The Business Case for Accessibility

Melissa Foley, Senior User Experience Designer

Article Categories: #Strategy, #News & Culture, #Accessibility

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Prioritizing and improving accessibility – an issue magnified by the COVID-19 pandemic – could far outweigh the cost and liability of ignoring it, and that helps your bottom line.

We’ve all heard the reasons why business owners don't prioritize accessibility. We might even be guilty of buying into these reasons ourselves: There aren’t that many people with a disability, and people with disabilities probably don’t use my website. Only big companies have to worry about accessibility. It’s too hard, it takes too much time, and it costs too much money.

If you have a disability, you probably already understand this issue and know the value and importance of accessibility. But if you don't have a disability, these misguided concerns might just be the reason your digital properties – websites and mobile apps – remain inaccessible.

So, what if I told you that the business case for prioritizing and improving accessibility could far outweigh the cost and liability of ignoring it?

Are you missing out on a $13 trillion market?

In the United States alone, almost 1-in-4 non-institutionalized adults – more than 61 million people – live with some type of disability, according to the CDC. That makes the population of people with disabilities larger than the entire Hispanic population in the country – approximately 60.6 million people, the largest ethnic, racial, or cultural minority.

But people with disabilities don’t just make up the largest minority group in the United States, they also have one of the largest discretionary incomes among working-age people in the country. The National Organization on Disability estimates that Americans with disabilities represent more than $200 billion in discretionary spending annually.

Source: "Disability Impacts ALL of US" from the CDC

Internationally, the numbers are even more compelling. According to a 2020 Return on Disability report, the estimated number of people living with a disability globally is 1.85 billion, making it a market larger than China and the European Union combined.

When you include their friends and family, you add another 3.3 billion potential consumers who act on their emotional connection to someone with a disability. Together, disability touches 73% of consumers and controls more than $13 trillion in disposable income.

Disability touches 73% of consumers and controls more than $13 trillion in disposable income.

And those consumers, their families, and their $13 trillion are increasingly choosing to spend that money with companies that delight and wow them with their accessible experiences. So, when you prioritize digital accessibility, you're solidifying your place in a market whose buying power and emphasis on digital inclusion only continues to grow.

Are you opening yourself up to potential liability?

By ignoring digital accessibility, you might not only be losing out on a huge market – you could be opening yourself up to liability, potentially costing your business millions. According to Accessible 360, “plaintiffs win 90% of digital accessibility cases that actually make it to court, and many more settle confidentially within days.”

Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act says that individuals can’t be discriminated against “on the basis of disability in the full and equal enjoyment of goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages, or accommodations of any place of public accommodation by any person who owns, leases, or operates a place of public accommodation.”

In 2016, Guillermo Robles sued Domino’s Pizza because he could not use their website or mobile app to order food, even with the assistance of the screen reading technology he used because of his vision impairment. Robles argued that Domino’s was required to make its digital platforms meet the requirements of the ADA.

The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco ruled in Robles’ favor, saying Title III of the ADA can apply to websites and mobile apps because they facilitated access to Domino’s physical locations.

Domino’s appealed and, in 2019, the United States Supreme Court declined to hear the appeal, the first time a web accessibility case had reached the Supreme Court. This decision opens businesses up to the possibility that they could be held liable if their content does not meet accessibility standards established by WCAG 2.0 AA - or now possibly the stricter WCAG 2.1 AA guidelines. As of March 2021, the case is still unresolved.

Source: "App and Web Accessibility Lawsuits - What’s New in 2020" on UsableNet

The University of Cincinnati Law Review’s analysis of the case stressed that “retailers should reformulate their websites to be in compliance with the standards of the ADA” to help what Domino’s feared would become a “tsunami of litigation.” Or they could find that the cost of inaction was much more than the cost of action.

They referenced a 2006 class-action lawsuit filed by the National Federation of the Blind against Target, arguing that Target’s website was not accessible. After two years, Target settled the case for almost $10 million, saying it would make changes to its website to make it more accessible and establish a $6 million fund to compensate the plaintiffs. A year later, the district court judge also awarded $3.7 million in attorney’s fees and costs to the plaintiffs.

Over the last five years, the number of digital accessibility-related lawsuits has increased more than 1,100% – from 262 in 2016 to 3,350 in 2020.

In January 2020, the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) went into effect, with reach that extends to websites that sell to California residents, not just companies that are located in California. That created more avenues to sue for damages because of non-accessible websites and mobile apps.

According to statistics compiled by UsableNet, the number of lawsuits involving website, mobile app, and video accessibility rose to its highest number ever in 2020, an increase of 23% from 2019. Over the last five years, the number of lawsuits has increased more than 1,100% – from 262 in 2016 to 3,350 in 2020.

The issue of digital accessibility was magnified because of COVID-19. As the country saw lockdowns, more customers went online when they couldn’t visit traditional brick and mortar establishments. Companies scrambled to quickly build or add to their online presence to capture that increased digital market.

And that increased reliance on digital properties was mirrored by an increase in accessibility complaints. In addition to the highest number of accessibility-related lawsuits, lawsuits increased by 50% after the initial COVID lockdowns in April and May, with the numbers steadily increasing through the end of the year, even as many lockdown measures were eased.

“Customers who were previously willing to ignore accessibility issues because they could just visit a physical retail location may no longer have that option due to shut-downs, stay-at-home orders, or simply new customer preferences for contactless purchasing options,” according to an article by the McAfee & Taft law firm.

Source: "A Record-Breaking Year for ADA Digital Accessibility Lawsuits" on UsableNet

While this might not be the tsunami that Domino’s feared, it does represent a substantial increase in litigation – accelerated by more reliance on digital technology due to COVID-19 – and should be something that worries you. A 2019-20 WebAIM study found that 98% of the top 1 million website homepages have detectable WCAG failures and each homepage averaged more than 60 errors.

Are you making your website better for everyone?

Making your site accessible isn’t just about making sure that people with disabilities have access, it also increases usability for everyone.

Source: "Design Delight from Disability" by the Return on Disability Group

When you add captions to your video embeds, you not only help those with hearing impairments interact with the content, you help people who may be someplace that is noisy – riding on a bus – or in a quiet environment – an office or library. Captions also help everyone understand your content better, and that leads to higher overall user engagement.

When you add keyboard navigation to your website, you not only help people who may have motor impairments, you help people who are multitasking and people – like me – who prefer using keyboard shortcuts.

When you meet color contrast guidelines, you not only help people with vision problems, you help someone experiencing glare because they are using their phone outside in the sun.

When you simplify your navigation, you not only help people with cognitive disabilities, you help everyone because no one wants to waste time trying to find what they are looking for on your website.

So now that you are thinking about improving the accessibility of your digital products – with an eye on increasing market access and decreased liability – never forget that those changes help EVERYONE. Accessibility improvements are usability improvements, and that helps your bottom line.

Melissa Foley

Melissa is a senior user experience designer in Raleigh, North Carolina. With the goal of making websites more user-friendly and accessible, she focuses on information architecture and content strategy.

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