Change text size:

Choose Style:

Some style changes refresh this page, so please choose your preferred style before filling in a form.

More Than Reasonable: Why employers need to redesign how adjustments work

More Than Reasonable: Why employers need to redesign how adjustments work cover image

More Than Reasonable: Why employers need to redesign how adjustments work

By Rachael Mole, Founder, Moleworks Solutions

In the latest article in our Patchwork Hub Employer Support series, Rachael Mole - Founder of Moleworks Solutions and Patchwork Hub Non-Executive Director - outlines her new white paper, bringing together the evidence, analysis and employer practice on reasonable adjustments to distill key lessons for employers moving forward.


Across the UK, reasonable adjustments are widely understood in principle. They have been embedded in equality law for over 25 years and are regularly referenced in employer policies, guidance, and accreditation schemes. Yet for many Disabled people, access to adjustments remains unpredictable, slow, and inconsistent.

This is not a marginal issue. It is a systemic one.

More Than Reasonable, a new white paper by Moleworks Solutions, brings together evidence, policy analysis, and employer practice to examine why the current system continues to fall short, despite strong legal foundations and widespread awareness. The findings show that the problem is not whether employers care about inclusion, but how adjustments are designed, governed, and delivered inside organisations.

The gap between legal duty and workplace reality

The Equality Act 2010 establishes a clear duty on employers to make reasonable adjustments where Disabled people are placed at a substantial disadvantage. In theory, this creates a strong framework for inclusion. In practice, outcomes vary widely depending on role, manager, organisation, and sector.

My research found that far too often, adjustments are treated as discretionary responses to individual needs rather than as a predictable part of how work operates. Decisions are made informally, timelines are unclear, and learning is rarely captured or shared to improve things for those who come later. The result is a system where access depends on confidence, persistence, and individual advocacy.

This inconsistency is not benign. It actively shapes who feels able to stay in work, progress, or disclose support needs at all.

Good intentions are not enough

Many employers point to commitment, values, or intent when discussing disability inclusion. And this is positive - it suggests a foundation of good intentions to build from. However, while intent matters, More Than Reasonable shows that intent without structure produces uneven and inconsistent outcomes.

Where processes are unclear, responsibility shifts from organisations to the disabled people within them. They are left to navigate fragmented systems, repeatedly explain their needs, and absorb the consequences of delay. At the same time, managers are expected to make judgement calls without adequate guidance, while HR teams inherit risk without reliable data or standards. Everyone is impacted.

In this context, inconsistency is not an accident. It is a predictable outcome of systems that rely on discretion rather than design.

Policy schemes cannot replace employer responsibility

Government schemes and employer-led initiatives are often positioned as solutions to these challenges. Access to Work, Disability Confident, and workplace adjustment passports all have a role to play. At their best, they can enable good practice and remove barriers that would otherwise prevent adjustments being implemented.

However, the white paper is explicit that these mechanisms cannot compensate for weak internal systems.

Access to Work is vital, but is overstretched and slow. Disability Confident signals intent, but lacks robust accountability around converting that intent into tangible actions and improvements. Adjustment passports can be effective, but only when embedded within organisations that already understand and own their responsibilities.

When employers treat these schemes as substitutes for internal capability, rather than as complements to it, the burden is displaced rather than reduced - simply transferred back onto the disabled individuals who require adjustments and those trying to support them. 

Adjustments as workplace infrastructure

A central argument of More Than Reasonable is that reasonable adjustments must be treated as workplace infrastructure. That means designing them into policies, processes, data, and decision-making, rather than responding to them case by case.

This requires a shift in how employers frame the issue. Instead of asking whether a particular adjustment is reasonable for a particular individual, organisations need to ask how their systems are creating disadvantage in the first place.

Infrastructure thinking moves the focus away from exception and towards predictability. It creates clarity about routes, timelines, and accountability. It reduces reliance on individual advocacy and enables learning to be embedded across roles and teams. When this process becomes business as usual, it isn’t just the most efficient way to operate from a business side, but also creates predictability and flexibility so people feel heard, supported and able to received individualised support. 

