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What we do

Advocacy

Listening, advising, organizing, and representing people with accessibility needs.

Lived experience is evidence

Most accessibility consulting tells you what the standards say. Advocacy tells you what those standards miss.

People with accessibility needs navigate digital products, services, and built environments every day. That experience produces knowledge that no automated scanner and no policy document can replicate.

Our advocacy specialists aren't advisors brought in at the end of a project to review a checklist. They're part of the work from the start — informing recommendations, reviewing deliverables, and ensuring that what we produce reflects the people it's meant to serve.

"Accessibility done well is not about making something that passes a test. It's about making something that works for people. That requires people."

Inclusable approach

Part of every consulting engagement

Advocacy isn't a separate service. Our advocacy specialists are integrated into every consulting engagement where their domain is relevant — informing the work, reviewing deliverables, and making sure our recommendations reflect actual lived experience rather than just policy interpretation.

This is what separates a genuine accessibility review from a compliance exercise. Standards are a floor, not a ceiling. Lived experience tells you where the floor is still too low.

Areas of expertise

Our advocacy team covers the major categories of accessibility need. Where a specialist's domain is relevant to your project, they're part of the team.

  • Neurodivergent

    Specialists with direct experience of neurodivergent conditions — including ADHD, autism, dyslexia, and others — advise on cognitive accessibility, interface clarity, and accommodation practices.

  • Hard of hearing and deaf

    Specialists who navigate the world with hearing differences advise on captioning, visual communication, alerting systems, and the gap between what standards require and what actually works.

  • Vision impairment

    Specialists who use screen readers, magnification, and other assistive technologies test and advise on digital accessibility from the perspective of someone who relies on it every day.

  • Mobility

    Specialists with motor and mobility differences advise on keyboard navigation, switch access, touch interaction, and the physical dimensions of accessible design.

Ready to make your organization genuinely accessible?

Talk to us about where you are and where you want to be. No automated report. Just a real conversation.