INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
A former judge and family law educator has teamed up with tech entrepreneurs to launch an app they hope will help divorced parents better
manage their co-parenting disputes, communications, shared calendar and other decisions within a single platform
The app, called coParenter, aims to be more comprehensive than its competitors, while also leveraging a combination of AI technology and
on-demand human interaction to help co-parents navigate high-conflict situations.The idea for coParenter emerged from co-founder Hon
Ellsworth’s personal experience and entrepreneur Jonathan Verk, who had been through a divorce himself.Ellsworth had been a presiding
judge of the Superior Court in Riverside County, California for 20 years and a family law educator for 10
During this time, she saw firsthand how families were destroyed by today’s legal system.“I witnessed countless families torn apart as
they slogged through the family law system
I saw how families would battle over the simplest of disagreements like where their child will go to school, what doctor they should see and
what their diet should be — all matters that belong at home, not in a courtroom,” she says.Ellsworth also notes that 80 percent of the
disagreements presented in the courtroom didn’t even require legal intervention — but most of the cases she presided over involved
parents asking the judge to make the co-parenting decision.As she came to the end of her career, she began to realize the legal system just
wasn’t built for these sorts of situations.She then met Jonathan Verk, previously EVP Strategic Partnerships at Shazam and now coParenter
Verk had just divorced and had an idea about how technology could help make the co-parenting process easier
He already had on board his longtime friend and serial entrepreneur Eric Weiss, now COO, to help build the system
But he needed someone with legal expertise.That’s how coParenter was born.The app, also built by CTO Niels Hansen, today exists alongside
a whole host of other tools built for different aspects of the co-parenting process.That includes those apps designed to document
communication, like OurFamilyWizard, Talking Parents, AppClose and Divvito Messenger; those for sharing calendars, like Custody Connection,
Custody X Exchange and Alimentor; and even those that offer a combination of features like WeParent, 2houses, SmartCoparent and Fayr, among
others.But the team at coParenter argues that their app covers all aspects of co-parenting, including communication, documentation, calendar
and schedule sharing, location-based tools for pickup and drop-off logging, expense tracking and reimbursements, schedule change requests,
tools for making decisions on day-to-day parenting choices like haircuts, diet, allowance, use of media, etc
and more.Notably, coParenter also offers a “solo mode” — meaning you can use the app even if the other co-parent refuses to do the
This is a key feature that many rival apps lack.However, the biggest differentiator is how coParenter puts a mediator of sorts in your
pocket.The app begins by using AI, machine learning and sentiment analysis technology to keep conversations civil
The tech will jump in to flag curse words, inflammatory phrases and offensive names to keep a heated conversation from escalating — much
like a human mediator would do when trying to calm two warring parties.When conversations take a bad turn, the app will pop up a warning
message that asks the parent if they’re sure they want to use that term, allowing them time to pause and think
(If only social media platforms had built features like this!) When parents need more assistance, they can opt to use the app instead of
turning to lawyers.The company offers on-demand access to professionals as both monthly ($12.99/mo – 20 credits, or enough for two
mediations) or yearly ($119.99/year – 240 credits) subscriptions
Both parents can subscribe for $199.99/year, each receiving 240 credits.“Comparatively, an average hour with a lawyer costs between $250
and upwards of $500, just to file a single motion,” Ellsworth says.These professionals are not mediators, but are licensed in their
respective fields — typically family law attorneys, therapists, social workers or other retired bench officers with strong conflict
Ellsworth oversees the professionals to ensure they have the proper guidance.All communication between the parent and the professional is
considered confidential and not subject to admission as evidence, as the goal is to stay out of the courts
However, all the history and documentation elsewhere in the app can be used in court, if the parents do end up there.The app has been in
beta for nearly a year, and officially launched this January
To date, coParenter claims it has already helped to resolve more than 4,000 disputes and more than 2,000 co-parents have used it for
Indeed, 81 percent of the disputing parents resolved all their issues in the app, without needing a professional mediator or legal
professional, the company says.CoParenter is available on both iOS and Android.