What Web Design Agencies Should Know About Web Accessibility
The best web design agencies know how to create stunning websites that engage all users with intuitive designs. This includes users with disabilities.
Understand how to achieve compliance and protect your business. We share web development techniques and all that we’ve learned on the front lines of accessibility.
The best web design agencies know how to create stunning websites that engage all users with intuitive designs. This includes users with disabilities.
WCAG 3.0 will be easier to understand, cover more needs, and be more flexible. It will be similar yet very different from previous WCAG versions.
Schools must understand web accessibility requirements, remove accessibility barriers, and prevent legal action due to poor website accessibility.
Is the Online Accessibility Act the solution to clearly defined web accessibility standards and fewer web accessibility complaints?
Using accurate semantics in our lists will strengthen our accessibility foundation as well as increase the readability, understanding and retention of our audience.
The semantic structure of a web page plays an important role in making a website accessible. In fact, we consider well structured semantic HTML to be the foundation of a great website.
Recent cases show that as we continue to wait for the U.S. Department of Justice to issue strict regulations on web accessibility, courts continue to prove that web accessibility is a legal requirement.
As with anything new, there is a learning curve to testing and applying web accessibility. Just like we don’t expect a baby to know how to type just because we hand him a laptop, we don’t expect business owners to know how to test for web accessibility just because they have a website.
A website that complies with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) is more than meets the eye—literally. In order to know if a website is ADA compliant, it’s important to understand what an ADA compliant website actually is.
Both Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) and Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) affect a website’s accessibility. Working together, they offer powerful tools to increase accessibility, search engine optimization (SEO), and overall user experience.