Digital Safety for all
Inclusive Change at Work

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Keep the conversation going

Here are some ways we can help you.

We hope you enjoyed The Castle Conference: Digital Wellbeing for Young People.

We know you want to keep the conversation going so we have created a page to help you do that.

The page will be updated with slides and videos when they are available.

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Digital Safety Training & Consultancy

Digital Safety can provide a range of training services and consultancy. From one cyber security for non-profits to training for parents in your community.

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Inclusive Change Support and Training

Want to know more about neurodiversity in your community? We can help: from unlocking the potential in your teams to deepening awareness of safeguarding vulnerable people.

Watch the Castle Conference Catch Up

We hope that The Castle Conference inspired you, got you thinking and talking about the topic of Digital Wellbeing. We really hope you have been talking about the conference to your friends, family and colleagues.

We certainly are and we arranged it!

The Castle Conference Catch-Up was a chance to keep talking, a chance to share your thoughts, a chance to find out what questions we have been asked since the day and a chance to ask us new questions.

Andy & Lucy

4th June 2024

Free Webinar

Join Lucy & Dan from Inclusive Change At Work CIC who will be discussing how to support disabled and neurodivergent employees to thrive at work.

Recap from the event

We have combined the slides into a video for you to rewatch

This is only the slides - no audio. Videos will be uploaded soon.

Lucy Smith: Digital Safeguarding and Neurodiversity

Listen to Owen's interview here

Professor Peter Kawalek: A crisis but not of their making

Listen to Peter's Interview here

Luisa Fassi: Social media and adolescence, a research perspective

Listen to Luisa's interview here

David Brown: If u care share

Listen to David's interview here

Speaker Videos

We will be uploading videos from The Castle Conference as soon as they are available.

COMING SOON!

Resources

Links and downloads for you

Watch or listen online to our podcasts

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Spotify Podcast

Listen to our speakers and exhibitors

Team meeting in a modern office, showing workplace collaboration and inclusive practices to support employees with ADHD

ADHD at Work: Small Adjustments, Big Impact

October 01, 20253 min read

ADHD at Work: Small Adjustments, Big Impact

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.

Why understanding ADHD in the workplace matters

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.

Small changes, big impact

Clear expectations

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.

Shorter, sharper meetings

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.

Make work visible

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.

Offer choice in delivery

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.

Protect focus time

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 that sticks

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.

Shifting the culture

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.

The bigger picture

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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