Ship better, often
Today
Shipping small, consistent improvements beats waiting until you get it perfect.
This is an archive of the email messages I sent to my daily mailing list since March 12th, 2024. Enjoy!
Today
Shipping small, consistent improvements beats waiting until you get it perfect.
In Issue 98 of Access Denied, Gary wants to prioritise a task force over fixing accessibility issues.
May 16th, 2026
Most web accessibility problems are fixed at the wrong time, which is why they cost more.
May 15th, 2026
There's a big difference between "not yet" and "never." And then there's the team that never had the accessibility conversation at all.
May 14th, 2026
Accessibility fixes sit in a backlog because nobody's attached a number to them that anyone recognises.
May 13th, 2026
Accessibility audits measure compliance, not experience.
May 12th, 2026
Fixing accessibility issues one by one is slow, expensive and never quite done.
May 11th, 2026
Accessibility keeps getting the leftover hours.
May 10th, 2026
In Issue 97 of Access Denied, Gary changes the accessibility project name because it tests better.
May 9th, 2026
Accessibility fails because nobody with budget approval wants it badly enough.
May 8th, 2026
What do to and what not to do in accessibility statements
May 7th, 2026
Don't strip out every technical word in your accessibility statement.
May 6th, 2026
You can't claim your site is fully accessible on the accessibility statement.
May 5th, 2026
How do you explain the known accessibility issues in an accessibility statement?
May 4th, 2026
What do you do when someone reaches out on the email from the accessibility statement?
May 3rd, 2026
In Issue 96 of Access Denied, Gary blames someone else for the non-existent email address on the accessibility statement.
May 2nd, 2026
How much and how often is your website changing should tell you how often to update the accessibility statement.
May 1st, 2026
How do you write an accessibility statement so that people actually read it
Apr 30th, 2026
Is an accessibility statement required by law?
Apr 29th, 2026
What is an accessibility statement and who is it for?
Apr 28th, 2026
Common questions about accessibility statements.
Apr 27th, 2026
Most accessibility problems are invisible until you go looking.
Apr 26th, 2026
in Issue 95 of Access Denied, Gary only thinks of the people who completed the checkout.
Apr 25th, 2026
The absence of complaints isn't proof that everything's fine.
Apr 24th, 2026
aria-label is not a one-size-fixes-all accessibility solution.
Apr 23rd, 2026
Your users don't owe you anything.
Apr 22nd, 2026
I'm not here to fix your ignorance about web accessibility.
Apr 21st, 2026
I pitched accessibility like I was the expert saving the day and all it did was put people on the defensive.
Apr 20th, 2026
The mental overhead of not fixing accessibility usually outweighs the fixes themselves.
Apr 19th, 2026
In Issue 94 of Access Denied, Gary thinks accessibility will improve if you just monitor it.
I send out short emails like these every day to help you gain a fresh perspective on accessibility and understand it without the jargon, so you can build more robust products that everyone can use, including people with disabilities.