The Best Jobs for People with Dyslexia (10 Tech Roles That Play to Your Strengths)

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The Best Jobs for People with Dyslexia (10 Tech Roles That Play to Your Strengths) was originally published on Mentra.

Dyslexia gets framed as a reading disorder. A deficit. Something to “overcome.”

But in tech, dyslexic professionals often outperform their neurotypical peers, not despite dyslexia, but because of it.

The same brain wiring that makes linear text processing difficult creates advantages elsewhere: exceptional visual-spatial reasoning, big-picture thinking, creative problem-solving, and the ability to see patterns and connections others miss. These aren’t soft skills, they’re the foundation of product design, system architecture, and strategic thinking.

Companies are starting to recognize this.

Jobs for people with dyslexia

Research shows that dyslexic entrepreneurs are overrepresented in Silicon Valley, and tech giants increasingly seek out dyslexic talent for roles requiring spatial reasoning and creative systems design.

Here are 10 jobs for people with dyslexia becomes a competitive advantage.

1. UX/UI Designer

Salary Range: $70K–$120K Why it works: Visual-spatial thinking dominates. Success depends on seeing user flows, designing intuitive interfaces, and thinking in systems, not reading documentation.

Dyslexia strengths it leverages: Visual thinking, spatial reasoning, empathy for user confusion, pattern recognition in behavior.

What the work looks like: Wireframing interfaces, prototyping interactions, conducting usability tests, collaborating with developers. Tools like Figma are visual-first.

Accommodations that help: Voice-to-text for documentation, pair design sessions, video demos instead of written specs.

2. Product Manager

Salary Range: $100K–$160K 

Why it works: Success requires synthesizing disparate information, seeing the big picture, and making strategic decisions—not writing perfect PRDs. Visual roadmaps and diagrams matter more than prose.

Dyslexia strengths it leverages: Big-picture thinking, connecting user needs to business goals, creative problem-solving, visual communication.

What the work looks like: Defining product strategy, prioritizing features, coordinating across teams, presenting to stakeholders. Whiteboards and visual roadmaps over lengthy documents.

Accommodations that help: Templates for recurring documents, voice recording meetings, visual roadmapping tools like Miro.

3. Solutions Architect

Salary Range: $120K–$180K 

Why it works: Architecture is spatial reasoning seeing how systems connect, where bottlenecks form, how data flows. Dyslexic brains excel at 3D systems thinking.

Dyslexia strengths it leverages: Systems thinking, spatial reasoning, pattern recognition across architectures, creative solutions to constraints.

What the work looks like: Designing system architectures, diagramming data flows, evaluating technology tradeoffs, presenting to engineering teams. Architecture diagrams over documentation.

Accommodations that help: Diagramming tools like Lucidchart, recorded presentations, collaborative whiteboarding.

4. Data Visualization Specialist

Salary Range: $70K–$110K 

Why it works: Turning complex data into visual stories requires spatial reasoning and pattern recognition, core dyslexic strengths. Reading spreadsheets is minimal; visual design is everything.

Dyslexia strengths it leverages: Visual thinking, pattern recognition in data, creative visualization approaches, storytelling through design.

What the work looks like: Building dashboards, designing infographics, creating interactive visualizations, presenting data insights. Tools like Tableau and D3.js.

Accommodations that help: Voice-to-text for reports, pair analysis sessions, visual-first tools.

5. Creative Technologist

Salary Range: $80K–$130K 

Why it works: Blending art, design, and code requires thinking across domains, connecting ideas others see as separate. Dyslexic brains naturally bridge these gaps.

Dyslexia strengths it leverages: Cross-domain thinking, creative problem-solving, visual prototyping, seeing unconventional connections.

What the work looks like: Prototyping interactive experiences, coding creative installations, experimenting with emerging tech, collaborating across design and engineering.

Accommodations that help: Visual coding tools, prototype-first workflows, collaborative creation.

6. Game Designer

Salary Range: $60K–$110K 

Why it works: Game design is spatial reasoning, systems thinking, and creative problem-solving, all dyslexic strengths. Success depends on how mechanics feel, not how documentation reads.

Dyslexia strengths it leverages: Systems thinking, spatial reasoning, creative mechanics design, player empathy.

What the work looks like: Designing game mechanics, prototyping levels, balancing systems, playtesting. Visual prototypes and gameplay over written specs.

Accommodations that help: Video-based documentation, visual design tools, prototype-driven iteration.

7. 3D Modeler / Technical Artist

Salary Range: $60K–$100K 

Why it works: Pure spatial reasoning work. Creating 3D assets, optimizing models, and lighting scenes requires visualizing objects in space, a core dyslexic strength.

