Are we really supporting neurodivergence in the workplace?

It is thought that around one in seven of the UK population are neurodivergent with conditions such as ADHD, Autism, Aspergers, Dyslexia, Dyspraxia or Dyscalculia. These conditions share some common features in the way people learn and process information and increasingly, it has been shown that these characteristics bring a variety of strengths to the workplace.

Research from Birkbeck College however has found that neurodivergent employees face significant barriers when disclosing their neurodivergence to their employer and further research from O2 revealed that 81% of neurodivergent employees felt their employer could provide them with more support. At the same time, employers said they experienced barriers in making adjustments for neurodivergent employees with 69% of those surveyed saying that a lack of disclosure is an issue. So, employees don’t feel safe enough to disclose, but without them stating their needs, employers don’t know how to support them.

The key is greater awareness from both sides. Aspects of good neurodivergent support and management are applicable to all employees - clear instructions, ensuring staff are not overloaded and providing a working environment that is free of distractions - but specific knowledge about neurodivergence should be shared. Only then will employers and employees be able to understand, be able to accommodate their co-workers and provide support if and where it’s needed. Strengths-based management that focuses on enabling people to do what they can and love to do (whilst avoiding the things they can’t) can align these abilities to what the organisation is trying to achieve and get the best from all employees.

There are great benefits for organisations having employees who think differently. Creativity, lateral thinking, a different perspective and the development of highly specialised skills enables companies to be more innovative, spot new solutions and make better decisions. Ultimately though, neurodivergence in the workplace is about helping everyone thrive and seeing everyone as talent - no matter how their brain works.