- Determining IT requirements (legal and business needs) is overwhelming.
- Prioritizing people in the process is often overlooked.
- Mandating changes instead of motivating change isn’t sustainable.
Our Advice
Critical Insight
- Compliance is the minimum; the people and behavior changes are the harder part and have the largest impact on accessibility. Preparing for and building awareness of the reasons for accessibility makes the necessary behavior changes easier. Communicate, communicate, and communicate some more.
- Accessibility is a practice, not a project. Therefore, accessibility is an organizational initiative, however, IT support is critical. Use change management theory to guide the new behaviors, processes, and thinking to adopt accessibility beyond compliance. Determining where to start is challenging, the tendency is to start with tech or compliance, however, starting with the people is key. It must be culture.
- Think about accessibility like you think about IT security. Use IT security concepts that you and your team are already familiar with to initiate the accessibility program.
Impact and Result
- Take away the overwhelm that many feel when they hear ‘accessibility’ and make the steps for your organization approachable.
- Clearly communicate why accessibility is critical and how it supports the organization’s key objectives and initiatives.
- Understand your current state related to accessibility and identify areas for key initiatives to become part of the IT strategic roadmap.
- Build your accessibility plan while prioritizing the necessary culture change
- Use change management and communication practices to elicit the behavior shift needed to sustain accessibility.
Initiate Digital Accessibility For IT
Make accessibility accessible.
EXECUTIVE BRIEF
Analyst Perspective
Accessibility is a practice, not a project.
Accessibility is an organizational directive; however, IT plays a fundamental role in its success. As business partners require support and expertise to assist with their accessibility requirements IT needs to be ready to respond. Even if your organization hasn't fully committed to an accessibility standard, you can proactively get ready by planting the seeds to change the culture. By building understanding and awareness of the significant impact technology has on accessibility, you can start to change behaviors.
Implementing an accessibility program requires many considerations: legal requirements; international guidelines, such as Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG); training for staff; ongoing improvement; and collaborating with accessibility experts and people with disabilities. It can be overwhelming to know where to start. The tendency is to start with compliance, which is a fantastic first step. For a sustained program use, change management practices are needed to change behaviors and build inclusion for people with disabilities.
15% of the world's population identify as having some form of a disability (not including others that are impacted, e.g. caretakers, family). Why would anyone want to alienate over 1.1 billion people?
Heather Leier-Murray
Senior Research Analyst, People & Leadership
Info-Tech Research Group
Disability is part of being human
Merriam-Webster defines disability as a "physical, mental, cognitive, or developmental condition that impairs, interferes with, or limits a person's ability to engage in certain tasks or actions or participate in typical daily activities and interactions."(1)
The World Health Organization points out that a crucial part of the definition of disability is that it's not just a health problem, but the environment impacts the experience and extent of disability. Inaccessibility creates barriers for full participation in society.(2)
The likelihood of you experiencing a disability at some point in your life is very high, whether a physical or mental disability, seen or unseen, temporary or permanent, severe or mild.(2)
Many people acquire disabilities as they age yet may not identify as "a person with a disability."3 Where life expectancies are over 70 years of age, 11.5% of life is spent living with a disability. (4)
"Extreme personalization is becoming the primary difference in business success, and everyone wants to be a stakeholder in a company that provides processes, products, and services to employees and customers with equitable, person-centered experiences and allows for full participation where no one is left out."
– Paudie Healy, CEO, Universal Access
(1.) Merriam-Webster
(2.) World Health Organization, 2022
(3.) Digital Leaders, as cited in WAI, 2018
(4.) Disabled World, as cited in WAI, 2018
Executive Summary
Your Challenge
You know the push for accessibility is coming in your organization. You might even have a program started or approval to build one. But you're not sure if you and your team are ready to support and enable the organization on its accessibility journey.
Common Obstacles
Understanding where to start, where accessibility lives, and if or when you're done can be overwhelmingly difficult. Accessibility is an organizational initiative that IT enables; being able to support the organization requires a level of understanding of common obstacles.
- Determining IT requirements (legal and business needs) is overwhelming.
- Prioritizing people in the process is often overlooked.
