ADHD Leiderschap Video's

The ADHD Leader in Five Videos
An executive summary of the five best videos on ADHD for leaders. Watched together, a hard-science lecture, a personal memoir, a reframe of the whole diagnosis, the coaching angle, and the popular superpower talk converge on a single conclusion.
I recently pulled together a short watch list of the best videos on ADHD for leaders, and having sat with all five again, I wanted to do more than list them. They approach the same subject from five very different directions and arrive at the same place. This is that conclusion, and how it maps onto what I wrote in De ADHD-leider. Watch each clip, then read the short synthesis beneath it.
The science: it is regulation, not attention
ADHD, Self-Regulation and Executive Functioning
Russell Barkley is the researcher most responsible for how the field now understands ADHD, and his central argument reframes everything. ADHD is not, at root, a deficit of attention. It is a difficulty of self-regulation and executive function, the brain's system for managing itself toward a goal that sits in the future. Emotional regulation is part of that same system, not a separate quirk, which is why the feelings run hot.
The practical consequence is the one leaders most need to hear. This is a performance problem, not a knowledge problem. People with ADHD usually know exactly what they should do; the difficulty is doing it at the moment and place it actually matters. That single distinction dismantles the willpower story, and it is the evidence base under the argument that structure is the ADHD leader's discipline.
The lived experience: stop failing at normal
Failing at Normal: An ADHD Success Story
McCabe's talk, watched more than ten million times, supplies what a lecture cannot. She describes years of measuring herself against a neurotypical standard and falling short, and the turn came not when she finally tried hard enough, but when she stopped trying to be normal, built external systems that fit how her mind actually works, and found other people who understood it. The movement is from shame to strategy.
For a leader, that arc is the hidden half of the problem. The exhaustion, the self-doubt, the private conviction of being a fraud despite the results, these cost more than any missed deadline, and they lift the moment the standard changes from "become someone steadier" to "work with the mind you have."
The reframe: a difference, not a defect
ADHD as a Difference in Cognition, Not a Disorder
Tonti's contribution is conceptual. He argues that ADHD is better understood as a difference in cognition than as a disorder, and that the issue is rarely a lack of focus so much as difficulty directing it. Held well, a wide range of interests and a fast, associative mind are assets, not symptoms. This is the intellectual backing for the strengths, the creativity, the drive, the pioneering instinct to start things and move first, that belong beside the challenges rather than beneath them.
The leadership angle: why high performers get coaches
Why do executives have ADHD coaches?
The shortest of the five makes the most direct leadership point. Executives work with ADHD coaches not because they are broken, but because external accountability and structure are precisely what convert a strong, ideas-rich mind into delivered results. It normalises the thing leaders are often ashamed to admit they need, and it matches the development work: delegate the executive function, borrow structure from outside the head, and build the scaffolding deliberately rather than hoping to summon it.
The caveat: a superpower, with conditions
Is Your ADHD Actually a Leadership Superpower?
The last video leans into the popular framing that ADHD is a leadership superpower. It is motivating, and the strengths it celebrates are real. But it deserves the caveat the research demands.
Those advantages are context-dependent, not guaranteed. The same wiring that shines in a launch or a crisis strains in routine, steady-state work. Watched critically, this is a useful corrective to the deficit-only story, provided you do not swallow the headline whole.
The key conclusion
Put the five side by side and the same conclusion emerges from every direction. The neuroscientist, the memoirist, the reframer, the coach, and even the optimist agree that ADHD is a difference in self-regulation carrying both genuine costs and genuine strengths, that effort aimed at the deficit reliably fails, and that what works is external structure at the point of performance, self-understanding that replaces shame with strategy, and roles designed to point the strengths where they pay.
The ADHD leader does not need to become a different person. They need to build the conditions in which the mind they already have does its best work.
Which is the argument of De ADHD-leider in a sentence. The science explains why, the stories show what it feels like, and the coaching shows how. The work is not to fix the instrument. It is to build the section around it.
Read the full article
The long form, with the seven challenges, the strengths hidden in the same wiring, and six concrete development steps.
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De Beste ADHD Video's voor Leiders: Wetenschap, Verhalen, Strategie
- 14 juli 2026
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- in Zelf & Persoonlijke Groei