Digital systems now shape almost every part of working life — from recruitment and onboarding through to internal communications, learning platforms and everyday collaboration.
Yet for many neurodivergent professionals, workplace systems can still create unnecessary friction long before meaningful work even begins.
Long documents, inaccessible formats, overwhelming onboarding journeys, unclear communication and systems designed around narrow assumptions about how people process information can quietly create barriers every day. Often this friction goes unnoticed because many employees simply spend energy adapting silently to environments that were never designed with different ways of thinking, processing or communicating in mind.
At Neurodiversity in Business, we believe inclusion cannot sit only within policy statements or awareness campaigns. Increasingly, organisations need to think more carefully about whether their environments and systems genuinely allow people to participate comfortably and confidently from the beginning.
As part of Global Accessibility Awareness Day, Neurodiversity in Business has implemented the Calling All Minds AXS Toolbar across its website as part of a wider conversation around practical accessibility and inclusive digital environments.
What appealed to us about the AXS Toolbar was that it felt like a practical and achievable step that could help organisations begin thinking differently about accessibility within their own systems and digital spaces.
The toolbar allows people to personalise how they engage with online information through features including text to speech, font customisation, colour overlays, reading support tools and focus support features.
Sometimes relatively small accessibility adjustments can make a significant difference to whether somebody feels able to engage confidently, process information comfortably and participate fully within workplace environments.
Quote from Dan Harris, Founder, Neurodiversity in Business
“Inclusive workplaces are not created through awareness alone. They are created through systems that reduce unnecessary friction and allow people to access information, onboarding and everyday working environments in ways that work for them.”
— Dan Harris, Neudordiversity in Business
Quote from Atif Choudhury, Calling All Minds
“If someone has to constantly ask for access to information just to do their job comfortably, then the workplace still hasn’t designed inclusion into the system.”
— Atif Choudhury, Calling All Minds
We talk a lot about inclusion.
But inclusion that cannot be accessed, is not inclusion.
As part of Global Accessibility Awareness Day, Calling All Minds is inviting organisations to take a practical first step by exploring the free AXS Accessibility Audit.
The audit helps employers better understand how accessible their digital environments, onboarding journeys and internal systems currently are — and where unnecessary friction may still exist for neurodivergent and disabled employees.
Explore the free AXS Accessibility Audit here:
https://www.callingallminds.com/axs-audit
Because meaningful inclusion should not begin at the point where somebody is already struggling at work.



