Practice operations are part of the client experience. Every response, handoff, deadline, and follow-up shapes the reputation attached to the neutral's name.
Independent ADR practices do not need more disconnected tools or a longer task list. They need a clear model for how every matter should move through the practice.
The CRS Practice Operations Framework organizes that work into six connected pillars. Together, they create the responsiveness, organization, communication, and follow-through associated with white-glove service.
Each pillar supports the next. Weakness in one area creates friction elsewhere; alignment across all six creates a practice that feels calm, prepared, and dependable.
The first response, conflict review, and clear next steps that establish confidence from the beginning.
Explore pillarMulti-party logistics handled with persistence, clarity, and respect for every participant's time.
Explore pillarDocuments, deadlines, status, and case details organized so every matter keeps moving.
Explore pillarClear, timely communication that reflects the judgment and professionalism of the practice.
Explore pillarConsistent fee, invoice, payment, and financial workflows that support a healthy practice.
Explore pillarPersistent completion of the work that remains after the session, deadline, or first request.
Explore pillarCRS learns the neutral's preferences, standards, and client expectations, then applies the six pillars in a way that feels native to the practice—not imposed from outside it.
The neutral keeps ownership of the name, relationships, decisions, and revenue. CRS provides the people, process, persistence, and supporting technology that keep the practice moving.
Let’s identify which pillars are already working, where the strain is showing, and what CRS can take responsibility for.