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How organizations implement accessibility. Chris M. Law School of Business Information Technology RMIT University. Outline. 1. Background and impetus 2. Organizational responses 3. Resources used 4. Practical implications of different types of responses 5. Preliminary conclusions.
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How organizations implement accessibility Chris M. LawSchool of Business Information TechnologyRMIT University Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 1
Outline 1. Background and impetus 2. Organizational responses 3. Resources used 4. Practical implications of different types of responses 5. Preliminary conclusions Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 2
1. Background Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 3
Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 4
Consultant(s) Designer(s) Guidelines Committees Accessibility Program Offices Key We know a lot End-User(s) We know little Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 5
Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 6
website inaccessible Make our website accessible? ... not on list Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 7
Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 8
Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 9
1. Start thinking about accessibility 2. Consider options 3a. Conclude, decide on design path product development context 3b. Review, decide on revisions 4. Commit to decision Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 10
Research studies on organizational responses • National Council on Disability, USA • 2004 report: "Design for inclusion: Creating a new marketplace" • 6 technology industry companies • Universal Design in Practice (UDiP) • 3 year project at Georgia Tech, USA • 4 technology industry companies, 4 government agencies • Business decision making and accessibility • My current PhD study, completed / scheduled so far: • 12 organizations with goods / services available to the public • 4 disability access organizations • 12 experts Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 11
2. Organizational responses Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 12
Business Decision Making and Accessibility (Australia) 1 NCD: "Several" Organization X UDiP: "Several" Executives Development: Design Programming NCD: 4 of 6 Management UDiP: 7 of 8 UDiP: 1 of 8 Marketing 1 Others Customer Service Sales 2 6 Organizational structure Accessibility Consultant Accessibility Consultancy Accessibility Point-Person (APP) Accessibility Program Office (APO) Disability Organization None: 2 Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 13
Organization X Executives Development: Design Programming Management Marketing Others Customer Service Sales APP/APO (stand-alone) APP / APO 20/26 18/20 Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 14
Organization X Executives Development: Design Programming Management Marketing Others Customer Service Sales APP/APO (integrated) A A A APP / APO A A A A A 1/20 successfully completed 1/20 currently attempting Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 15
3. Resources used Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 16
Universal Access Guidelines & Tools APP/APO Programmer(s) Questions ? Recommendations Software Development Accessibility Evaluation Feedback & Data End-User(s) Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 17
Internal & External Accessibility Resources (Consultants, Guidelines, Tools, Websites, Books etc.) Support & Advice Rest of Dev't team Interface Designer(s) and Programmer(s) Accessibility Team Questions ? Recommendations Software Develop- ment Accessibility Evaluation Feedback & Data End-User(s) Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 18
4. Practical implications of different types of responses Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 19
Accessibility in the organization is... • Ingrained, or marginalized? • Everyone's responsibility, or a select few? • Part of the mission, or a hassle? • Well planned, or haphazard? • etc. etc. • Customers are taken care of, or seen as a nuisance? Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 20
Staffing and skill-sets • A possible problem... • Who do you hire to address accessibility problems? • start with consultants • hire a person or a team of people • they know about technology and accessibility, but not necessarily about design, manufacture, programming, management, etc. • but they have to then convince all of the people in those other roles of what to do for accessibility Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 21
5. Preliminary conclusions (and further work) Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 22
Preliminary conclusions • Rarely about money • Often about Australia's position in the marketplace • e.g., computers post-508; buses post-ADA; telephone hardware design limitations • Organizational responses rarely planned • even with Disability Action Plans • more evolutionary and dependent on organizational structure and staff Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 23
Resource gaps • Establishing what is possible is difficult for novices • Resources not really designed for the observed organizational responses • Design guidance and standards in universal design - there are a number of unresolved problems • The business case is not well documented Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 24
The ideal response? • Take time to find out what's physically, technologically and sociologically possible in all areas • Consider how to make the organization's accessibility message consistent • e.g., Architecture and technology priorities • Conduct training, set internal 'best practice' guides • Better if it is everyone's responsibility Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 25
Thanks! chris.law@rmit.edu.au www.udprojects.com Acknowledgments:Funding provided by - Media Access Australia - Australian Postgraduate Award Scholarship - Victoria ICT Scholarship Chris M. Law, WANAU meeting, RMIT University, March 26, 2007; Slide 26