There’s so much to consider regarding accessibility when you’re creating a digital experience, whether that’s a mobile app or a brand website.
The term “disability” includes any impairments, activity limitations, or participation restrictions that would keep someone from being able to engage properly in a digital experience.
If you don’t have closed captions for your onboarding videos, people who are deaf or hard of hearing are missing vital information. And if you have a Contact Form that doesn’t allow for keyboard-only navigation and submission, someone with motor disabilities may not be able to get in touch with your brand.
There are four core groups of disabilities that organizations must always account for when considering accessibility and usability in design. Let’s look at each.
Visual impairments include any impact on sight. It covers the following:
In order to accommodate all users with visual impairments, your design team will need to account for:
Auditory impairments cover conditions that result in any degree of loss of hearing. This can include conductive hearing loss, sensorineural hearing loss, or complete deafness.
These are the design accommodations you’ll want to keep in mind for your hard-of-hearing users:
Keep in mind that lawsuits pertaining to videos have increased recently, so prioritizing adding captions and transcripts to video and audio files is crucial.
Motor impairments include any disability that impact coordination or motor control. This may include Cerebral palsy, neural-tube defects, muscle and joint conditions, neurologic conditions, physical labor injuries, and traumatic brain or spine injuries.
Motor impairments aren’t always considered by design teams, but they should be. Here’s what you need to keep in mind:
Cognitive impairments can include motor, attention, problem-solving, text processing, math processing, visual processing, literacy, and learning disabilities. It can also include vestibular disorders and seizures.
This is unfortunately another area that many UX and design teams forget to account for, but you don’t want to miss it.
To create accessible experiences for users with cognitive impairments, remember the following:
Design teams have a lot on their plate; creating solid experiences even for fully able-bodied users isn’t always the simplest task.
Because accessibility issues should be at the core of what you do, however, it’s easier to create an accessible-first foundation and build from there.
This prevents your team from needing to recreate or redevelop entire sections of your app or site because of an accidental blind spot, and it’s easier to add on additional accessibility features in the future as needed.
Need help getting your design teams up to speed with accessibility best practices? We can help. We offer expert training for design teams. Learn more here.