Sarah Ennor
Biracial Speaker, Lawyer, International Athlete, Entrepreneur, Storyteller, Creative, & Woman with ADHD
Presentations
- Ask for a full list of Sarah's Topics and Workshops
- Neuroinclusion 101: ADHD in the Workplace
- Neuroinclusion 101: ADHD in the Legal Workplace
- Words Matter, De-stigmatizing ADHD & Mental Health
- Everything You’ve Always Wanted to Know About The “Neurotypical” Brain but Were Afraid to Ask (Stigma & Stereotypes)
- What Aussie Rules Taught Me About Leadership (Leading Diverse Teams)
- From Fix to Fill (Building Teams)
- Playing With ADHD, Not Against It (Skills, Strengths, & Strategy)
- Brought to You by the Letter F: Fixing Frustrating Feedback (Giving & Receiving Actionable Feedback)
- Performance Anxiety to High Performance (Giving & Receiving Actionable Feedback)
-
Ask for a full list of Sarah's Topics and Workshops
In addition to the topics/descriptions provided, Sarah has an extensive list of presentations available. Other titles include:
Try Softer Not Harder (Compassionate Leadership)
Employees Are Just Clients That You Pay (Recruitment, Retention, & Results)
Babysitters & Cheerleaders: The ADHDer’s Support Squad
Mountains & Molehills: Motivation & ADHD
#MeToo? Affirming or Denying ADHD (Safety, Empathy & ADHD)
Emotional Executives (Executive Functions & ADHD)
Get Authentic (Belonging & Self-Awareness)
The Professional Power-Play (Creative Collaboration) -
Neuroinclusion 101: ADHD in the Workplace
ADHD is often stigmatized as an excuse for laziness and misbehaviour. Yet high performance workplaces often attract people with ADHD. Maybe ADHD isn’t what we think!
Every person with ADHD experiences different symptoms and strengths. Many rely on the support of others to thrive at work. What makes a high-performance workplace so attractive to the ADHD brain? How and why might the positive and negative traits of ADHD show up at work? What role can folks without ADHD play in unlocking their colleagues’ potential? How can we support ourselves?
When we cultivate a neurodiverse workforce, the unique blend of strengths and skills can generate impressive results. Just like every role contributes to a profitable and efficient workplace, so too does every thinking style!
-
Neuroinclusion 101: ADHD in the Legal Workplace
ADHD is often stigmatized as an excuse for laziness and misbehaviour. Yet nearly 3 times more lawyers report having experience with ADHD than the general population. Maybe ADHD isn’t what we think!
Every person with ADHD experiences different symptoms and strengths. Many rely on the support of others to thrive at work. What makes the legal workplace so attractive to the ADHD brain? How and why might the positive and negative traits of ADHD show up at work? What role can folks without ADHD play in unlocking their colleagues’ potential? How can we support ourselves?
When we cultivate a neurodiverse workforce, the unique blend of strengths and skills can generate impressive results. Just like every role contributes to a profitable and efficient workplace, so too does every thinking style!
-
Words Matter, De-stigmatizing ADHD & Mental Health
Experts estimate that by age 10, children with ADHD have heard 20,000 negative comments from their teachers alone. Adding parents at home, and peers in and out of school, it’s no wonder they also report lower levels of self-esteem.
It’s hard to know what to say when someone shares their diagnosis. Curiosity plays a pivotal role in getting it right.
Perpetuating myth and stigma is harmful to everyone. We can change the narrative by choosing our words wisely.
-
Everything You’ve Always Wanted to Know About The “Neurotypical” Brain but Were Afraid to Ask (Stigma & Stereotypes)
Would it surprise you to know that at least 70% of the population may not be neurodivergent at all? And that’s just the percentage we know about!
This group is often referred to as “neurotypical” because their brains only allow them to relate to time, show empathy, manage their emotions, and organize their lives like most other people. They may be held back from taking risks, thinking of wildly creative ideas, or even following their noses to the most unique conclusions. ADHDers have much to learn about this dominant brain type so we can support them at work and foster belonging.
Make curiosity (and humour?) the gateway to stronger relationships in the workplace.
-
What Aussie Rules Taught Me About Leadership (Leading Diverse Teams)
Coaching a winning team doesn’t end after selection. Leading humans is more than sitting back and watching your skilled players score. You’ll be juggling egos, energy levels, and the occasional dust-up. From the overconfident rookie to the quiet star, everyone is trying their best. Great leaders don’t force uniformity. They build trust, embrace and adapt to difference, and offer support.
