Three certificates, four institutions, one pathway. Anyone searching for a mediation training quickly runs into terms like “IMI Qualified Mediator”, “SIMI Accredited Mediator” or “University Certified Mediator” – and wonders: what does that actually mean for me?
This post clears things up.
Few topics generate as many questions among aspiring mediators as certification. That’s understandable: unlike classic professional qualifications, mediation has no single, globally valid diploma. Instead, you encounter a landscape of training providers, accreditation bodies and national regulations that is hard to read at first glance.
The good news: behind the apparent tangle lies a clear logic. Once you understand who certifies what, and why, you can decide very deliberately how far your own pathway should go. That’s exactly what this post is about.
The most important question: who issues the certificate?
Here’s the key to cutting through the confusion. Terms like “certified”, “accredited” and “qualified” are used differently by different organisations – and even the same word can mean different things from one country to the next. So rather than getting lost in labels, ask the one question that actually tells you something: who issues the credential? On that measure, mediation credentials fall into two groups:
Issued by the training provider itself
Your IMC certificate confirms that you completed the IMC course – it comes from the organisation that trained you.
Issued or recognised by an independent third party
A body that did not train you and has no stake in your enrolment. On the IMC pathway, that means the International Mediation Institute (IMI) and the Singapore International Mediation Institute (SIMI), which recognise your competence against international standards, and the International School of Management (ISM), an independent university that issues an academic certificate.
Why does this distinction matter more than the wording on the certificate? A credential from an independent body carries weight precisely because that body has nothing to gain from your enrolment: it is external assurance rather than self-certification – which is exactly why international clients and courts tend to look for it. The training provider’s own certificate is the essential foundation you build on; the independent credentials are what make your qualification travel beyond the room you trained in.
Who stands behind your certificate? The four institutions
Every credential you can earn through the IMC carries the signature of one of four institutions. It’s worth knowing the role each one plays:
| Institution | Role | What it signs off on |
|---|---|---|
| International Mediation Campus (IMC) | Training provider & issuer | Designs the curriculum, delivers the live online training and certifies completion. |
| International Mediation Institute (IMI) | Independent accreditor | Global standards body for mediator competence, with members across 27+ countries. |
| Singapore International Mediation Institute (SIMI) | Regional accreditor | Asia-Pacific accreditation body recognising IMC training programmes; partnered with the IMI, with cross-recognition between SIMI- and IMI-certified mediators. |
| International School of Management (ISM) | University partner & issuer | German private business school offering bachelor’s and master’s programmes for students in Germany and beyond; issues the academic certificate via self-study. |
In short: the IMC trains you, IMI and SIMI vouch for the quality, and the ISM adds academic weight. The involvement of four institutions isn’t an end in itself – it ensures your qualification holds up in different contexts: within the international mediation community, in commercial and cross-border work, and in academic and corporate settings.
The pathway in three steps
It all begins with the Professional Mediation Course: 40 hours of live online training with international trainers and peers. Complete the course, and you are a certified and accredited IMC Professional Mediator, ready to mediate general disputes.
This is the foundation – and it’s required. To receive the certificate, you need to attend at least 80% of the live sessions. If you miss individual sessions, you can make up the missing units in the next course cohort.
This is where the effort-to-benefit ratio really pays off. International accreditation requires just a roughly one-hour mediation simulation at your workplace plus a written reflection. The IMC handles the rest: it submits your documents to IMI and facilitates accreditation through SIMI.
The benefit: you can then list yourself publicly on the international IMI register – a strong signal of credibility, especially in commercial and cross-border contexts. And because SIMI is partnered with the IMI and the two operate a cross-recognition scheme, a credential from one institution can open the door to recognition by the other, extending your standing across the Asia-Pacific region as well. For purely local work this step isn’t essential, but for international work it is strongly recommended.
The pathway concludes with a third certificate – a university diploma from the International School of Management (ISM), a German private business school that offers bachelor’s and master’s programmes to students in Germany and beyond. For this you complete 60 hours of online self-study at your own pace. The nice part: this step is included at no extra cost. Because it carries the name of an established university, it adds academic weight to your CV and professional profile, particularly in Germany and the EU.
At a glance: the three credentials compared
The IMC certificate is the foundation. The two further steps are optional but strongly recommended. Use this overview to plan how far you want to go:
| Compare | IMC Certificate Step 1 · Foundation — Issued by IMC |
IMI · SIMI Step 2 · Accreditation — by IMI & SIMI |
ISM Certificate Step 3 · University — Issued by ISM |
|---|---|---|---|
| Time investment | 40 hours live online | ~1 hour simulation + reflection | 60 hours online self-study |
| Format | Live, with international trainers and peers | On-site simulation in your workplace + written reflection | Self-paced via the Absorb platform |
| Cost | Included in your course fee | No additional fee – IMC facilitates submission | Included – no extra cost |
| What you can do with it | Practise mediation in general disputes as an IMC certified professional | List publicly on IMI’s international register; signal credibility globally | Add a university-issued credential to your CV and profile |
| Recognition | International training community | Worldwide, especially commercial and cross-border contexts | Academic and corporate, especially in Germany and the EU |
| When you earn it | Once attendance for the 40-hour course is confirmed | After IMC facilitates your submission to IMI and SIMI | On completion of all 60 self-study hours |
| Required to practise? | Yes – this is the foundation | No, but strongly recommended for international work | No, but adds academic weight to your profile |
The most common questions – answered briefly
What certificate will I receive after the training?
After 40 hours of live online training, you first receive the IMC certificate. After a one-hour on-site simulation and a written reflection, you become eligible to register with IMI and SIMI. After an additional 60 hours of self-study, the ISM university certificate is added. Regardless of formal titles, the training provides in-depth knowledge of mediation and conflict resolution that you can apply both professionally and privately.
Can I already practise with the IMC certificate alone?
Yes – the IMC certificate is the foundation and enables you to mediate general disputes. For specialised fields such as family or commercial mediation, additional national or sector-specific qualifications are typically required.
What about national recognition?
This is the point to clarify individually: the formal recognition of mediation training is regulated differently in every country. Always check the exact requirements with the relevant authorities where you live. The academic and international qualifications from the IMC pathway stand independently of this.
What does IMI certification actually mean?
The training is approved by the IMI. On successful completion, you are an IMC-certified international mediator and eligible to become IMI qualified. You are then internationally recognised, quality-proved and part of an international network – with a listing on the IMC and IMI homepages.
What are the requirements to take part?
A good level of English, plus an academic education or relevant professional experience.
Does mediation even work online – and is it recognised?
In the IMC’s experience, the live online training provides all the skills you need to conduct a mediation; in online simulations, body language and non-verbal cues can still be read. Online and offline settings aren’t identical – which is why participants are encouraged to meet local peers for in-person simulations as well. Online mediation is also a fast-growing global field in which the course builds specialist expertise.
What happens if I miss a live session?
For the IMC certificate, you need to complete 80% of the live sessions. Missing units can be made up in the next course.
Conclusion: how far do you want to go?
Certification in mediation looks more complicated than it is. At its core, it’s a deliberate decision in three steps: the IMC certificate lays the foundation, IMI/SIMI accreditation opens the international stage, and the ISM certificate adds the academic finishing touch. Step one is required; steps two and three are optional – but designed so that the additional effort is small and the benefit is large.
So the most honest answer to “Which certificate do I need?” is: it depends on where you want to go. If you mediate locally, the foundation sets you up well. If you want to work internationally, commercially or across borders, you’ll feel the benefit of the full pathway.
Still have questions?
Get in touch – we’ll help you find the right pathway and the right course format.
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