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Upcoming Events

With Inclusive Change

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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.

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Our online events are designed to inform and educate. We have a range of free and on demand events online.

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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.

Important Dates in our Calendar

Calendar of Events

June 2026

July 2026

Leadership, Neurodiversity & Decision Making

June 22nd 2026

22nd June - In-person workshop

Join Lucy Smith, founder of Inclusive Change and a specialist in leadership, neurodiversity, and organisational change, for this workshop hosted at The Courtyard Exeter Sandy Park.

This morning session combines breakfast, networking, and an honest, practical exploration of what it really means to lead people with ADHD and autism in today’s workplace.

Across the morning, you’ll move from a grounded discussion on neurodiversity in leadership to a live decision-making simulation based on the National Decision Model, putting real-world pressure and complexity into practice. You’ll leave with clearer insight into how neurodiversity is shaping leadership challenges, alongside practical tools for making better decisions and supporting teams with confidence.

Re-Visit our Past Events

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BSides Bristol - 5th & 6th September

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.

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Inclusive Change at Work - In the Community

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.

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Building the Future of Work, Together

Throughout 2024 and early 2025, we hosted a series of live webinars and in-person workshops focused on supporting neurodiverse and disabled young people in the workplace. These sessions helped businesses understand the value of neurodivergent talent, while also offering guidance to parents and carers on career opportunities and support for their young adults.

You can catch up on everything via our recap pages - watch the recordings, explore helpful articles, and grab some free resources too.

Our Event Blog - Where we've been, what we've learned

Sharing our experiences, insights, and standout moments from industry events

Clay-style illustration for “Blog 2 of 5” showing a worried parent seated beside a balancing scale. On one side is a small block labelled “Flexibility,” while the other side is weighed down with stacked pressures including EHCPs, appointments, school communication, meltdowns, emotional load, sleep deprivation, and financial pressure. The image represents the hidden complexity faced by parents of neurodivergent children and the message that workplace flexibility alone is not enough to create sustainable support.

Is flexibility enough to support parents of neurodivergent children at work? - Copy

May 21, 20264 min read

Why flexibility alone is not enough for parents of neurodivergent children at work

After our Supporting Parents of Neurodivergent Children at Work Lunch and Learn, one theme came back repeatedly: many organisations believe they are already supportive because they offer flexibility.

Flexible hours. Remote working. Time off for appointments. And whilst those things absolutely matter, flexibility alone is not enough anymore. Because the reality for many working parents of neurodivergent children is not occasional disruption. It is sustained system pressure.

What sustained pressure actually looks like

For many of these parents, life is not operating in predictable cycles. It is uncertainty, constant adaptation, waiting lists, changing school situations, emotional exhaustion, and fragmented systems - often all at once.

The issue is not simply: 'Can I leave early for an appointment?' The issue is: 'Can I sustainably remain in work while navigating ongoing complexity?' That is a very different conversation. And it requires a very different organisational response.

Parents of neurodivergent children - children with autism, ADHD, dyspraxia, PDA, or combinations of these - are often managing systems that do not work smoothly. EHCP reviews that take months. School placements that break down. Support services with waiting lists measured in years, not weeks. Flexibility helps with individual moments. It does not resolve the underlying load.

The iceberg underneath flexibility

Flexibility is an event-level response. It addresses the visible surface; the appointment, the difficult morning, the school call that arrives mid-meeting. But it does not touch the structural layers underneath.

The underlying structures that actually determine whether a parent carer can remain sustainably in work include: how workloads are designed, how managers are trained and supported, what psychological safety looks like in practice, and whether there are proactive pathways for people to disclose caring complexity without fear of it being used against them. Flexibility is one tool. Sustainable systems design is the whole toolbox.

Underlying structures

Organisations often mistake event-level responses (flexibility, time off) for structural solutions. The structures layer of the iceberg - policy design, workload, manager capability - is where sustainable support is built or broken.

Illustrated iceberg infographic titled “The Iceberg of Systems Thinking for Change: Supporting Parents of Neurodivergent Children at Work.” The image uses a layered iceberg model to show visible workplace issues above the surface — such as burnout, appointments, reduced performance, and last-minute leave requests — with deeper systemic layers underneath including patterns, organisational structures, mental models, and root causes. The infographic contrasts reactive workplace responses with systems-thinking approaches focused on psychological safety, manager capability, inclusive policy design, and sustainable workplace support for parent carers and neurodivergent families.
The Iceberg of experiences for parents of neurodivergent children at work

The problem with reactive support

One of the persistent problems in workplaces is that support tends to appear after the fact. After sickness absence. After burnout. After a performance conversation. After someone is already overwhelmed and running on empty.

Good systems design works proactively. It asks: what conditions reduce unnecessary friction before people reach crisis point? And the answers are often less dramatic than organisations expect. Predictable communication. Clear priorities. Psychologically safe management. Written follow-ups after meetings. Reduced meeting overload. Flexibility with structure, not flexibility in place of it. Supportive escalation pathways. Manager confidence training. Peer support networks. These things sound small. Collectively, they reduce cognitive load enormously for people who are already carrying a great deal before the working day begins.

Managers are carrying pressure too

It is important to name this directly: many managers genuinely want to help but feel underprepared, frightened of getting it wrong, emotionally overwhelmed, or unsure where the boundaries sit. They are often carrying their own caring responsibilities outside of work. They are not always in a position to carry their team's complexity as well, not because they do not care, but because nobody has given them the frameworks or confidence to do so.

We cannot expect managers to solve systemic issues through goodwill alone. That is why organisations need proper frameworks and clear pathways rather than relying on individual personalities. Support should not be a postcode lottery depending on who you happen to report to.

Sustainable systems matter more than perks

Flexibility matters. But sustainable systems matter more. The shift from reactive accommodation to proactive system design is not a large leap in theory. In practice it requires leadership investment, honest conversations, and the willingness to ask better questions: what are we actually asking people to carry, and is our workplace designed to support that — or simply to manage the fallout when it becomes visible?

Organisations that understand this distinction are the ones that retain experienced, talented people that other workplaces quietly lose to burnout, resignation, or long-term sickness absence.

P.S.

If your organisation is ready to move from flexibility to genuinely sustainable support, we can help. Inclusive Change works with employers to design proactive, neurodiversity-informed workplace systems, and offers training and mentoring for managers and HR professionals navigating these conversations. Reach out at [email protected] to start the conversation.

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Lucy Smith

Lucy is founder of Inclusive Change, supporting organisations to lead change, inclusion and neurodiversity more thoughtfully in fast-changing workplaces.

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