5 Quick Accessibility Fixes Anyone Can Implement
Web Accessibility is one of those topics that gets added to the “someday” list and stays there. We understand. Teams are stretched, priorities compete, and overhauling an entire digital experience feels overwhelming. But here’s what we’ve learned: most accessibility problems don’t require an overhaul. They require intention.
According to the World Health Organization, over 1.3 billion people globally live with some form of disability. When a website or product isn’t built with accessibility in mind, it quietly turns away a significant portion of its potential audience, often without anyone realising it.
We put together this guide for teams who want to do better but don’t know where to begin. These five fixes are practical, implementable today, and make a meaningful difference to real people.
Fix 01: Add descriptive alt text to every image
Alt text is a short written description attached to an image. When a screen reader encounters an image with no alt text, it either reads out the raw filename, often something like “IMG_20240312_0847.jpg”, or skips it entirely. Neither outcome serves your user. We recommend writing alt text that describes the image’s content and purpose, not just its appearance.
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