Written by Sebastian Fjeld on April 08, 2025

How to: Build a truly accessible brand

Accessibility

Illustration showing a diverse group of people, including individuals with visible disabilities such as a prosthetic leg and a wheelchair user.Accessibility is more than just a legal obligation - it's an opportunity! A truly inclusive brand reaches more people, demonstrates social responsibility and creates long-term customer loyalty. But what is important? We have picked out five key aspects for you to consider when building a brand:

1. Consider accessibility from the outset

A brand does not only become accessible when problems arise - it is designed that way from the outset. Inclusive brand development means designing websites, apps and marketing materials according to the WCAG guidelines right from the start. This includes easy-to-read fonts, high color contrast, flexible customization options and simple navigation for all users.

2. Accessible communication to all

Language can create barriers - or break them down. An accessible brand relies on clear, understandable language and avoids unnecessarily complicated formulations. But accessibility goes further: subtitles for videos, audio descriptions, sign language options and alternative text descriptions for images are essential to ensure that everyone can interact with your brand.

3. Make inclusion visible

Those who take accessibility seriously also show this in their public image. Inclusive brands consciously focus on diverse and authentic representation - in advertising campaigns, on social media or in product development. People should be depicted in all their diversity - not as an afterthought, but as a natural part of society.

4. Making the customer experience inclusive

Whether online store, service hotline or physical store - true inclusion means that everyone can participate equally in your offering. That means

  • Digital accessibility: A website that can be used with screen readers and does not require complicated mouse control.

  • Accessible customer service: Multiple contact options (e.g. telephone, email, live chat) and trained employees who can respond to the needs of people with disabilities.

  • Also in „real life“ - physical accessibility: Step-free entrances, tactile guidance systems and easy-to-understand signage in business premises.

5. Accessibility is never "finished"

A truly accessible brand does not stand still - it is constantly evolving. This means regular usability tests with those affected, training for employees and openness to feedback. Technologies evolve, laws change - companies need to keep up in order to remain inclusive in the long term.

Accessibility is not a trend, but a must for modern brands. It creates trust, strengthens brand loyalty and opens up completely new target groups. Companies that invest in inclusion now are fit for the future and make a real contribution to society.

At Eye-Able®, we help companies break down digital barriers - let's create a truly inclusive brand world together!

Sebastian Fjeld

Sebastian Fjeld has been part of the team as a professional voiceover artist and copywriter at Eye-Able® since the beginning. He studied voice acting at a university and was trained by actors. Currently he is completing his education as an interpreter for various languages.
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