Ideally, you can address accessibility gaps on your website or mobile app before you run into legal trouble. But if you have received a demand letter from a potential plaintiff, what should you do?
WCAG
You've Received an ADA Demand Letter. Now What?
The Bare Minimum for Web Accessibility
Everyone has to start somewhere. We are often asked where organizations should focus their initial efforts. This post is our attempt to sketch out a bare minimum; this isn’t enough but it should go a long way in improving your site’s user experience for all users while also reducing your risks of being sued under the ADA.
DOJ's New Guidance on Web Accessibility and What It Means For Your Business
New federal guidance is a huge milestone for digital accessibility and an improvement over the previous uncertain status quo. That said, we were disappointed that the contents of the guidance document falls short of what we would have hoped for.
Why Email Accessibility is the Best Place to Start Your Accessibility Journey
Email is a cost effective way to introduce digital accessibility practices to your organization and serve your most engaged audiences.
How Wordle Falls Short on Accessibility
If you participate in social media, you have surely seen at least a few Wordle share grids over the past month or so. The five-letter word guessing game has taken the internet by storm and kept users hungry by releasing only one puzzle each day. In fact, it became so popular that it was quickly bought up by the New York Times for a low-7 figure sum. Wordle also makes for an interesting case study on digital accessibility; it’s not just a typical website with typical best practices to apply, but raises novel questions that force us to think just a bit more empathetically.