Most of the time, accessibility programs usually don’t fail suddenly; they quietly stall. Fewer people are trained, bug fixing slows down, and the accessibility dashboard (which executives no longer watch) plateaus. In extreme cases, accessibility can revert from a program…
Accessibility and Usability: Inline Field Validation vs. Constantly Active Submit Button
User researchers have exhaustively explored the pros and cons of having the submit button active throughout form entry versus validating each field before allowing the user to proceed, and only exposing the submit button when there is a valid value…
How to Avoid Boiling the Accessibility Ocean
Accessibility is often framed as a gigantic task that requires attention to everything at once. People sometimes describe that type of endless activity as “boiling the ocean.” The phrase reflects how things feel when accessibility relies on a small group…
Don’t Fall Into the “Accessibility Grade/Score” Trap
In the rush to make digital products accessible, many teams lean on a single accessibility score or grade to convey how good (or bad) a product is from the accessibility point of view. An example of this might be 92…
What Continuous Improvement Model is Best for Accessibility?
Most organizations start their accessibility journey in reactive mode. A complaint arrives. A defect ticket opens. A fix ships under pressure. The immediate barrier may disappear, yet the system that created it stays intact. Over time, the same issues resurface…
Accessibility Contractors Have Their Place-But It’s Not Everywhere
The all-contractor “accessibility team” has become an increasingly common pattern in organizations trying to build some semblance of an accessibility program while avoiding headcount limits and long-term commitment in expensive locations. While it appears to be an attractive shortcut, unless…
Five accessibility trends to watch in 2026
Accessibility methodology continues to mature. In many organizations, it is moving beyond ad hoc remediation toward more structured, repeatable practices. Even as enforcement signals vary by region, organizations that operate across jurisdictions or sell into markets with stronger accessibility expectations…
2026 Accessibility hiring looks busy, yet the patterns show underlying weakness
Accessibility job postings are up. On a11yjobs.com, even at the end of the year, when things typically slow down, the volume differs meaningfully from what it was even six months ago. Recently, I saw 17 new roles in a single day.…
Everyone Loses When Paying Fines Becomes a Business Strategy
Compliance failures are triggering urgency or internal organizational reckoning less frequently. Instead, they prompt budgeting discussions, legal modeling, and risk acceptance exercises. Fines, legal fees, and settlement agreement costs are appearing in budgets. Legal teams estimate exposure ranges. Finance teams…
The Accessibility Manager Moment No One Warns You About
The demand letter/lawsuit lands first. The questions come next. “Why didn’t anyone tell me?” one or more of the CEO / COO / CFO / Corporate Counsel asks, genuinely surprised. If you work in accessibility leadership, you already know the…









