“When will we hit 100% compliance?”
“How much is left until we are accessible?”
“When will accessibility be done?”
These are common questions from clients, managers, product teams, and anyone else who works in or around websites or applications. They aren’t unreasonable questions in theory. Stakeholders view accessibility compliance as a requirement to be met and expect a checklist which can be completed. Finish that, and you’re done with accessibility, right?
Not quite.
The first trouble with that perspective is the core assumption that accessibility is a one-and-done requirement; the belief that once your product is compliant, it will be fully accessible. This is an understandable mistake since many formal requirements within an ongoing project are addressed once and can be moved on from. This includes one-off features, designs, content, automated testing, server configuration, etc. These may be in flux while the project is underway, but they’re settled when it has shipped.

However, this just isn’t the case with accessibility. The fundamental purpose of accessibility is to remove the barriers we (knowingly or not) have placed in front of people with impairments. Disability as a concept is commonly defined as “the result of combinations of impairments and environmental barriers”. This means that until we’ve tested and confirmed the full experience with every person alive, we can not claim accessibility is “100% done”. Even if we could hit this marker today, that result will change over time, as rates of disability increase as people age. Not to mention the roughly 15% of 385,000 new people born every day who will have some form of impairment. As long as your website is still running, accessibility is still ongoing!
Don’t be discouraged by the work ahead, though. See this situation for what it is: an opportunity to learn, grow, and improve - as a product, a team, and an individual. Each improvement made for accessibility means new people can use your application, consume your content, and spend money on your products. Business-to-Customer (B2C) companies spend 5-10% of their revenue trying to attract new users with a marketing team. Imagine how much more effective that budget can be when you aren’t blocking access for over 20% of potential users!



