Digital accessibility

Digital accessibility is the practice of designing websites, apps, emails, and other digital content so that they can be used effectively by people with a diverse range of abilities and disabilities.

This includes people with visual impairments who use screen readers, people with hearing impairments who rely on captions for video content, people with motor impairments who navigate using keyboard controls rather than a mouse, and people with cognitive differences who benefit from clear language and predictable layouts. Accessibility is not a checklist to satisfy compliance; it is a design principle that makes digital experiences better for everyone.

The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), developed by the W3C, are the internationally recognised standard for digital accessibility. They are organised around four principles: Perceivable, Operable, Understandable, and Robust (POUR). WCAG 2.1 is the current widely adopted version, with compliance levels A, AA, and AAA. In the UK, public sector organisations are legally required to meet WCAG 2.1 AA. Many private sector organisations adopt the same standard as best practice to reduce legal risk.

For B2B content and email marketers, accessibility affects a practical set of daily decisions: writing descriptive ALT text for images, using sufficient colour contrast between text and backgrounds, structuring emails and web pages with proper heading hierarchies, providing text alternatives for video content, and using plain language that does not rely on jargon or complex syntax. Making these practices habitual improves the experience for a significant portion of your audience, including people with permanent disabilities, situational impairments, and varying levels of digital literacy.

What is WCAG and why does it matter?

WCAG stands for Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). It is the internationally recognised standard for web and digital accessibility. The guidelines are organised around four principles (Perceivable, Operable, Understandable, Robust) and specify success criteria at three compliance levels (A, AA, AAA). WCAG 2.1 AA is the most widely required compliance level, mandated for UK public sector websites and adopted as best practice by many private sector organisations.

How do I make my emails more accessible?

Key steps for accessible email design include: use ALT text on every image to describe what it shows; ensure sufficient colour contrast between text and background (a minimum contrast ratio of 4.5:1 for normal text); use a clear, logical heading hierarchy in your email HTML; avoid using colour as the only way to convey information; use a readable font size (minimum 14px for body text); make links descriptive rather than generic (‘Download the guide’ rather than ‘Click here’); and test your email with screen readers to experience it as visually impaired recipients do.

Is digital accessibility a legal requirement?

For UK public sector organisations, yes: the Public Sector Bodies Accessibility Regulations 2018 require websites and apps to meet WCAG 2.1 AA. For private sector organisations, there is no single accessibility law in the UK that mandates a specific technical standard, but the Equality Act 2010 requires that reasonable adjustments be made to ensure disabled people can access goods and services. This has implications for digital products and content. In practice, meeting WCAG 2.1 AA is increasingly treated as the baseline for both legal compliance and ethical design practice.

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