Many of AI's early adopters have ADHD, and that makes sense. ADHD isn't a question of ability or talent. It's a challenge of executive functioning: the starting, the organizing, the prioritizing, the finishing. It's the gap between having a brilliant idea and actually bringing it to life.
Configured correctly, AI becomes the collaborator that ADHD brains have always needed to help avoid overthinking, provides structure without rigidity, and turn scattered brilliance into completed work. It's the tool that helps those with ADHD use all of their talents and actually bring their ideas to life.
Liz speaks from experience, not just research. This isn't clinical. It's practical, personal, and built for people who've spent a lifetime being told to try harder when what they needed was a better system.
Why This Matters Now
Neurodivergent professionals are some of AI's earliest and most creative adopters. This keynote validates that experience and gives practical frameworks that work with the ADHD brain, not against it.