- Mandating changes instead of motivating change isn't sustainable.
Info-Tech's Approach
Prepare your people for accessibility and inclusion, even if your organization doesn't have a formal standard yet. Take your accessibility from mandate to movement, i.e. from Phase 1 - focused on compliance to Phase 2 - driven by experience for sustained change.
- Use this blueprint to build your accessibility plan while prioritizing the necessary culture change.
- Use change management and communication practices to elicit the behavior shift needed to sustain accessibility.
Info-Tech Insight
Accessibility is a practice, not a project. Therefore, accessibility is an organizational initiative; however, IT support is critical. Use change management theory to guide the new behaviors, processes, and thinking to adopt accessibility beyond compliance. Determining where to start is challenging because the tendency is to start with tech or compliance; however, starting with the people is key. It must be a change in organizational culture.
Your challenge
This research is designed to help IT leaders who are looking to:
- Determine accessibility requirements of IT based on the business' needs and priorities, and the existing standards and regulations.
- Prepare the IT leaders to implement and sustain accessibility and prepare for the behavior shift that is necessary.
- Build the plan for IT as it pertains to accessibility, including a list of business needs and priorities, and prioritization of accessibility initiatives that IT is responsible for.
- Ensure that accessibility is sustained in the IT department by following phase 2 of this blueprint on using change management and communication to impact behavior and change the culture.
90% of companies claim to prioritize diversity.
Source: Harvard Business Review, 2020
Over 30% of those that claim to prioritize diversity are focused on compliance.
Source: Harvard Business Review, 2022
Accessibility is an organizational initiative
Is IT ready and capable to enable it?
- With increasing rates of lawsuits related to digital accessibility, more organizations are prioritizing initiatives to support increased accessibility. About 68% of Applause's survey respondents indicated that digital accessibility is a higher priority for their organization than it was last year.
- This increase in priority will trickle into IT's tasks – get ahead and start working toward accessibility proactively so you're ready when business requests start coming in.
A survey of nearly 1,800 respondents conducted by Applause found that:
- 79% of respondents rated digital accessibility either a top priority or important for their organizations.
- 42% of respondents indicated they have limited or no in-house expertise or resources to test accessibility.
Source: Business Wire, May 2022
How organizations prioritize digital accessibility
- 43% rated accessibility as a top priority.
- 36% rated accessibility as important.
- Fewer than 5% rated accessibility as either low priority or not even on the radar.
- More than 65% agreed or strongly agreed that accessibility is a higher priority than last year.
Source: Angel Business Communications, 2022
Why organizations address accessibility
Top three reasons:
- 61% To comply with laws
- 62% To provide the best user experience
- 78% To include people with disabilities
Source: Level Access, 2022
Still, most businesses aren't meeting compliance standards. Even though legislation has been in place for over 30 years, a 2022 study by WebAIM of 1,000,000 homepages returned a 96.8% WCAG 2.0 failure rate.
Source: Institute for Disability Research, Policy, and Practice, 2022
Info-Tech's approach to Initiate Digital Accessibility
The Info-Tech difference:
- Phase 1 of this blueprint gets you started and helps you build a plan to get you to the initial compliance driven maturity level. It's focused more on standards and regulations than on the user and employee experience.
- Phase 2 takes you further in maturity and helps you become experience driven in your efforts. It focuses on building your accessibility maturity into the developing, defined, and managed levels, as well as balancing mandate and movement of the accessibility maturity continuum.
Determining conformance seems overwhelming
Unfortunately, it's the easier part.
- Focus on local regulations and what corporate leaders are setting as accessibility standards for the organization. This will narrow down the scope of what compliance looks like for your team.
- Look to best practices like WCAG guidelines to ensure digital assets are accessible and usable for all users. WCAG's international guideline outlines principles that can also aid in scoping.
- In phase 1 of this blueprint, use the Accessibility Compliance Tracking Toolto prioritize criteria and legislation for which IT is responsible.
- Engage with business partners and other areas of the organization to figure out what is needed from IT. Accessibility is an organizational initiative; it shouldn't be on IT to figure it all out. Determine what your team is specifically responsible for before tackling it all.