Crucially, it also recognises that adjustments may need to change over time. Support is not a one-off intervention, but part of an ongoing relationship between people, roles, and working environments.

Why this matters now

The timing of this conversation is not incidental. The UK is facing rising economic inactivity linked to ill health, an ageing workforce, and the long-term effects of Covid. At the same time, work is being reshaped by digital systems and AI-driven tools that increasingly influence recruitment, performance management, and job design.

These developments create both opportunity and risk. Where we end up will depend on us actively mitigating the risks and engaging fully with the opportunities. Technology can reduce friction and enable anticipatory support. And it can embed exclusion at scale if accessibility and governance are not considered from the outset.

Employers therefore face a strategic choice. Continue to manage adjustments as reactive fixes, or redesign systems so access is predictable, timely, and fair. Now is the perfect time to make that shift and ensure we’re embracing the opportunities that the wider policy and tech environment is giving us.

What the evidence shows

More Than Reasonable is accompanied by four in-depth packs that explore different parts of this system:

Together, they demonstrate that most adjustments are low cost, that delays and refusals are common, and that fear of stigma continues to suppress disclosure. They also show that much of the data needed to improve practice already exists, but is rarely connected or acted upon.

Accountability, not aspiration

One of the clearest messages from the white paper is that progress will not come from new slogans or voluntary commitments alone. It requires clearer standards, better data, and shared accountability.

This does not mean a one-size-fits-all model. It does mean moving beyond reliance on individual champions and informal goodwill. Employers need systems that work regardless of who is managing a team, which role someone is in, or whether a person feels safe to disclose.

Without this shift, reasonable adjustments will continue to function as a lottery rather than a right.

A moment for leadership

Employers are operating within a complex policy environment, under genuine pressure. But complexity does not remove obligation. The Equality Act already sets the floor. 

So what should organisations and their leaders be doing next? Engage with the evidence. Read the white paper. Explore the packs. And work with expert support to examine how adjustments are currently designed and delivered in your organisation - not just in policy, but in practice.

Reasonable adjustments are not an edge case. They are a test of how seriously organisations take equity, sustainability, and the future of work. And they’re an area where doing the right thing makes clear commercial sense.


 

 

