Building a Neurodiversity Hiring Program: Lessons from SAP, Microsoft, and JPMorgan
The Neurodiversity Talent Opportunity
An estimated 15-20% of the global population is neurodivergent, encompassing autism, ADHD, dyslexia, dyspraxia, and other neurological differences. Yet unemployment among autistic adults alone exceeds 80% in many countries. These statistics represent an enormous untapped talent pool, and pioneering companies have proven that neurodiversity hiring programs deliver measurable business value.
SAP Autism at Work
Program Overview
Launched in 2013, SAP's Autism at Work program was one of the first major corporate neurodiversity hiring initiatives. The program set a goal of having 1% of its global workforce be autistic employees by 2020.
What Worked
- Partnership model: SAP partnered with Specialisterne, a social enterprise founded in Denmark, to source and support candidates
- Modified interview process: Replaced traditional interviews with a multi-week assessment combining team-building exercises, work simulations, and mentoring sessions (the "Autism at Work" workshop format)
- Dedicated support: Each new hire received a job coach, a workplace buddy, and a manager trained in neurodiversity
- Role matching: Rather than fitting candidates into existing job descriptions, SAP identified tasks where neurodivergent strengths (pattern recognition, attention to detail, systematic thinking) were a genuine advantage