The Tahkeem enterprise tier is designed for government bodies, regulatory authorities, and large arbitration centers operating at high caseload volumes — with advanced SLA commitments, dedicated infrastructure, and government system integration.
An enterprise arbitration system is a deployment configuration designed for government bodies, regulatory authorities, and large institutional arbitration centers operating at high caseload volumes or requiring strict data sovereignty. Unlike standard shared-environment deployments, enterprise configurations feature dedicated infrastructure (private cloud or on-premise), contractual SLA commitments with defined uptime guarantees, API integration with government systems, and multi-entity support enabling multiple arbitration centers to operate under a single governance umbrella. The Tahkeem enterprise tier is purpose-built for organizations where scale, compliance, and integration requirements place them beyond the scope of standard commercial deployments.
Designed for bodies that cannot accept compromises on scale, security, or SLA
Private cloud or on-premise deployment with dedicated compute resources — no resource contention, no shared environment risk.
API connectivity with government portals, national identification systems, payment gateways, and regulatory reporting platforms.
Architecture built for thousands of concurrent cases. Auto-scaling on demand — with predictable costs and zero performance degradation.
Defined uptime guarantees, response time commitments, and escalation protocols — all contractually binding, not policy-based promises.
Deploy multiple isolated arbitration center environments under one governance umbrella — each with its own brand, workflows, and data boundary.
A named Tahkeem technical and account management team for enterprise clients — direct escalation channel, proactive monitoring, quarterly reviews.
High operational volume, complex integrations, or strict data sovereignty requirements
An enterprise arbitration system is a deployment configuration designed for government bodies, regulatory authorities, and large institutional centers at high caseload volumes. It features dedicated infrastructure (private cloud or on-premise), contractual SLA commitments, government system integration, and multi-entity support — as opposed to shared-environment standard deployments.
The enterprise tier is designed for: government bodies running ministry-level arbitration programs; regulatory dispute resolution authorities; national arbitration commissions; large institutional centers processing 500+ cases annually; multi-branch arbitration networks; and centers with strict data sovereignty requirements or complex government system integrations that exceed standard platform capabilities.
Enterprise clients receive contractually binding SLA commitments covering defined uptime guarantees, incident response time commitments, and escalation protocols with defined remedies — not policy-based promises. A dedicated Tahkeem account management and technical team is assigned to each enterprise client, with direct escalation channels and quarterly performance reviews.
Yes. The enterprise tier supports multi-entity deployment: multiple isolated arbitration center environments operating under one governance umbrella, each with its own brand, workflows, arbitrator registry, and data boundary. This is particularly suited for regulatory bodies overseeing multiple centers or organizations running sector-specific arbitration programs across different jurisdictions.
Yes. Enterprise deployments include API connectivity with government portals, national identification and verification systems, government payment gateways, and regulatory reporting platforms. The specific integration scope — including which systems, authentication methods, and data flows — is defined during the enterprise requirements engagement before any proposal is made.
Book a meeting directly with the Tahkeem enterprise team. We will work through your organization's scale, integration requirements, data sovereignty constraints, and SLA expectations — before any proposal is made.