Dyslexia strengths it leverages: Spatial reasoning, visual thinking, attention to form and structure, creative problem-solving.

What the work looks like: Modeling 3D assets, texturing, rigging, optimizing for performance. Tools like Blender, Maya, Unreal Engine.

Accommodations that help: Video tutorials, visual workflows, minimal text-based documentation.

8. Network Engineer

Salary Range: $70K–$120K 

Why it works: Networks are spatial systems, seeing how traffic flows, where congestion happens, how redundancy protects. Dyslexic brains excel at visualizing these topologies.

Dyslexia strengths it leverages: Spatial reasoning, systems thinking, pattern recognition in network behavior, troubleshooting complex flows.

What the work looks like: Designing network architectures, troubleshooting connectivity, optimizing traffic flows, documenting in diagrams. Network diagrams over text.

Accommodations that help: Visual network mapping tools, diagram-first documentation, recorded troubleshooting sessions.

9. Video Editor / Motion Graphics Designer

Salary Range: $50K–$90K 

Why it works: Editing is visual sequencing, seeing how clips flow, where cuts belong, how motion guides attention. Zero text processing required for core work.

Dyslexia strengths it leverages: Visual sequencing, spatial reasoning in timeline, creative transitions, storytelling through motion.

What the work looks like: Cutting video, designing motion graphics, color grading, sound design. Tools like Premiere, After Effects, DaVinci Resolve.

Accommodations that help: Visual-first tools, minimal text-based workflows, collaborative review processes.

10. Entrepreneurship / Startup Founder

Salary Range: Variable 

Why it works: Dyslexic founders are overrepresented in Silicon Valley. Big-picture vision, creative problem-solving, and seeing opportunities others miss drive startup success.

Dyslexia strengths it leverages: Visionary thinking, creative problem-solving, seeing market gaps, connecting disparate ideas, resilience from overcoming challenges.

What the work looks like: Defining vision, product strategy, fundraising, team building. Delegating detail-heavy tasks, focusing on strategy and relationships.

Accommodations that help: Executive assistants for documentation, voice-to-text, visual presentations, collaborative tools.

What These Roles Have in Common

These jobs reward dyslexic cognitive strengths:

Visual-spatial dominance: Success depends on seeing systems, flows, and structures, not processing linear text.

Big-picture thinking: Strategy and architecture matter more than execution details.

Pattern recognition: Spotting connections across domains, finding creative solutions, seeing what others miss.

Systems thinking: Understanding how components interact, where bottlenecks form, how complexity behaves.

Creative problem-solving: Finding unconventional approaches when standard solutions don’t fit.

Beyond the Job Title: Building a Dyslexia-Friendly Workflow

The role matters, but so does how you work. Look for:

Visual-first tools: Figma, Miro, Lucidchart, Notion (visual databases), diagramming over docs.

Voice-to-text capabilities: Dictate emails, messages, documentation.

Collaborative workflows: Pair design, whiteboard sessions, video walkthroughs.

Asynchronous communication: Loom videos over Slack essays, recorded demos over written specs.

Clear templates: Reduce cognitive load on recurring documents.

Diagram-driven documentation: Architecture diagrams, flowcharts, visual specs over prose.

Finding Dyslexia-Friendly Tech Companies

Look for companies that:

  • Value visual communication and prototypes over lengthy documentation

  • Offer flexible communication methods (video, voice, diagrams)

  • Measure results over process

  • Provide assistive technology support

  • Have neurodiversity hiring programs

Microsoft, SAP, and other tech companies with neurodiversity programs explicitly accommodate dyslexic working styles. Their interview processes allow visual demonstrations, and workplace accommodations include speech-to-text software, visual collaboration tools, and flexible documentation formats.

The Dyslexia Advantage in Tech

Richard Branson. Steve Jobs. Ingvar Kamprad (IKEA founder). Charles Schwab. All dyslexic. All built billion-dollar companies by leveraging strengths others overlooked.

The tech industry increasingly recognizes what these founders proved: dyslexia isn’t a reading disorder that limits potential, it’s a different cognitive profile that excels at visual thinking, systems design, and creative problem-solving.

Ready to find tech companies that value your strengths? Create your neuroprofile on Mentra. We match dyslexic professionals with employers who hire based on cognitive strengths, not resumes that hide who you are.

About the Author: This article was researched and written for Mentra’s neurodivergent community. For more career guides, join our Discord community or follow us on LinkedIn

Curated by uConnect