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April 15, 2021 08:03 am GMT

Why you should make your site accessible

When creating websites, its easy to think of all users as the same. You often forget that not all users can navigate a website with the same ease as oneself. Thats where accessibility comes into play.

But what is accessibility? As Victor Tsaran, a Technology Program Manager at Google, who also happens to be blind, puts it:

Accessibility is really about making sure that the content and the websites we create are useable to people with various impairments or abilities.

- Victor Tsaran, Technology Program Manager at Google

Your mind might automatically jump to a user who has difficulty using a regular keyboard, mouse, or touch screen. That can be one case, yes. But accessibility also covers all from users with ADHD, who has difficulty focusing, to a person trying to read a screen in direct sunlight.

There are many categories when it comes to accessibility concerns, but the four main areas are:

  • Vision (People with limited vision, low vision, or blindness).
  • Motor/dexterity (People who have difficulty or cant use a mouse / touch screen).
  • Auditory (People who have difficulty hearing or are deaf).
  • Cognitive (People with ADHD, dyslexia, autism, etc.).

You might already be out of breath thinking, Pew, isnt that a lot of work for just a few people?.

Yes. However, all people should be able to access the web, which is why there are also laws & policies for this in place. You can view your countrys law or policy here.

Now, this isnt all stick and no carrot. The fruit of your labor also benefits users without any impairment or disability.

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What if told that making your site accessible benefits all users. Not only that, but it can also have a direct impact on your conversion rate and your SEO rankings.

Sounds too good to be true? Let me explain.

Say youre optimizing your content for vision accessibility; what do you do? You make your content easier to digest by:

  • Making sure you have a nice font size for your body text (E.g., 16px).
  • Ensuring that the font is easy to read and is not disturbing (sorry, Comic Sans).
  • Setting a good line-height (E.g., 150%).
  • Leaving plenty of white space between paragraphs.
  • Selecting the correct contrast for your text (light text on a light background is a no-go).

By optimizing your content, you will increase dwell time and reduce bounce rate and pogo sticking, which all are part of Googles ranking factors.

Dont think good typography matters? See if you can find an old website from the early 2000s. Back then, the font and font size of choice was 11px Verdana. Try reading this today, and you will properly be rubbing your eyes afterward.

Speaking of old websites, remember when we couldnt get enough animated gifs, marquee-elements, and cheesy background images? Do you know why this trend eventually died? Because they were distracting.

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I also claimed that making your website more accessible could directly impact your conversion rate. How?

Well, the obvious answer is, of course, that the more users who can actually access and use your site, the more likely a conversion is to happen. But this isnt what I had in mind. Lets look at optimizing for cognitive accessibility.

Cognitive accessibility covers many topics but generally speaking, its about minimizing distractions.

To minimize distractions, you should find out what your pages primary goal is and then remove unnecessary elements (fluff) that can distract the user from achieving this goal.

To illustrate this, Ive created my very own eCommerce store, TacoTsunami.com, where I sell an organic all-in-one taco kit.

My main goal? To sell my amazing taco kits!

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Heres my current store. Its not converting all that well. Thats because a lot is going on here:

  • I want to sell my Taco kit (Add to cart-button).
  • If they dont want to buy now, I want them to at least save it for later (Add to wishlist-button).
  • I want everyone to know about our new, awesome club! (CHECK OUT OUR NEW TACO CLUB!-text)
  • I want them to sign up for our free newsletter (Sign up for our newsletter-box)
  • I also want them to like this product on Facebook so all their friends can see it! (The Like-button)

Thats five different calls to action on one single page!

Its messy, and it distracts the users from our real goal to sell our awesome taco kit.

Now lets try to remove all the fluff like this:

Alt Text

There cant be any doubt about what action we want the user to take. Removing distractions not only makes your site more accessible to people with cognitive impairments but also improves your conversion rate.

As Victor puts it:

Improving the experience for users with cognitive impairments makes it a so much better experience for everybody else.

-Victor Tsaran, Technology Program Manager at Google

Agreed, Victor

Use Alertdesk to keep track of your pages accessibility

Alertdesk automatically checks your pages accessibility daily both from a Mobile and a Desktop perspective.

Our accessibility reports help you to see what needs fixing on how to do it.

Start tracking your accessibility today with Alertdesk. Try us free for 14 days.


Original Link: https://dev.to/kaspera/why-you-should-make-your-site-accessible-om6

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