All Tags
4-day week 9 to 5 Ableism Academia Academy for Disabled Journalists Academy for Disabled SEO Specialists Access2Funding Accessibility Accessibility information Accessible education Accessible locations Accessible places Adaptive fashion Advocacy All-Party Parliamentary Group for Inclusive Entrepreneurship Allyship Alt text Amazon Amnesia Announcement Annual appraisals Annualised flexibility Annualised hours Anxiety Apple Aspiring Entrepreneurs with Disability Development Programme Assistive technology Autism Award Awareness Baroness Jane Campbell Barriers Beth Kume-Holland Beyond compliance Billy Caldwell Blog British Banking Brooke Millhouse Budgeting Bullying BUPA Burnout Business Business Disability Forum Business model creation Business skills Business workshop Businesses Cancer Candidates Cape Town Captioning Captions Careering into Motherhood Carers Caring responsibilities Cash flow Cerebral palsy Characters Charity Charity sector Chronic anxiety Chronic health conditions Chronic migraines Chronic pain Closed captions Clothes Clothing Coca-Cola Cognitive disabilities Comfort zone Communal working Communication Community networks Companies Company Company Corner Company culture Concentration problems Confidence Confucius Consultant Consultation Content creator Content designer Contract work Coping mechanisms Core hours Covid Covid-19 Createive pboelm sovling Data talent Day centres Depression Desert Island Discs Diagnosis Difference Digital and social media marketing Digital transformation Disabilities Disability Advisory Service Disability advocate Disability advocates Disability and Neurodiversity Network Disability awareness Disability Awareness Month Disability Awareness Training Disability community Disability confident Disability Confident Leader Disability employment Disability inclusion Disability law Disability news Disability Policy Centre Disability Pride Disability Startup to Watch Disability talks Disabled Disabled and Proud podcast Disabled candidates Disabled community Disabled entrepreneurs Disabled founders Disabled people Disabled People’s Direct Action Network Disabled talent Disabled team Disabled-led Disabled-led organisations Disbled Students Allowance Disclosure Diversity Diversity Project Dizziness Domestic violence Downing Street ED&I EDDP Education Education and resource platform Educational institution Emotional intelligence Employees Employer best practice Employer Support Series Employment opportunities Employment platform Empowerment Energy-limiting condition Equality Act 2010 Ethnic minorities European Union Eventbrite Evidence-based practice Exams Executive dysfunction Expert teachers Expert training Extreme tiredness Fashion Fashion industry Fathom Fatigue Feedback Finance Finances Financial goals Financial planning Financial plans Financial services Financial services sector Financial Times Flex Plus Flexibility Flexible work Flexible working hours Forbes Freelance FTSE 100 Fund management Funding GAIN Game Gaming Gareth Walkom Garment technologist Gastrointestinal conditions Gem Turner Gender Gender Networks Global Diversity Leaders Gradute Grant Logan Guide dog Harvard University Heaches Health and disability Health issues Healthcare Healthcare professionals Healthy living Healthy working lives Hearing loss Hidden talent pool Homeworking Hospice UK Compassionate Employers Programme House of Lords Houses of Parliament HR Human rights Hybrid working Ian MacKenzie Illness Inclusion Inclusive culture Inclusive workforce Inclusivity Income loss Incomplete Tetraplegia India Inspiration Intellectual capabilities Intensive care Internships Interview process Interviews Investments Investor Invisible disabilities Invisible disability Invisible illness Irwin Mitchell Isaac Harvey Isaac Harvey MBE Istituto Marangoni Jack Wills Job applicant Job descriptions Job interviews Job opportunities Job vacancies Journalism Journalists Kennedy Scholarship Labour market Learning disability Lee Ridley Leeds Leeds trinity university Legislation Let’s Talk About It LGBT Great LGBTQ+ Limb-pelvic hypoplasia LinkedIn LinkedIn influencer Listening service Liz Carr Lloyds Bank Loeys-Dietz Syndrome London London Fashion Week Long-term health condition Long-term health conditions Long-term illness Mapping days Mark Esho Maths Matt Pierri Maya angelou ME ME/CFS Medical condition Medication Meta Metaverse Metro Migrants Misconception Mobility aids Motivation MRI Multinational firm Musculoskeletal conditions National Council for the Training of Journalists National Health Service Nausea NCTJ Neurodivergence Neurodivergent Neurodiverse Neurodiversity consultant Neurodiversity space Neurotype Neurotypes Neurotypical New Delhi New York News NHS Non-disabled founders Non-profit Novos OBS Occupational health Office environment Online internship Online lecture Opportunities Organisations Oxford university Pain Palpitations Pandemic Paralysis Parents Partially sighted Partnership Pastoral support Patchworker Spotlight Patchworkers People Perception of disability Perceptions Performance reviews Personality Phase Eight Phone calls Physical disabilities Pirate video games Policy Policy expert Poverty Presentations Pride Network Primark Processes and systems Productivity Professional Women’s Network Progress Together Public speaking Pulmonary embolism Puneet Singh Singhal Race Race and