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

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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

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COMING SOON!

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Spotify Podcast

Listen to our speakers and exhibitors

Illustrated infographic titled ‘Building systems that support neurodivergent team members (and the parents who raise the future workforce).’ The image uses colourful puzzle pieces to represent key elements of inclusive workplaces, including policy design, manager capability, peer support, flexible systems, psychological safety, and measurement and learning. A message at the bottom reads: ‘Strong systems today create inclusive workplaces tomorrow. Support parents. Strengthen everyone.’ Decorative trees, buildings, clouds, and a sun create a warm community-focused background

From Awareness to Embedded Practice

May 21, 20266 min read

From awareness to embedded practice: what a real change programme looks like

The first four blogs in this series have made the case. Workplaces are not keeping pace with the reality of modern caring. Flexibility is not enough. Managers are not equipped. The patterns are hiding in plain sight. And the mental models underneath it all - the beliefs that caring is private, that support means lowering standards, that resilience is the answer - are quietly costing organisations the people they can least afford to lose.

This final blog is about what to actually do about it.

Not in a vague, 'start a conversation' sense. But in a structured, sequenced, outcomes-focused sense, the kind of change programme that moves an organisation from awareness through to embedded, system-led practice. Because awareness without architecture is just a good seminar. And good seminars do not change cultures.

Start with the iceberg, not the event

Most organisations begin their inclusion work at the wrong layer. A staff member resigns. Or there is a tribunal. Or someone raises a grievance. And the response is event-level: a training session, a policy refresh, a manager conversation. That is not nothing. But it is not change.

A real change programme starts by mapping what is actually happening beneath the surface. What patterns are recurring? Where are the structural gaps — in policy, in workload design, in manager capability? And what are the mental models that are generating all of it? The iceberg is not just a diagnostic metaphor. It is a planning tool. The interventions that create lasting change are the ones that work at all four layers simultaneously, not just the ones that are easiest to point to.

Diagnostic question

Before designing any intervention, ask:

"Are we responding to the event, or are we addressing the structure that keeps generating it?"

If the answer is 'the event', go deeper.

Map the forces before you design the solution

Lewin's Force Field Analysis gives us a practical way to understand what is working for change and what is working against it. In the context of supporting parents of neurodivergent children at work, the driving forces are real and growing: rising identification of neurodivergence, the Employment Rights Act 2025, reputational pressure, retention risk, and the growing number of senior leaders who are parents of neurodivergent children themselves and who understand this from the inside.

The restraining forces are equally real: manager confidence gaps, fear of legal exposure, the stigma around disclosure, unsustainable workloads already baked into the baseline, and the persistent belief that support is somehow in tension with performance.

The instinct is to push harder on the drivers. Run more campaigns. Publish more data. Strengthen the business case. But Lewin's insight is that the more powerful lever is to actively reduce the restrainers. A manager who has been trained, given frameworks, and told that asking for help is expected rather than a sign of weakness is a different proposition entirely from a manager who is simply told to 'be more supportive.' Remove the barrier, and the driving forces do their job.

Sequence the change - meet people on the curve

Change does not happen in a single moment. People move through it. The change curve - informed by Kübler-Ross and adapted widely for organisational contexts - gives us a map of that journey: from initial shock and denial ('I didn't know this was happening / surely it's not that common'), through resistance and overwhelm ('this is too complicated / I don't know how to fix it'), into exploration and commitment ('let's try something / this is actually working'), and finally into embedded practice ('this is just how we work here').

The mistake most organisations make is to design a single intervention and deploy it across all of these stages at once. A manager in denial does not need a policy framework yet. They need a story that makes the reality undeniable. A manager in overwhelm does not need another webinar. They need a practical tool and a safe space to practice using it. A manager in the exploration phase does not need more convincing. They need peer connection and a structure to build on.

Change curve principle

Interventions must be sequenced to meet people where they actually are, not where we wish they were. The most technically excellent training programme will fail if it is delivered to people who are still in denial.

What a sequenced programme looks like in practice

Phase one is awareness. Lunch and Learns, storytelling, data that makes the invisible visible. The goal is not to persuade, it is to make denial harder. Use lived experience, not statistics alone. Statistics inform the head. Stories shift the heart. And it is the heart that changes mental models.

Phase two is engagement. Safe space conversations, facilitated manager workshops, honest audit of existing policies against real employee experience. This is where resistance surfaces and where it needs to be heard, not managed. People who feel heard move through the curve faster than people who feel overridden.

Phase three is design. Working groups that include parents, managers, and HR together. Reasonable adjustment frameworks that are practical, not theoretical. Carer disclosure pathways that people actually trust. Peer support structures. Workload review. This is the structures layer of the iceberg and it is where most programmes stop short, which is why most programmes do not hold.

Phase four is embedding. Training becomes standard rather than optional. Manager capability is assessed, not assumed. Data on carer experience is tracked alongside engagement and retention data. Leaders model the behaviours publicly. And the question shifts from 'are we doing this?' to 'is it working, and how do we know?'

The desired outcome and how to know when you are getting there

The desired outcome of a change programme like this is not a policy document or a completed training module. It is a workplace where sustainable participation for parent carers - including those managing neurodivergent children, ageing relatives, or both - is a designed-in feature of how the organisation operates, not a favour granted by the right manager.

You know you are getting there when: managers feel equipped rather than exposed; parent carers disclose early rather than waiting until crisis; reasonable adjustments are normalised rather than exceptional; sickness absence and turnover data start to tell a different story; and senior leaders are talking about this not because HR asked them to, but because they understand it matters.

None of that happens quickly. And none of it happens from a standing start. But all of it is achievable with the right sequencing, the right frameworks, and the willingness to work at every layer of the iceberg, not just the ones that are easiest to reach.

Where Inclusive Change comes in

This is the work we do. We support organisations to move from awareness through to embedded, system-led practice through consultancy that starts with honest diagnosis, training and Lunch and Learn programmes that meet people on the change curve, manager coaching and mentoring that builds genuine capability, and ongoing support that keeps the momentum going after the initial programme ends.

Whether you are at the beginning of this journey, somewhere in the middle, or trying to understand why a previous initiative did not hold, we can help you work out where you are and what to do next.

P.S.

If you are ready to move from awareness to action, we would love to talk. Inclusive Change offers bespoke change programmes, training, consultancy, and mentoring for organisations navigating neurodiversity and caring responsibilities in the workplace. Get in touch at [email protected] — and let's build something that actually holds.

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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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