Using Sitemorse to assess digital accessibility

18 Apr 2018

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Wheelchair sign

Sitemorse can be used to run tests, checks and measures to assess a website (or PDF document) for WCAG2.0 compliance. The scale of what is involved can seem a little overwhelming, so starting with key priorities is important for driving measurable results.

SMARTview

Want to assess a page right now? With our browser service (that is as easy to use as saving a bookmark) any page can be assessed any time, with just a single click.

Developer Priorities

Rather than having to wonder where to start, we highlight the top 10 priorities – allowing developers to focus on what is going to drive the greatest impact.

Management View

Content editors are now focused and developers have their priorities of what to work on. The organisation can then continually track improvements across the site as work is done.

About Sitemorse

Sitemorse (www.Sitemorse.com) helps organizations to efficiently drive improved user experience, ensuring that content is always optimised and that compliance requirements are always met. With clients in every corner of the world, Sitemorse (www.Sitemorse.com) sets out to remove endless reporting from Digital Governance and to instead provide actionable insights so that major changes can be made quickly.

The company has now been moving the field of Digital Governance forwards for over 15 years, while remaining privately owned, and continues to provide clients with new tools and capabilities every year. Most recently, this has included a focus on extending capabilities directly within the CMS, as well as addressing the governance / QA service issue of ‘endless reporting’. 

Sitemorse (www.Sitemorse.com) helps digital managers to build strong processes and accountability, to minimise risks and to achieve the highest standards of content quality. And with Sitemorse (www.Sitemorse.com), there is no need for the substantial infrastructure, support and accordant costs that are required for manual quality and compliance checks.

Image: Public Domain Pictures/Linnaea Mallette