Ethnicity Network Rachael Mole Radio Raising awareness Recruiters Registered blind Relationships Remote course Remote education Remote learning Remote work Removing barriers Research Residential care Residential colleges Resilience Respite Revenue streams Rights Rowena the Wonderful School Scoliosis Scope Search engine optimisation Secretary of State for Disabled People Selection process Self-care Self-employed Self-employment Senators Senior staff Sexuality Shaw trust Shaw trust power 100 list Sign language SJP Sleep Sleep problems Small Business Britain Social enterprise Social entrepreneur Social good Social impact Social mission Social mobility Social network Social-emotional learning Social-emotional learning platform Software Speaking situation Special Advisor Speech Speech differences Speech disabilities Speech impediment Spinal stroke Spotlight series Spotlight stories Ssstart St. James’s Place Charitable Foundation Staff Stammer Stammering Stoke Mandeville Stonewall Stories Story Strategy Student disability representative Stuttering Style Supportive network Sustainable change Sweaty Betty Target market Tech for good fellowship Tech industry Tech talent TechRound TEDx Temporal lobe epilepsy Tesco The Pursuits of Darleen Fyles Think tank Tinsel Girl Training Transcription UCL UK Government Underrepresentation Unhidden Unhidden Clothing United States Congress Universities University lectures University of Leicester Unlearning Ableism Vanessa Castañeda Gill Victoria Beckham Video editor Video game Vimeo Violence Virgin Virtual reality VR Walks Like a Duck Wealth management Web accessibility What If Everyone Was Disabled Wheels and Wheelchairs Women Women’s Hour Work environment Work experience Work from home Work location Working conditions Working day Working Families Group Working from home Working hours Working week Workplace Workplace adjustments Yale University Youth Zoom Abc Ability Today Access to work Accessibility in the workplace Accessibility test Accessible work Accessible working Acting Adhd Adjustments Administrative Adrian lord Advice Advocacy and campaigns Allparty parliamentary group for inclusive entrepreneurship American civil rights movement Android Anglonorman App Artificial intelligence Artificial Intelligence (AI) Bad grammar Barriers to work Bbc Benefits Blind persons act Blue badge Blue badge service specialists Care Career Carer Celia Chartres-Aris Celtic languages Center on everyday lives of families Ceo Cfs Chloe tear Chronic fatigue syndrome Chronic health condition Chronic illness Community Community story Companies house Compressed hours Coronavirus Councils Covid19 Crystal mark standard Deaf Design Dictionary Digital accessibility Disability Disability advocacy Disability and creative arts Disability discrimination act Disability employment gap Disability inclusion Disability rights movement Disability services Disabled leadership Disabled peoples direct action network Disabled persons employment act Disabled-led organisation Easy read Email address Employer Spotlight Employers Employment English English speakers Entrepreneur Entrepreneurship Epilepsy Equality Equality act Equality and diversity Equality of access Esources, disability, disability services, support services, community story, features, adjustments, social support network Esse vero eum nisi a Eugenics Facebook Feature Features Fibromyalgia First world war Flexi Flexible working Flexitime Flextime Founder Francesco cirillo Freelancing French Gcses Gdpr General data protection regulation Good Good grammar Google Government policy Government support Graduate Graduates Grammar Grammar schools Health Health condition Health conditions Hearing impairment History History of language Holistic Ico Impact Impactful Imposter syndrome Inclusive entrepreneur network Inequalities Inequality Information commissioners office Information governance Instagram Internet Jacqueline winstanley Laborum Magna moles Language Latin Law Learning difficulties Lexicographers Limited company Local councils Local government Making a difference Marketing strategy Mecfs Medical conditions Medical model of disability Medical vs social models of disability Medicines Mental health Middle english Mindfulness Mlm Mobility issues Multilevel marketing Nam eaque iure aut v National league of the blind Neurodiversity Niya Normans Not Your Grandmas Old english Old french Onboarding and retention Online Out of work Oxbridge Oxford University Parent Passwords Patchwork hub Payment details Planning Planning for work Podcasts Policy change Pomodoro Preposition Press release Private schools Psychiatric Psychiatry Punctuation React Reasonable adjustments Recruitment Remote working Resources Resources and support Rest Retinopathy of prematurity Sales Scam Search engine Second world war Shell shock Slang Sociability Social Cipher Social interactions Social media Social model of disability Social support network Socialising Spelling Spoken language Spotlight series Spotlight stories St. James’s Place Standard english Startup State schools Student Students Studying Suffragette movement Support Support services Symptoms The Disability Policy Centre The elderly Then barbara met alan Universal inclusion University Victoria Jenkins Visual impairment Ways of working Work structure Workforce recruitment Working environment Workplace barriers Young carer