Blueclaw focuses its web design around key accessibility issues. Web accessibility is about ensuring your web site is accessible to all users.
There are an estimated 8.6 million registered disabled people in the UK, totaling 14% of the population. Many of these disabled people find it hard to use the internet by conventional means.
In April 2004 The Disability Rights Commission conducted a report titled ‘The Web: Access and Inclusion for Disabled People’. The report revealed findings of a large-scale study of 1000 British websites. The DRC found that 81% of websites failed to meet the most basic criteria for conformance to web accessibility guidelines.
The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) are set by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), who are the ruling authority on web accessibility guidelines.
We test your web site for accessibility and send you a report detailing areas recommended for change.
There are 3 levels of accreditation which your web site can achieve:
Level A is the most basic level and ensures that all Priority 1 criteria identified by the W3C Web Accessibility Initiative – WCAG 1.0, are met. This level is the minimum standard a site should meet.
Level AA is the second level of accreditation given to a web site under the WCAG. All web sites should aspire to at least level AA, which ensures that all Priority 1 and Priority 2 criteria identified in the WCAG are met.
Level AAA is the highest level of accessibility that a web site can achieve. To reach this level, a web site must meet both Priority 1 and 2 criteria and also Priority 3 criteria, as identified by the WCAG.
Blueclaw will also test HTML coding, internet browser compatibility, Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), and the use of colours.
Blueclaw will help your company achieve the level you require.