High cognitive demand. Low cognitive support.
Technology companies rely on cognitive diversity for innovation, but extreme cognitive load, sprint culture burnout, and communication mismatch drive neurodivergent talent out.
What we see in this sector
Extreme cognitive load
Constant change, product iteration, AI integration.
High prevalence of neurodivergent talent
Yet support is inconsistent.
Burnout from sprint culture
Hyperfocus is exploited. Recovery is ignored.
Communication mismatch
Asynchronous communication can amplify misunderstanding.
Performance metrics over energy sustainability
Brilliant contributors stalled at promotion due to social expectations.
What is breaking
- Senior engineers leaving due to burnout
- Brilliant contributors stalled at promotion due to social expectations
- Inclusion initiatives that ignore technical reality
- Communication mismatch amplified by remote and hybrid working
"The sector's greatest strength — cognitive diversity — is also the thing it's worst at supporting."
What this sector has going for it
Design cognitive sustainability into delivery models.
What changes when you invest
UK data for Technology & Digital.
Named sources, UK-specific, traceable. Forward this block to Finance, Legal or Board without editing.
17×
Tech disclosure gap: 53% of UK tech workers self-identify as neurodivergent, yet employers formally identify just 3% of their tech workforce as such
Tech Talent Charter / Attest, Diversity in Tech 2024
68%
Of Tech Talent Charter signatories now measure neurodiversity, up from 26% in 2021 — measurement is becoming table stakes
Tech Talent Charter, Diversity in Tech 2024
Sector regulatory risk
No sector-specific regime — Equality Act exposure dominates
UK tribunal claims citing neurodivergent conditions have almost doubled since 2020, with autism claims up 25% in 2025 alone. Tech employers' open-plan, 'culture fit' interviewing, and rapid-iteration working norms repeatedly surface in ET pleadings. The Stedman EAT ruling (2025) lowered the bar further — one substantially-affected activity is enough.
Primary source
Named precedent / employer
GCHQ — dyslexia-positive recruitment
GCHQ's apprenticeship programme runs at 3 – 4× the national dyslexia rate. Director of strategy Jo Cavan and former director Jeremy Fleming have publicly positioned dyslexic pattern-recognition as 'mission critical'. The highest-profile UK tech employer leaning into neurodiversity as a capability advantage.
Primary source
Want the full regional picture? See the business case — UK, North America, EMEA, APAC and LATAM with per-region data.
"The impact on retention has been remarkable. Our leadership team now thinks about talent completely differently."
— VP of Engineering, Global Technology Company