The story

Why I mediate

I qualified as a solicitor in 2002. The training was rigorous, the work was interesting, and the adversarial system made a certain kind of sense when you were inside it. Disputes have facts. Facts have legal consequences. Courts determine those consequences. The logic is clean.

What the logic does not account for is what happens to people while the process unfolds. The sleepless nights. The financial pressure. The way a dispute with a former business partner — or a neighbour, or a spouse — begins to consume everything else. The legal system is designed to resolve disputes. It is not designed to minimise the cost of resolving them.

"Most parties in a dispute don't need a judge. They need a conversation — structured, neutral, and focused on where the middle ground actually is."

The MBA at Oxford Brookes sharpened a different lens: the commercial one. Disputes have costs that do not appear on any invoice — lost management time, damaged relationships, missed opportunities, reputational exposure. Litigation often maximises those costs. Mediation does the opposite.

I came to mediation having watched — over many years — the same pattern repeat. Parties who could have settled early, for a fraction of the eventual cost, litigating to the bitter end. Lawyers (including, at times, myself) who were structurally incentivised to keep the matter running. A system that treats settlement as a detour on the way to a hearing, rather than the destination.

Mediate Don't Litigate is my direct response to that pattern. It exists to offer something the system rarely offers: an honest conversation about what resolution actually costs, and a faster, cheaper, less damaging way to reach it.

"My key differentiator is practical: I am a qualified solicitor (non-practising). When the mediation succeeds, I draft the settlement agreement on the day — legally sound, unambiguous, signed before anyone leaves the room."

Most mediators, when agreement is reached, issue a heads of terms document and advise both parties to see a solicitor. That means more cost, more delay, and a window in which the deal can unravel. I close that window. The settlement is the end of the process, not the beginning of another one.

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Career timeline
University of Natal
LLB — Bachelor of Laws
Foundation in law at one of South Africa's leading universities — covering contract, property, constitutional, and commercial law.
2002
Admitted as Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England & Wales
Qualified and admitted in England and Wales. Practised across civil and commercial matters. The qualification remains current — non-practising.
Oxford Brookes University
MBA with Distinction
A Masters in Business Administration that reframed legal disputes through a commercial lens — the real costs of conflict, the economics of resolution, and the strategic value of early settlement.
2024 – present
CMC-Accredited Mediation Training — ProMediate
Civil and commercial mediation training with ProMediate, the Civil Mediation Council-accredited provider. Practical training in facilitative mediation, shuttle diplomacy, and settlement drafting.
2025
Mediate Don't Litigate — Launch
Professional mediation practice launched from Windlesham, Surrey. Serving individuals and businesses across England and Wales — in person and online.
Qualifications
Solicitor · Supreme Court of E&WAdmitted 2002 · Non-practising
MBA with DistinctionOxford Brookes University
LLBUniversity of Natal
CMC-Accredited MediatorProMediate · Civil & Commercial
Practice Details
LocationWindlesham, Surrey
CoverageEngland & Wales
DeliveryIn-person & online
LanguagesEnglish
Services Offered
Civil & commercial mediation
Workplace mediation
Family mediation & MIAM
Settlement agreement drafting
Consent order drafting
Online mediation
How I work

Three principles that
shape every mediation

Honesty before anything else

The scoping call exists because mediation is not always appropriate. If I do not think mediation is the right route for your dispute — I will tell you, and I will tell you why. The conversation is free. The wasted mediation fee is not.

The agreement is the point

A mediation that reaches agreement but cannot produce a document is unfinished. Every session is structured around reaching a conclusion that can be written down, reviewed, and signed before anyone leaves the room. That is the job.

No structural conflict of interest

I am paid a fixed fee, agreed in advance. There is no incentive to extend the process, adjourn to another day, or recommend further services. Resolution is not just the goal — it is what I am paid to deliver.

Related brands

Part of a wider
access to justice mission

Mediate Don't Litigate sits alongside a group of related legal services brands — each distinct, each with its own audience. They share a single conviction: that the legal system should serve people, not profit from their confusion.

Live
Equal Justice
equaljustice.legal

McKenzie Friend service for litigants in person. Practical court support for those navigating civil proceedings without a solicitor — affordable, experienced, plain-speaking.

Building
Be Your Best Lawyer
beyourbestlawyer.com

An education platform for litigants in person. Courses, guides, and tools to help individuals understand the civil process and represent themselves effectively.

Planned
Pienaar Legal
pienaarlegal.com

Fractional General Counsel for SMEs. Commercial legal support without the cost of a full-time in-house lawyer — contracts, disputes, governance, and compliance.

Work with Eugene

The first conversation
is always free.

Thirty minutes to understand the dispute and assess whether mediation is the right route. No obligation. No charge. If it is not right for your situation, you will know before you spend a penny.