Beyond Ramps: Practical Equity Through Daily Design Decisions
Every designer I know wants their work to be inclusive. But when a project deadline looms, accessibility checklists often shrink to a few color contra...
11 articles in this category
Every designer I know wants their work to be inclusive. But when a project deadline looms, accessibility checklists often shrink to a few color contra...
Most digital accessibility efforts start with an audit. A tool scans the page, flags low-contrast text and missing alt attributes, and a team scramble...
Accessibility compliance is the floor, not the ceiling. Many teams celebrate passing an automated audit, only to hear real users describe experiences ...
Most teams know they should make their websites and apps accessible. They run automated checks, add alt text, maybe test with a screen reader once. Bu...
Every organization we talk to says they value equity. Yet the gap between a stated commitment and a team that actually feels fair is often wide—and st...
Most teams treat accessibility as a checklist. They run an automated scanner, fix the low-hanging contrast errors, and call it done. But compliance wi...
Every week, someone lands on your website and cannot read a button label, hear a video, or navigate a form. By 2025, that someone might be a customer,...
For many teams, accessibility starts and ends with a checklist. Run an automated scan, fix the red flags, publish a VPAT, and call it done. But anyone...
Most teams treat web accessibility as a checklist to tick before launch. They run an automated scan, fix the low-hanging contrast errors, add alt text...
Accessibility is often reduced to a checklist: install a ramp, add alt text, ensure color contrast. But true inclusion demands more than meeting minim...
Where the Digital Divide Shows Up in Real Work The digital divide is not a single gap but a collection of barriers that vary by community, context, an...