Black and White photograph of a person’s eye, with a small logo of the Interaction Design Foundation at the bottom.

Great UX Design Is One That Works for Everyone

Kasturika
UsabilityGeek
4 min readMay 21, 2021

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Earlier this year, I saw Rebecca Knill’s TED talk about how technology has changed what’s it’s like to be deaf. It was, umm, an eye-opener for me. As UX designers, we pride ourselves on empathizing with our users. But when it comes to people who have disabilities, what we actually do, is sympathize with them. People with disabilities don’t want anyone to design for them out of pity. What they want, is to be accepted as who they are. That is a fundamental shift in mindset.

Every year, the third Thursday of May is celebrated as Global Accessibility Awareness Day (GAAD). Today marks the tenth anniversary of this movement. The official website of GAAD states that there are more than 1 billion people around the world with disabilities and impairments. Yes, that’s a billion with a capital B. And yet, when it comes to serving these 1 billion users, we fall short. A survey last year by WedAIM revealed that 98.1% of websites fail to meet at least one accessibility guideline as laid out by W3C. Clearly, there’s a lot of ground to cover.

Initiatives like the GAAD are an opportunity for us to start conversations, and bring accessibility into focus. Instead of looking at accessibility from a purely compliance or technical perspective, it is important that we make users with different abilities part of our design process. Here are just some of the ways you can begin designing for accessibility:

  • Include people with different abilities in your user research.
  • Ask them about their challenges, and how they get around them.
  • Create personas and storyboards to include them in your design process.
  • Simulate the experience by disconnecting your mouse and turning off your screen. Switch off the speaker, or hit the mute button.
  • Familiarize yourself with the tools your users are familiar with, such as screen readers and head sticks, and make sure your design works well with those tools.
  • Most importantly, test for accessibility. No matter how well you do your research and simulate the experience, test with real people.

Designing for Accessibility Improves UX for Everyone

People with disabilities can offer you perspectives that ordinary people cannot. Think about the ramps beside staircases that make it possible for those on wheelchairs to move about independently. But it’s not just wheelchair users who use the ramp. Everyone does! Those who are tired, who’re dragging heavy luggage bags, or those who’re recovering from injuries find it easier to use the ramp instead of the stairs.

A bell curve, that depicts the distribution of users. The extreme users are fewer in number and lie at the narrow edges of the bell, while the majority is represented by the central large curve.
© Teo Yu Siang and Interaction Design Foundation, CC BY-NC-SA 3.0

Similarly, when the contrast ratio of the text on screens is high, everyone can read the text without straining their eyes, not just people with low vision. And when we introduce closed captions on videos, it helps us when we forget our earphones, or when we can’t understand the dialogue. People with disabilities are extreme users. When we serve them, we make life easier for the entire user base.

Where To Begin Learning About Accessibility

Accessibility covers a wide spectrum, and it can be an overwhelming subject for beginners. To help you get started, here are some resources:

Great design is one that works for everyone. And when it works well for people with different abilities, it will invariably improve the user experience for people with regular abilities.

Black and White photograph of a person’s eye, with the caption “25% off digital accessibility course”.

The Interaction Design Foundation is the world’s largest online design school and offers 30+ courses. In honor of Global Accessibility Awareness Day, this year, the IxDF is offering 25% off on your first year of the annual membership.

With an annual membership, you gain access to all courses, a 90% discount on live webinars with industry experts as well as discounts on design tools.

Get 25% off on a membership with the Interaction Design Foundation.

Originally published at https://usabilitygeek.com/.

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Kasturika
UsabilityGeek

Former Editorial Team Lead, Interaction Design Foundation. Storyteller, Sustainability crusader, Slightly Eccentric