Lucy Smith speaking at a conference on neurodiversity and inclusive change

Lucy Smith

Neurodiversity & Inclusive Change Speaker, Facilitator, Compare

Lucy Smith, a keynote speaker on neurodiversity, resilience & inclusive change, helps organisations build inclusive, adaptive cultures that thrive on difference. Inspiring audiences & making a difference

Neurodiversity | Managing Change | Resilience

Life Stories | Social Enterprise

Authentic storytelling that makes a difference

Hi, I am Lucy!

Some people call me the "pocket rocket". I think that is because I have passion and energy to bring out the best in an audience.

I have been working with audiences for almost 25 years in many guises - Lecturer, radio presenter, drama teacher, children's entertainer (I have been a professional fairy) facilitator, compare and speaker.

As a speaker I believe there has to be some substance behind us and I sure have that too. Not being able to settle and always saying "YES" to opportunities has led to a whole lot of experience that informs my work and my presentations.

At my core I am a purpose led social entrepreneur who loves to start a conversation about topics that matter.

I start those conversations with stories some that will surprise and some that will inspire. I talk about some difficult stuff and combine my unique expertise and knowledge.

Relatable, authentic and thought provoking

Lucy x

Lucy Smith keynote speaker on neurodiversity, professional headshot

Neurodiversity

What is your perspective?

I come from a range of different perspectives when I talk about neurodiversity. From pedagogy, organisation development and leadership, research, personal and family and real lived experience. With a a strengths based approach I talk positively and with passion about change and neurodiversity in work, school and community.

I engage audiences to get them thinking and start conversations that will make and does make a lasting difference.

Change Management

Let me meet you at your

bus-stop

In the world of change management, it's not about imposing a new route; it's about understanding where you're starting from.

I have spent a decade working with senior leaders in transformational change where I have learned that change is often an individual journey and we will all join that journey from a different bus-stop.

I combine theory with reality and always have an eye on the future.

Life Stories

The secret change agent

A wealth of stories based on real lived experience with plenty of lessons for the future. Spilling some my secrets on here would be giving away some of my best work which you will want to hear straight from the source.

Oh, okay, let's just say I can talk about resilience, royalty, and some really fun stuff from a career in international law enforcement.

Social Enterprise

Making a difference - the torch that lights the stars

Lighting people up to make sustainable change happen is a big part of what I do. From setting up a community radio station to developing an innovative and groundbreaking conference around digital wellbeing and young people.

I talk the talk and walk the walk when it comes to social enterprise, from grass roots to engagement at the highest levels right up to Downing Street.

Neurodiversity in the workplace

Delivering practical workshops, interactive webinars and tailored team development sessions.

Lucy explores how embracing neurodiversity drives creativity, collaboration and wellbeing at work.

-Understanding the strengths and challenges of neurodivergent colleagues

-Practical adjustments and inclusive communication strategies for teams

-Building a culture where neurodivergent talent can thrive and contribute fully

What do other people say?

Don't take it from me, here is what others say about working with me.

Listen online

Podcasts, interviews and YouTube

Read more

The blog

Clay-style illustration for “Blog 3 of 5” titled “The rise of the sandwich carer and what it means for the future of work.” The image shows a tired but calm-looking adult holding a mug, seated beside a signpost labelled “Children,” “Neurodiversity,” “Ageing Parents,” and “Work.” The illustration represents the emotional and practical balancing act faced by sandwich carers who simultaneously support neurodivergent children, ageing relatives, and professional responsibilities. The warm clay aesthetic reflects themes of hidden labour, emotional load, and sustainable workplace support.

The Rise of the Sandwich Carer

May 21, 20264 min read

The rise of the sandwich carer - and what it means for the future of work

One of the strongest conversations emerging from our Supporting Parents Lunch and Learn was around something many attendees had never heard named before: the sandwich carer.

The term describes people who are simultaneously caring for children - often neurodivergent young adults - and ageing or unwell relatives, while also trying to sustain a career. It is not a niche experience. And once you start looking for it, you see it everywhere.

What sandwich caring actually involves

People managing school meetings during their lunch break. Hospital calls between back-to-back meetings. Safeguarding concerns that land before 9am. Care coordination that runs late into the evening. Emotional labour that never fully pauses.

Many are exhausted before the working day even begins. And then they show up -reliably, professionally, often without saying a word about what they carried to get there, because the alternative is to lose the income, the structure, or the sense of self that work provides.

Workplaces, meanwhile, still largely operate around assumptions built for a different era, one where caring responsibilities were distributed differently, community support structures were stronger, and awareness of neurodiversity was significantly lower. Modern life looks very different. But many workplace systems have not caught up.

The patterns organisations are failing to read

Systems thinking asks us to look below the surface event, the resignation and the absence, and ask: what patterns have been building underneath? For sandwich carers, those patterns are often hiding in plain sight. Consistent turnover among employees in their thirties and forties. Reduced participation in people who used to lead conversations. Repeated short-term absences that HR labels 'unrelated' because nobody has connected the dots.

These are not individual failures. They are systemic signals. And organisations that are not actively looking for them will not find them - not because the data is not there, but because the mental model ('this is a personal matter') stops people asking the right questions.

Framework note: patterns and mental models

Burnout in sandwich carers can present as disengagement, reduced confidence, or withdrawal. Organisations misread these as performance issues because the mental model ('caring is private') prevents them from seeing the real pattern underneath.

What organisations misread

Burnout in sandwich carers can present in ways that organisations routinely misinterpret. Reduced confidence. Emotional fatigue. Withdrawal from conversations they used to lead. Lower participation. Forgetfulness in people who are usually sharp.

Underneath that may simply be sustained overload. Not lack of ambition. Not disengagement. Not a performance issue. Just human limits, reached quietly over time. The risk of misreading this is significant. Organisations that respond with performance management processes, or that frame the issue as a personal resilience problem, often accelerate exit. They lose highly skilled, deeply experienced people - not because those people could not do the job, but because the system around them was not designed for the life they were actually living.

The bigger strategic picture

The future of work conversation in most boardrooms focuses on AI, digital transformation, automation, and productivity. These are genuinely important. But one of the most significant strategic questions organisations face is quieter and more human:

"Can human beings sustainably continue operating inside the systems we are building?"

The UK's working carer population is substantial and growing. The combination of rising neurodivergence identification, an ageing population, reduced public sector capacity, and stagnant wage growth is creating a convergence that employers are only beginning to reckon with. Organisations that recognise this now and build structures that reflect it, will be better placed to retain the people they need.

Supporting sandwich carers is workforce sustainability

This is not simply compassionate leadership, though compassionate leadership matters. Supporting sandwich carers is a workforce sustainability issue. The people navigating these pressures are often the most resilient, most adaptable, most experienced members of a team. They have had to become excellent at problem-solving, at managing complexity, at holding multiple things at once. Those are not small skills.

The question is whether workplaces are designed to retain them, or whether they quietly push them out and then wonder where all their institutional knowledge went.

P.S.

If your organisation is starting to have these conversations — or needs help knowing where to begin — Inclusive Change offers consultancy, training, and mentoring specifically designed for organisations navigating neurodiversity, caring responsibilities, and sustainable workforce design. Get in touch at [email protected].

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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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  • Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consecetuer lorem ipsum

  •  Organically grow the holistic world view of disruptive innovation

  •  At the end of the day, going forward, a new normal that has evolved

Column Header

  • Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consecetuer lorem ipsum

  •  Organically grow the holistic world view of disruptive innovation

  •  At the end of the day, going forward, a new normal that has evolved