Upcoming Events
We host events in our local community in partnership with Inclusive Change At Work CIC. Take a look at the list below to find out whats on.
Our online events are designed to inform and educate. We have a range of free and on demand events online.
Our team are experienced speakers and can be booked to educate and entertain at your next event - get in touch to find out how we can help.
23rd - F'Up Night Exeter, The Bootlegger, 6-9pm
29th - Free, In-Person Tekmatix Workshop, Bristol
Lucy Smith joined day one of BSides Bristol as she explored the future of work – spotting red flags, recognising reasonable requests, and reframing adjustments as smart strategies for building high-performing, future-ready cyber teams.
Click on the button below to access Lucy's top ten tips for inclusive recruitment.
From January to March 2025, our sister community interest company, Inclusive Change at Work CIC, hosted transformative workshops to promote understanding and inclusion for neurodivergent individuals and their families.
We gathered at Emersons Green Village Hall for expert-led sessions that offered practical strategies and a welcoming space for learning and growth.
Visit our recap page for more information about the sessions plus useful links and articles.
Some sessions guided businesses on the value of workplace diversity and inclusion, highlighting how neurodivergent talent strengthens teams and fosters innovation.
The other sessions, designed for parents and carers of neurodivese young adults, provided insights into workplace opportunities and support for thier young people, inspiring hope for their future careers. Attendees had the opportunity to learn, connect, and contribute to more inclusive work environments.
Take a look at our recap pages, you can watch the recordings and you will find a host of information, articles and freebies too!
October is ADHD Awareness Month, and one question I hear often is, “What can we do right now that would really help colleagues with ADHD?” The good news is, you don’t need to overhaul your organisation overnight. Inclusion and understanding neurodiversity at work, is not about a big bang initiative. It’s about small changes, consistently applied, that add up to make a real difference.
ADHD is more common than many realise. Some colleagues have a diagnosis, others are waiting for assessment, and many are masking their challenges, which can sometimes be misinterpreted as capability concerns. The impact is often invisible, but it is there and supporting employees with ADHD is more important then ever. Environments designed without ADHD in mind can add friction, while environments designed with inclusion unlock focus, creativity, and problem-solving for the whole team.
Ambiguity is a barrier. Sharing clear goals, timelines, and what “good” looks like helps everyone. A short agenda before a meeting, or a two-line summary of next steps afterwards, can prevent hours of wasted effort.
Meetings that run long and back-to-back leave little room for focus or recovery. Try setting meetings for 30 minutes, and encourage a break in between longer meetings. It’s a small adjustment, but the difference in energy, attention and outcomes are huge.
Task boards, shared documents, and agreed owners reduce reliance on memory and email chains. When the work is visible, it is easier to track progress and stay aligned.
Some people work best in writing, others verbally, others visually. Allowing choice in how work is delivered focuses attention on outcomes rather than one rigid process. Flexibility makes space for strengths.
Deep work is hard to achieve in noisy or interrupt-driven environments. Offering quiet spaces, noise-cancelling tools, or simply encouraging blocked focus time helps colleagues with ADHD to do their best work, and benefits many others too.
Feedback lands best when it is clear, specific, and kind. Instead of general comments, agree on the next small step together. This makes feedback actionable and motivating.
What all these examples have in common is that they are not “special treatment.” They are good practice for everyone, which happens to reduce barriers for people with ADHD. When we make the invisible visible, protect time, and design with flexibility in mind, the culture shifts towards inclusion by default.
Small changes add up, but sustaining them takes commitment. That is why awareness months like this are important starting points. They give us permission to pause, reflect, and experiment. The next step is embedding what works into the everyday, becoming the norms, driving policies and creating an inclusive culture.
Want to know more?
If you’re curious about what inclusive adjustments could look like in your team, explore our Inclusive Change training prospectus or get in touch to arrange a call.
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