identifying positions, strengths, bottlenecks, and blind spots.
- Constraint Clarification: bylaws, SHA, debt covenants, commitments, dependencies.
- Scenario Modeling: stay / exit / arbitrate / freeze — and the true cost of each option.
- Sequencing: determining the order of topics, who to talk to, and under what conditions.
- Negotiation: securing clauses, avoiding irreversible concessions, and regaining momentum.
We do not replace your legal counsel. We operate where the case is won or lost: preparation, framing, posture, and negotiation discipline.
In Geneva: Governance, Confidentiality, and Risk Sensitivity
In Geneva, many partner disputes play out under a major constraint: confidentiality. When a company depends on a tight-knit ecosystem (banks, advisors, local partners, key clients), the risk isn't just financial or legal. It is reputational and relational.
In this context, visible escalation can be costly: loss of trust, frozen credit lines, or hardening of positions. The objective is to move past the "ego war" and return to a simple question: which outcome protects the asset?
The Trap: Confusing Procedure with Strategy
In partner disputes, the temptation is to "secure" by launching technical steps (audits, formal notices, litigation). While sometimes necessary, without a strategy, these actions often only serve to freeze positions.
Before opening a sequence that locks you in, you must clarify:
- what each party truly wants (control, exit, protection, recognition),
- what is negotiable (price, timeline, governance) and what is not (security, continuity),
- "points of no return" (communication to teams, clients, or financial partners),
- the best window to decide (before a cash flow crisis, before external trust breaks).
Red Flags: When to Act Immediately
If you recognize any of these signals, the situation is already locking up:
- disagreements have turned into systematic vetoes,
- partners start communicating only through intermediaries,
- internal teams are being forced to take sides,
- discussions revolve around past grievances instead of future options,
- litigation threats have become a standard negotiating tool.
The earlier the framework is set, the more options remain open. The later it is, the more brutal the exit becomes.
Further Reading
Facing a Partner Dispute? Avoid Decision-by-Attrition
In partner conflicts, the worst outcome is often the one that "just happens": deadlock, wear and tear, litigation, followed by a forced settlement. If a decision must be made, it should be made methodically.
👉 Contact us to frame the case, test your options, and secure a defensible outcome.