Beyond individual support: Employment experiences of autistic Korean designers receiving strength-based organizational support.
Strength-based organizational support lets autistic adults shine at work and feel better about themselves.
01Research in Context
What this study did
Lee et al. (2025) talked with autistic Korean designers about their jobs. The team asked how company-wide, strength-based support changed daily work and self-image.
Interviews and focus groups gave rich detail on what "organizational support" looks like from the employee side.
What they found
Workers said the program let them use their design strengths every day. They felt proud, capable, and happier with life overall.
Positive identity shifts came from being valued for what they do well, not just "accommodated."
How this fits with other research
Hedley et al. (2018) and Voss et al. (2019) already showed that workplace supports help autistic adults get and keep jobs. The new study moves the lens from "getting hired" to "thriving while hired" by spotlighting strength-based culture.
Fridchay et al. (2026) found that everyday peer kindness drives inclusion. SoHyun et al. add the structural layer: formal policies that celebrate neurodiversity set the stage for those friendly moments.
Jackson et al. (2025) used the same strengths frame in autism assessment. Both 2025 papers show adults react well when professionals focus on gifts, not gaps.
Why it matters
You can pitch employers on strength-based systems, not just single accommodations. Ask teams to list each autistic worker's design, coding, or data eye, then build projects around it. When companies embed neurodiversity in policy, pride and output rise together.
Want CEUs on This Topic?
The ABA Clubhouse has 60+ free CEUs — live every Wednesday. Ethics, supervision & clinical topics.
Join Free →Help one autistic client list their top three work strengths and share the list with their supervisor to shape next week’s tasks.
02At a glance
03Original abstract
This study qualitatively examined the employment experiences of autistic designers in a South Korean company providing strength-based support at the organizational level. The experiences of 12 autistic employees (mean age = 27 years old, 83.3% male), 12 parents, and 5 non-autistic employees were examined using semi-structured interviews and multi-perspective interpretive phenomenological analysis. Four superordinate themes emerged: the impact of inclusive support systems, views on autistic characteristics, empowering employment experiences, and associated outcomes. Results emphasized the importance of organization- and individual-level support in shaping the employment experiences of autistic and non-autistic employees. While autistic characteristics served as facilitators and challenges of autistic employees' employment experiences, they contributed to the company's overall success. A sense of belonging, competency, and agency motivated autistic employees; their employment outcomes involved perceived changes in autistic characteristics, enhanced quality of life, and positive autistic self-identity. The findings suggest that the implementation of neurodiversity-based support at the organizational level allows autistic employees to leverage their unique characteristics as strengths regardless of support needs and benefits all employees. Future research should explore cultural influences, assess generalizability to other vocational contexts, and investigate the impacts of adopting neurodiversity in the workplace to create inclusive environments that maximize the career potential of autistic employees.Lay AbstractAutistic people have difficulties obtaining and maintaining jobs. This study looked at the experiences of autistic designers working in a South Korean company that supports autistic people at the company level. We wanted to understand how the autistic individuals' jobs and the support they received influenced their lives. We interviewed autistic employees, their parents, and non-autistic coworkers. We found four important themes: how they felt about the support systems, their thoughts on being autistic, the experiences they had at work, and their employment outcomes. Both company and individual support were crucial for the company. Autistic characteristics sometimes created challenges, but overall, they contributed to the company's success. Feeling like they belonged, being good at their jobs, and having control over their work made autistic employees feel empowered. Working at this company led to positive changes such as reducing certain autism-related challenges, improving their quality of life, and feeling good about being autistic. These findings suggest that companies should support autistic employees not only on a personal level but also as part of the company's culture. Thus, autistic characteristics can be seen as strengths that benefit the individuals and the whole company. Future research should explore how different cultures influence these experiences and evaluate whether similar findings apply to other jobs. We also need to study how embracing neurodiversity in the workplace can create environments that help autistic individuals do well in their careers.
Autism : the international journal of research and practice, 2025 · doi:10.1177/13623613251329605