Restorative Workplace Conversations
A Human-Centered Alternative to Workplace Mediation in Oregon and Washington
Restorative Workplace Conversations are a confidential, facilitated process designed to help employees repair working relationships, rebuild trust, and move forward after conflict, offense, or communication breakdowns. This service supports early intervention and long-term relationship repair, before small issues escalate or after a formal workplace investigation has concluded.
This approach is especially effective when employees are reluctant to participate in mediation or when the goal is understanding, accountability, and repair rather than compromise or settlement.
What Is a Restorative Workplace Conversation?
A Restorative Workplace Conversation is a facilitated dialogue between employees that focuses on:
- Understanding what happened and its impact
- Creating space for listening and acknowledgment
- Supporting accountability without blame
- Identifying what is needed to move forward productively
- Establishing practical tools and agreements for future working relationships
This is not mediation and not a workplace investigation. There is no fact-finding, determination, or assignment of fault. The purpose is to restore professionalism, trust and communication within the guardrails of company policies and expectations.

How This Is Different from Workplace Mediation
Many employers ask whether restorative conversations are a form of mediation. They are not.
Restorative Workplace Conversations differ from mediation in key ways:
- Mediation focuses on reaching agreement or compromise. Restorative conversations focus on understanding, acknowledgment, and repair.
- Mediation often occurs after positions are entrenched. Restorative conversations are effective earlier, when relationships can still be repaired.
- Mediation can feel legalistic or outcome-driven. Restorative conversations are relational and human-centered.
- Employees are often more willing to participate because the process is not about winning, losing, or negotiating outcomes.
For employees who feel defensive, misunderstood, or wary of formal processes, restorative conversations can feel safer and more constructive than mediation.
When to Use Restorative Workplace Conversations
This service is well suited for:
- Situations where one or more employees felt disrespected, dismissed, or offended
- Ongoing tension, repeated miscommunication, or strained working relationships
- Early intervention when both parties have concerns but no formal complaint has been filed
- After a workplace investigation, to support reintegration and relationship repair
- Leadership coaching or team development focused on communication and accountability
Restorative conversations can help organizations address issues proactively, rather than waiting for escalation into formal complaints, investigations, or turnover.
Our Process
Each restorative engagement is tailored to the situation and generally includes three phases.
2
Facilitated Restorative Conversation
Participants engage in a structured, guided conversation focused on what happened, its impact, and what is needed to move forward. The facilitator ensures balanced participation, psychological safety, accountability, and respect through clear ground rules and active facilitation.
3
Follow-Up and Ongoing Support
Participants develop practical agreements for how they will work together going forward. Optional follow-up sessions or coaching may be provided to reinforce commitments and support sustained progress.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. Restorative workplace conversations focus on understanding and repair, not negotiation or compromise.