Understanding Neurodiversity at Work: A Practical Starting Point for Leaders

Posted in Neurodiversity at Work
  January 8, 2026 by Jennifer Prendergast

Three months ago, I received an official diagnosis of ADHD at 45.

It didn’t change who I am. But it did change how much sense my work, learning, and career history finally made.

Like many adults diagnosed later in life, the signs had been there for years. Friends had gently clocked it long before I had. What felt new wasn’t the diagnosis itself, but the lens it offered. Suddenly, patterns I’d spent decades questioning had a context.

This wasn’t a personal failure.
It was a mismatch between how my nervous system works and how work is often designed.

When a new lens brings clarity

Looking back through this lens, so many long-standing questions clicked into place.

Why certain kinds of work felt harder than they seemed to be for others.
Why traditional advancement paths often felt out of reach.
Why focus, pacing, and timing never quite aligned with workplace norms.

These experiences aren’t unique to ADHD. They show up across many forms of neurodivergence. And they point to something important we don’t talk about enough at work.

Most workplaces still assume there’s one “right” way to think, focus, communicate, prioritize, and perform. When someone doesn’t fit that template, the issue is often framed as individual deficiency rather than systemic design.

Why neurodiversity education matters

Neurodiversity isn’t rare. It’s part of the natural variation of human nervous systems.

What is rare is workplaces that understand how different nervous systems actually experience work, expectations, feedback, and structure.

This gap is where misunderstanding, burnout, and exclusion quietly take root. Not because people don’t care, but because they don’t have the information or language to do things differently.

We don’t need perfect understanding to start.
We need grounded information and the openness to let it change how we work.

That belief sits at the center of everything we do at The Expert Talk.

A grounded place to begin

We recently completed a new course, Neurodiversity 101, designed as a practical, compassionate starting point for leaders, teams, and organizations.

This course doesn’t aim to turn people into experts overnight. Instead, it offers a clear foundation for understanding:

  • What neurodiversity really means beyond labels and stereotypes
  • How common workplace norms can unintentionally exclude or exhaust people
  • Why “treating everyone the same” often misses the mark
  • How nervous system differences show up in communication, focus, feedback, and capacity
  • What small, realistic shifts can make work feel more accessible for more people

It’s designed to reduce overwhelm, avoid performative language, and support real-world application.

The impact reaches further than we think

One course participant shared this after completing the program:

“I have a neurodivergent child and this course gives me hope for when he joins the workforce. Neurodiversity is presented here with compassion and care, and offers a crucial window into the experiences of so many.”

That reflection captures why this work matters.

When we approach neurodiversity with care and accurate information, we don’t just improve today’s workplaces. We help shape the environments people will enter tomorrow.

An invitation

If you support leaders, teams, or organizations who want to do better but aren’t sure where to begin, Neurodiversity 101 offers a grounded place to start.

Learning with openness changes what feels possible.
And possibility shapes the future of work.

👉 Learn more about Neurodiversity 101 here: https://www.theexperttalk.com/product/neurodiversity-101/

About

I (she/her) founded The Expert Talk in 2020 in response to the growing need for new approaches to training in areas that surround organizational culture, and interpersonal dynamics within teams. I have a career background in sales and media, and an honours degree in Communications, Philosophy, and Psychology, as well as my Trauma Certificate—all from Wilfrid Laurier University.

More importantly, I do this work because I know the difference it makes. Not just in organizations, but in people’s lives. Doing this work myself—learning about the nervous system and putting trauma-informed practices into action—has been transformational. It’s reshaped my relationship with myself, how I show up, how I lead, and how I connect with others. And I’ve experienced the ripple effects in every single area of my life.

That’s why I believe so deeply in bringing these practices into workplaces. They don’t just change how teams function; they change what people believe is possible when they feel safe enough to grow and connect. They have the power to shift every single relationship in our lives—at work, at home, and in the community. This isn’t abstract theory for me—it’s lived experience, and it’s why I’m committed to helping leaders and organizations step into this new era of work.


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