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Description

Up to 46% of construction professionals identify as neurodivergent — far above the roughly 31% seen in other industries. In this solo episode, Angelo Suntres argues that cognitive diversity isn’t a problem to manage but a competitive advantage construction stumbled into long ago and never named. He breaks down how to tell a deficit from a variation, the three low-cost adjustments that unlock performance, and why building a workplace that fits how different people think is both better leadership and a serious recruiting edge in a talent-short market.

Key Topics Covered

• Why construction has always attracted neurodivergent people — variety, movement, hands-on problem-solving, tangible results

• The reframe: treating struggles as variations to support rather than deficits to penalize

• Communication clarity — being specific and direct instead of vague

• Environment flexibility — task rotation, quiet workspace options, control over how people work

• Feedback style — matching delivery to the individual instead of a one-size-fits-all method

• The talent shortage and the recruiting edge almost nobody is using

• Moving from managing for compliance to leading for the person

About the Host

Angelo Suntres is a construction executive with 20+ years in institutional and ICI construction, a two-time published author (The Human Side of Construction, Rebuild Construction), and creator of the HSOC platform built around the “me and we” framework.

Connect

Email: angelo@hsoc.one



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit humansideofconstruction.substack.com