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Most companies treat bug reporting as a necessary administrative function. Submit a form, wait for a ticket number, receive a generic acknowledgment, never hear what happened next. The process is designed to manage information flow into the organisation rather than to actually engage the people who are giving you the most valuable signal you have.
Mentra is thinking about this differently, and it starts with understanding what the neurodivergent community is actually like when you give them a real channel.
Neurodivergent users interact with digital products in ways that reveal edge cases, friction points, and logical inconsistencies that neurotypical users either do not notice or do not bother to report. An autistic user who encounters an unclear error message will not assume they are missing something obvious. They will follow the literal instructions to the letter and then report back precisely what happened and why it did not make sense. An ADHD user who loses the thread of an onboarding flow can tell you exactly the moment their attention dropped and what was missing that would have kept them engaged.
This is not a niche use case. It is the most honest product feedback you can get.
Traditional bug reporting forms have a participation problem. They feel like homework. They require switching context from the experience that just frustrated you to a structured form with fields you may not know how to fill in. By the time most users get to the form, the momentum of the moment is gone and so is the detail.
A conversational bug bounty system, where users can report issues through a familiar chat interface that asks the right follow-up questions, changes the participation rate and the quality of the information. Instead of 'describe the bug,' the interface asks what you were trying to do, what happened instead, and what you expected to happen. Those three questions surface actionable information in a fraction of the time.
For a neurodivergent community that tends to be both highly observant and highly motivated when they feel genuinely heard, a well-designed feedback system does not just capture bugs. It builds the kind of trust that turns users into advocates.
The companies that do this well share a consistent trait: they treat user feedback as a product conversation rather than a support ticket. They close the loop. When a community member reports something and it gets fixed, they hear about it. When a suggestion shapes a product decision, the person who made it knows.
This is disproportionately important for a neurodivergent community, where the lived experience of not being heard, of having needs dismissed or deprioritised, of being told that the way you experience something is an exception rather than a signal, runs deep. A product that demonstrably listens is doing something genuinely different.
The best product teams do not build for their users. They build with them. The difference shows up in everything.
Mentra is building its feedback infrastructure on this principle. The community is not a source of support tickets. It is the most direct line to understanding what the platform needs to be. That feedback loop, done well, is also a model for what good neurodivergent-friendly product thinking looks like at every stage.
Join the Mentra community and help shape the platform at mentra.com
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