Work · 2023
UX & AccessibilityDisability services · Public sectorAccessible UX Redesign
A WCAG 2.1 AA-led rebuild of a public service portal that tripled usage in six months.
- Client
- State disability council
- Role
- Lead UX strategist, accessibility design
At a glance
The problem
A portal too few people could use.
A state-level disability council operated a public service portal that, ironically, had become inaccessible to a significant portion of the people it was meant to serve. Keyboard navigation broke on key flows, color contrast failed at multiple points, screen-reader hierarchy was incoherent, and the support team was fielding 3× the inbound volume of a comparable service portal because users couldn't self-serve.
The principle
Accessibility-led, not accessibility-bolted.
A common mistake: design for the “default” user, then patch for accessibility. The result is always the same. A worse experience for everyone, accessibility-conformant on paper but unusable in practice. We rebuilt the other way around. WCAG 2.1 AA was the ceiling, not the floor. We targeted AAA on color contrast and keyboard navigation specifically.
“Accessibility is not a patch. It is a design principle, applied at the start.”
Visual artifacts.
The outcome
Tripled usage. Cut support volume in half.
Usage tripled within six months. Inbound support volume dropped 47%. The portal was now self-serviceable for the constituents it was meant to serve. The redesigned portal passed external WCAG 2.1 AA audit at 100%, with AAA conformance on color contrast and keyboard navigation specifically.
The work has continued to influence subsequent state procurement standards for accessibility-led design. The engagement's artifacts are now reference materials for procurement vendors.
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