Designing for Accessibility: A Guide for Marketers with Real Examples
Accessibility in design isnât just a trendâitâs a necessity. If your website or marketing materials arenât accessible, youâre unintentionally excluding millions of users, including people with disabilities. Great marketing reaches everyone, and that includes those who rely on assistive technologies or specific visual and functional design accommodations.
At Atomic Social, we help brands build inclusive, accessible marketing that performs well, connects deeply, and reaches wider audiences. Here’s how you can start designing for accessibilityâand why it matters more than ever.
Why Accessibility Should Be Part of Every Marketing Strategy
Accessibility improves usability for everyone, not just people with disabilities. It also boosts SEO, improves customer retention, and shows that your brand values inclusivity.
Think about this:
- Over 1 billion people worldwide live with some form of disability.
- Accessible websites have better user engagement and lower bounce rates.
- Inclusive design is favored by search engines and social platforms.
Ignoring accessibility means youâre leaving money on the tableâand damaging your brandâs reputation.
Use Clear, Readable Fonts and Text Contrast
Your typography choices directly affect readability. Stick to fonts that are easy to read and scale well across devices. Avoid decorative or thin fonts, especially for body text.
Also, ensure high color contrast between text and background. Use online tools to test for contrast compliance (e.g., WebAIM or Contrast Checker).
Example: Apple uses simple sans-serif fonts and clear contrast across all their product pages, ensuring every userâregardless of visionâcan read their content comfortably.
Make Navigation Keyboard-Friendly
Accessible sites let users navigate using a keyboard, not just a mouse or touchpad. This is essential for people with motor disabilities.
Your design should include:
- Focus states (so users can see where they are on a page)
- Logical tab order
- Skip navigation links
Example: GOV.UKâs website is a model for clean, accessible navigation. Everything can be reached using keyboard commandsâwithout the user ever needing a mouse.
Donât Rely on Color Alone
Color can be a powerful branding tool, but relying solely on it can exclude users with color blindness. Always pair color with labels, icons, or patterns to reinforce the message.
Example: When using red and green in graphs or buttons, add labels like âSuccessâ or âError,â or use patterns to differentiate data points visually.
Add Alt Text to Images and Media
Every image in your marketing should include alt textâa description of the image that screen readers can read aloud. This helps visually impaired users understand the context and relevance of your visuals.
Also, provide captions or transcripts for videos and audio content to ensure full accessibility.
Example: LinkedIn encourages users to add alt text to uploaded images and automatically adds captions to videos, making their platform more inclusive.
Accessibility Tools Every Marketer Should Know
You donât have to guess whether your site is accessible. Use these tools to test and improve:
- WAVE Accessibility Tool
- Google Lighthouse
- axe DevTools
- Color Oracle (for simulating color blindness)
At Atomic Social, we use these tools in every design audit to ensure your site and content meet modern accessibility standardsâwithout compromising style or performance.
Inclusive Marketing Is Smart Marketing
Designing for accessibility isnât just about complianceâitâs about compassion, effectiveness, and brand longevity. Accessible marketing reaches more people, builds stronger brand loyalty, and gives you an edge in search rankings and user experience.
If your brand is ready to grow with intention and impact, start by making your designs more inclusive. And if you need help getting it right, Atomic Social is here to lead the way.
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