Writing Neurodivergent-Friendly Work Emails: A Guide for Managers and Teams
The Hidden Communication Barrier An estimated 15-20% of the workforce is neurodivergent — ADHD, autism spectrum, dyslexia, dyscalculia, dyspraxia, and other neurological differences. Most workplace...

Source: DEV Community
The Hidden Communication Barrier An estimated 15-20% of the workforce is neurodivergent — ADHD, autism spectrum, dyslexia, dyscalculia, dyspraxia, and other neurological differences. Most workplace communication was never designed for how these brains process information. The result: neurodivergent employees spend significant cognitive energy decoding communication that neurotypical colleagues process automatically. Vague instructions, implicit expectations, ambiguous tone, and unstructured information create a tax that's invisible to the majority but exhausting for the minority. The good news: communication practices that help neurodivergent team members help everyone. Clear, structured, explicit communication isn't an accommodation — it's just better communication. Structure Is Kindness Use clear subject lines that indicate action: 'ACTION NEEDED: Review proposal by Friday' vs. 'Quick question.' The first tells the reader exactly what's needed and when. The second tells them nothing