Willing to switch up the game plan and transform your team so it can’t lose? Keep your eye on the prize (er…outcomes) and get curious about each player’s unique strengths. You’ll uncover surprising talents hiding in plain sight. Plus, never forget you’re on the team too!
-
From Fix to Fill (Building Teams)
Winning teams need more than just skill. Team building is both art and science.
When coaches and leaders reflect on our goals and fill our gaps, we amplify our chances of success. Caitlin Clark’s leadership, intensity, and scoring ability make her a standout athlete. But risk-taking can lead to turnovers and reliance to exhaustion. Even this powerhouse needs defenders supporting her. She needs teammates to pass to when things get sticky. The same rules apply at work. Take the focus off of “fixing” what each team member lacks. Start “filling” with the unique strengths each player has hiding in plain sight.
Does your team have the right mix of culture, craft, and charisma to meet its goals? Once it does, everyone wins!
-
Playing With ADHD, Not Against It (Skills, Strengths, & Strategy)
We’re on the same team. Whether it’s work or sport, team members have agreed to a common goal and are working together to achieve it.
Focusing on comparison can leave us annoyed with our teammates’ differences – even feeling superior. We easily see character flaws and bad attitudes, rather than seeking to understand. But side-eye and lectures don’t produce better results. The strongest motivator for performance is encouragement, which requires curiosity. The same is true for ADHDers battling their judgy inner monologue.
Our brain is on our team, too! Learn how to nurture the ADHD brain for optimal results.
-
Brought to You by the Letter F: Fixing Frustrating Feedback (Giving & Receiving Actionable Feedback)
Formal reviews feel burdensome when we’re full-out. But folks with ADHD can falter without a formula to follow.
Having difficult conversations is, well, fraught! Reviewees fancy flattery – yet fear failure, fretful we’re frauds. Reviewers face firm pressures and may flail for empathy when fixated on flustering flaws. It’s easy for everyone to fall back on frank, fast, and flimsy. But fuzzy feedback is futile! It fuels friction rather than fixing it.
Does your framework fulfill its function? Fix it by first framing and fact-finding, then field testing and finessing for fully actionable and inclusive feedback!
(This talk is brought to you by the letter F.)
-
Performance Anxiety to High Performance (Giving & Receiving Actionable Feedback)
We’ve all walked into a performance review yearning for firm direction. How often have we left with nothing but vague hints? That’s the curse of subjective feedback. It’s confusing, not clear. Feels personal instead of helpful.
Giving actionable feedback is a skill. It takes practice, especially when we are busy, frustrated, or the stakes are high. Plus, it’s always a two-way street.
Why not transform performance reviews into the perfect inclusion tool – leaving everyone satisfied? Learn to give (and get) actionable feedback using simple tools that support everyone who’s different!
Ask for a full list of Sarah's Topics and Workshops
In addition to the topics/descriptions provided, Sarah has an extensive list of presentations available. Other titles include:
Try Softer Not Harder (Compassionate Leadership)
Employees Are Just Clients That You Pay (Recruitment, Retention, & Results)
Babysitters & Cheerleaders: The ADHDer’s Support Squad
Mountains & Molehills: Motivation & ADHD
#MeToo? Affirming or Denying ADHD (Safety, Empathy & ADHD)
Emotional Executives (Executive Functions & ADHD)
Get Authentic (Belonging & Self-Awareness)
The Professional Power-Play (Creative Collaboration)
Neuroinclusion 101: ADHD in the Workplace
ADHD is often stigmatized as an excuse for laziness and misbehaviour. Yet high performance workplaces often attract people with ADHD. Maybe ADHD isn’t what we think!
Every person with ADHD experiences different symptoms and strengths. Many rely on the support of others to thrive at work. What makes a high-performance workplace so attractive to the ADHD brain? How and why might the positive and negative traits of ADHD show up at work? What role can folks without ADHD play in unlocking their colleagues’ potential? How can we support ourselves?
When we cultivate a neurodiverse workforce, the unique blend of strengths and skills can generate impressive results. Just like every role contributes to a profitable and efficient workplace, so too does every thinking style!
Neuroinclusion 101: ADHD in the Legal Workplace
ADHD is often stigmatized as an excuse for laziness and misbehaviour. Yet nearly 3 times more lawyers report having experience with ADHD than the general population. Maybe ADHD isn’t what we think!
Every person with ADHD experiences different symptoms and strengths. Many rely on the support of others to thrive at work. What makes the legal workplace so attractive to the ADHD brain? How and why might the positive and negative traits of ADHD show up at work? What role can folks without ADHD play in unlocking their colleagues’ potential? How can we support ourselves?
