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PROJECTS

This is where creative chaos meets clarity,
and drive meets direction

LEARN ABOUT US

Who weare

Neuro-G is a community where ADHD founders turn their difference into momentum.

 

We bring together ambitious, neurodivergent entrepreneurs and creatives through live events, podcast conversations, and peer connections that spark action, insight, and real opportunity.

ADHD is a force we shape. Like gravity, it can pull you down or accelerate you forward.

 

At Neuro-G, we choose forward. This is where creative chaos meets clarity, and drive meets direction. We are powered by community, not conformity.

OUR PURPOSE

Passion for Divergence

We created Neuro-G to support and empower ADHD founders, this is a peer-powered community built by and for neurodivergent entrepreneurs.

 

We offer ADHD-friendly events, resources, and connections without pressure, designed around how ADHD brains actually work. From real-life stories to practical toolkits, we provide support that reflects lived experience, not just theory.


Our team includes successful entrepreneurs, an executive coach, and a practising psychiatrist, all with ADHD and first-hand experience of building businesses differently. We bring together neuroscience, research, and real-world insight to help founders turn their difference into momentum.

Rooted in clarity, care, and collaboration, we build with our community, not for.

PODCASTS

Creativity

Integrity

Adaptability

Collaboration

Results-Driven

NOT JUST
NUMBERS

  • Studies show that 20–35% of adults with ADHD are unemployed this is significantly higher than the general population average of around 4%.

    It’s not about lack of talent. It’s about fit.
    Traditional jobs often demand consistency, routine, and quiet compliance are the very things many of us struggle with most. Without the right environment or support, we can find ourselves cycling through roles, burning out, or stepping away altogether.

    But that doesn’t mean we stop working.
    Many of us go on to build something better and on our own terms.

  • 32% of adults with ADHD report having been unemployed at some point because of ADHD-related challenges.

     

    It’s a sharp reminder that the same traits that can drive innovation, urgency, non-linear thinking, sensitivity to environment, can also clash with rigid systems and expectations. Missed deadlines, overstimulation, or being labelled “difficult” can lead to performance issues or dismissal in traditional roles.

     

    But many don’t stop there. For some, that experience becomes the push to build something on their own terms, turning exclusion into momentum.

  • 25–35% of adults with ADHD run their own business, compared to just 10% in the general population.
    That includes freelancers, consultants, sole traders, and founders. For neurotypical adults, this is the norm. For ADHD adults, it’s the escape route.

    We’re not chasing status, we're designing a way of working that actually works.
    When traditional roles feel limiting, building something from scratch can be necessity.
    It’s how we turn how our brain works into how our business runs.

  • It’s estimated that 25–35% of entrepreneurs have ADHD, either diagnosed or self-identified. That’s a striking contrast to the roughly 4.4% of adults in the general population.

     

    Starting a business isn’t linear. It’s unpredictable, urgent, and full of moving parts. These are conditions where many ADHD minds naturally thrive.

    For many, entrepreneurship isn’t about chasing status or wealth. It’s about creating an environment where their brain actually works better. What might look impulsive from the outside could just be fast decision-making. What’s seen as distraction in a corporate office might be curiosity in action. And what feels chaotic at times? That’s often where innovation begins.

  • Recent studies have found that adults with ADHD are 3 to 6 times more likely to start their own business compared to those without the condition.

    When traditional roles feel limiting, many with ADHD turn to entrepreneurship as an alternative. It offers something more aligned with how their brain works: urgency, autonomy, constant problem-solving, and the freedom to follow momentum.

    For these founders, it’s all bout creating the right kind of structure that works for them. One that supports focus, not suppresses it. One that turns restlessness into action.

  • Recent research shows 10–20% of businesses fail primarily because they didn’t innovate.
    Not because the idea was bad, but because they didn’t evolve or didn’t keep up with customer needs, market shifts, or emerging tech.

    It’s rarely about one big mistake. It’s slow. Quiet. A gradual decline from relevance.

    That’s why divergent thinking matters. ADHD founders often see the shift before it happens, they feel the restlessness before the market does. If you can act on that instinct, if you’re wired to challenge the status quo, you’re already solving tomorrow’s problems while others are still refining yesterday’s systems.

    Innovation isn’t a bonus. It’s survival.

  • 87% of adults with ADHD say they generate more ideas and think more divergently than the average person. It’s one of the most consistent strengths reported across studies: rapid ideation, unusual connections, and thinking that cuts across categories. While that can feel overwhelming in rigid systems, it’s a huge advantage in spaces that reward innovation.
    If you can create a space that works for your brain, where you’re in control and able to bring ideas to life quickly, you’re outpacing the competition.

TOP COLLABORATIONS

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CONTACT US

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