Accessibility-First: What It Actually Means in Practice
Most developers treat accessibility as a checklist. Here's why that's backwards — and what it looks like to treat it as a design constraint from the very first commit.
20+ years of web development experience, distilled into accessible, made-for-you digital tools. No templates. No guesswork.
You've had enough people trying to sell you "a new website". I'm more interested in the invisible bits — missed calls, follow-ups, admin pile-ups — and whether a small, made-for-you tool could quietly take some of that weight off.
Projects start from £1,500 because you're not buying a template — you're buying my time to understand how you actually work, then design and build something just for your business.
Fewer missed calls quietly turning into lost jobs.
Quicker, more organised replies to new and existing customers.
Less copy-pasting, chasing and paperwork when you're already tired.
Simple, made-for-you tools that match how you already work.
Our Process
We learn about your business, your users, and your goals. No assumptions — just clear, focused questions to understand what success looks like.
Development happens in short, visible cycles. You see progress early, give feedback often, and never get surprised by the result.
We handle deployment, run accessibility checks, and stick around to make sure everything works in the real world.
What We Do
Bespoke websites and web applications, built accessible from the ground up.
Purpose-built digital tools that replace spreadsheet chaos with something that actually works.
Find out what is broken, get a clear plan, and fix it — with expert hands-on support.
Retainer-based maintenance, monitoring, and continuous improvement after launch.
The Human Element
We use AI to move faster, test more thoroughly, and document more completely. But every decision, every design choice, and every line of code is reviewed by a developer with 20+ years of experience.
AI augments our expertise — it does not replace it. You always know what is AI-assisted and what is not, because transparency is not optional here.
From The Magazine
Most developers treat accessibility as a checklist. Here's why that's backwards — and what it looks like to treat it as a design constraint from the very first commit.
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