For sensitivity purposes I cannot disclose where I work but we are a large corporation that you have definitely heard of. I am one of the Software Development Directors and responsible for about 150 people on my teams not to mention I work closely with other peers and managers for a software development and professional services group that is 2000 people.
I have identified at least 3 people who have ASD or Asperger's. Two of them have told me directly and the third was told to me by someone else but his behavior makes a lot more sense now that someone pointed it out to me. None of them revealed this in their interviews and frankly I think this is probably good because I don't trust all of our managers to not discriminate.
Two of them have complained about a lack of structure, which is challenging in software development because the requirements we get from the business are going to have a certain level of ambiguity. I have worked with them to ask more questions, be direct with our business partners, and to get specific on areas that they want more detail. Honestly, this is something I did myself when I was coding and I don't think it is something only ASD people should be doing but it appears.
We have a very open work area that can be noisy. I've done the best I can to encourage them to use headphones to reduce distraction.
Working in development there have been struggles. A lot of our people fit the developer stereotype. Poor social skills, lack of empathy, strong introversion. This may sound like ASD heaven but there is a strong use of sarcasm throughout and it causes a lot of confusion and there has been at least one meltdown from a combination of sarcasm from teammates and an strong confrontation between an ASD associate and their team lead over performance issues.
It's not all struggles. Our third person is actually a manager candidate but now that I am aware he likely has Asperger's it explains why he needed more coaching on how his communication affects his teammates. If we expand his area or build a new team I am strongly supporting his promotion even though he now reports to one of the professional services directors instead of me.
I'm fine with one-on-one coaching despite how busy I am. What things can I do to help? What accommodations can you suggest to help them be successful?
I have identified at least 3 people who have ASD or Asperger's. Two of them have told me directly and the third was told to me by someone else but his behavior makes a lot more sense now that someone pointed it out to me. None of them revealed this in their interviews and frankly I think this is probably good because I don't trust all of our managers to not discriminate.
Two of them have complained about a lack of structure, which is challenging in software development because the requirements we get from the business are going to have a certain level of ambiguity. I have worked with them to ask more questions, be direct with our business partners, and to get specific on areas that they want more detail. Honestly, this is something I did myself when I was coding and I don't think it is something only ASD people should be doing but it appears.
We have a very open work area that can be noisy. I've done the best I can to encourage them to use headphones to reduce distraction.
Working in development there have been struggles. A lot of our people fit the developer stereotype. Poor social skills, lack of empathy, strong introversion. This may sound like ASD heaven but there is a strong use of sarcasm throughout and it causes a lot of confusion and there has been at least one meltdown from a combination of sarcasm from teammates and an strong confrontation between an ASD associate and their team lead over performance issues.
It's not all struggles. Our third person is actually a manager candidate but now that I am aware he likely has Asperger's it explains why he needed more coaching on how his communication affects his teammates. If we expand his area or build a new team I am strongly supporting his promotion even though he now reports to one of the professional services directors instead of me.
I'm fine with one-on-one coaching despite how busy I am. What things can I do to help? What accommodations can you suggest to help them be successful?