Th is article examines the work of facilitators within the garment sector of India to draw insights as to how third parties can help a group build trust and work toward the creation of opportunities for productive dialogue and collaboration in a troubled industry. By analyzing concrete examples from an authentic confl ict of perceptual and stereotype change among dialogue participants, this article contributes to the literature on how confl icting stakeholders within a group form, maintain, and transform perceptions and stereotypes of one another. In an attempt to reveal how facilitated dialogue can be used as a tool to produce such stereotype change, it provides a methodological framework for the systematic observation of perceptual change within dialogue processes that can easily be replicated in other dialogue projects.T his article analyzes the progression of confl ict within a multistakeholder dialogue between stakeholders in the garment sector of India. As a country of 1.2 billion people and growing, India is riddled with confl icts that are inherent in its massive scale of diversity. Th e largest democracy in the world has found itself in a struggle to manage the tensions between the encouragement and control of rapid economic growth and development. Th is research examines the work of facilitators within the garment sector of India in order to draw insights as to how third parties can