When we cultivate a neurodiverse workforce, the unique blend of strengths and skills can generate impressive results. Just like every role contributes to a profitable and efficient workplace, so too does every thinking style!
Words Matter, De-stigmatizing ADHD & Mental Health
Experts estimate that by age 10, children with ADHD have heard 20,000 negative comments from their teachers alone. Adding parents at home, and peers in and out of school, it’s no wonder they also report lower levels of self-esteem.
It’s hard to know what to say when someone shares their diagnosis. Curiosity plays a pivotal role in getting it right.
Perpetuating myth and stigma is harmful to everyone. We can change the narrative by choosing our words wisely.
Everything You’ve Always Wanted to Know About The “Neurotypical” Brain but Were Afraid to Ask (Stigma & Stereotypes)
Would it surprise you to know that at least 70% of the population may not be neurodivergent at all? And that’s just the percentage we know about!
This group is often referred to as “neurotypical” because their brains only allow them to relate to time, show empathy, manage their emotions, and organize their lives like most other people. They may be held back from taking risks, thinking of wildly creative ideas, or even following their noses to the most unique conclusions. ADHDers have much to learn about this dominant brain type so we can support them at work and foster belonging.
Make curiosity (and humour?) the gateway to stronger relationships in the workplace.
What Aussie Rules Taught Me About Leadership (Leading Diverse Teams)
Coaching a winning team doesn’t end after selection. Leading humans is more than sitting back and watching your skilled players score. You’ll be juggling egos, energy levels, and the occasional dust-up. From the overconfident rookie to the quiet star, everyone is trying their best. Great leaders don’t force uniformity. They build trust, embrace and adapt to difference, and offer support.
Willing to switch up the game plan and transform your team so it can’t lose? Keep your eye on the prize (er…outcomes) and get curious about each player’s unique strengths. You’ll uncover surprising talents hiding in plain sight. Plus, never forget you’re on the team too!
From Fix to Fill (Building Teams)
Winning teams need more than just skill. Team building is both art and science.
When coaches and leaders reflect on our goals and fill our gaps, we amplify our chances of success. Caitlin Clark’s leadership, intensity, and scoring ability make her a standout athlete. But risk-taking can lead to turnovers and reliance to exhaustion. Even this powerhouse needs defenders supporting her. She needs teammates to pass to when things get sticky. The same rules apply at work. Take the focus off of “fixing” what each team member lacks. Start “filling” with the unique strengths each player has hiding in plain sight.
Does your team have the right mix of culture, craft, and charisma to meet its goals? Once it does, everyone wins!
Playing With ADHD, Not Against It (Skills, Strengths, & Strategy)
We’re on the same team. Whether it’s work or sport, team members have agreed to a common goal and are working together to achieve it.
Focusing on comparison can leave us annoyed with our teammates’ differences – even feeling superior. We easily see character flaws and bad attitudes, rather than seeking to understand. But side-eye and lectures don’t produce better results. The strongest motivator for performance is encouragement, which requires curiosity. The same is true for ADHDers battling their judgy inner monologue.
Our brain is on our team, too! Learn how to nurture the ADHD brain for optimal results.
Brought to You by the Letter F: Fixing Frustrating Feedback (Giving & Receiving Actionable Feedback)
Formal reviews feel burdensome when we’re full-out. But folks with ADHD can falter without a formula to follow.
Having difficult conversations is, well, fraught! Reviewees fancy flattery – yet fear failure, fretful we’re frauds. Reviewers face firm pressures and may flail for empathy when fixated on flustering flaws. It’s easy for everyone to fall back on frank, fast, and flimsy. But fuzzy feedback is futile! It fuels friction rather than fixing it.
Does your framework fulfill its function? Fix it by first framing and fact-finding, then field testing and finessing for fully actionable and inclusive feedback!
(This talk is brought to you by the letter F.)
Performance Anxiety to High Performance (Giving & Receiving Actionable Feedback)
We’ve all walked into a performance review yearning for firm direction. How often have we left with nothing but vague hints? That’s the curse of subjective feedback. It’s confusing, not clear. Feels personal instead of helpful.
Giving actionable feedback is a skill. It takes practice, especially when we are busy, frustrated, or the stakes are high. Plus, it’s always a two-way street.
Why not transform performance reviews into the perfect inclusion tool – leaving everyone satisfied? Learn to give (and get) actionable feedback using simple tools that support everyone who’s different!


