How To Build A Business Case To Promote Accessibility In Your B2B Products<\/h1>\nGloria Diaz Alonso<\/address>\n 2025-04-04T12:00:00+00:00
\n 2025-04-30T09:33:23+00:00
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When I started working on promoting accessibility, I was fully convinced of its value and was determined to bring it to the business stakeholders. I thought that the moment I started pushing for it inside the company, my key stakeholders would be convinced, committed, and enlightened, and everyone would start working to make it possible.<\/p>\n
I prepared a lovely presentation about the benefits of accessibility. I made sure my presentation reflected that accessibility is the right thing to do: it is good for everyone, including those who don\u2019t have a disability; it improves usability<\/strong>, makes the code more robust, and, of course, promotes inclusivity<\/strong>. I confidently shared it with my stakeholders. I was so excited. Aaaaaand BOOM\u2026 I hit a wall. They didn\u2019t show much interest. I repetitively got comments, such as:<\/p>\n\n- It doesn\u2019t bring much value to us.<\/li>\n
- It doesn\u2019t impact the revenue.<\/li>\n
- The regulation doesn\u2019t apply to us, so there is no reason.<\/li>\n
- Accessibility is just for a few people with disabilities.<\/li>\n
- It would cost too much.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
\u201cPeople don\u2019t manage to understand the real value. How can they say it has no impact?\u201d<\/em> I thought. After some time of processing my frustration and thinking about it, I realized that maybe I was not communicating the value correctly<\/strong>. I was not speaking the same language, and I was just approaching it from my perspective. It was just a presentation, not a business case.<\/p>\nIf there is something I had to learn when working that I didn\u2019t in university, it is that if you want to move things forward in a company, you have to have a business case<\/strong>. I never thought that being a UX Designer would imply building so many of them. The thing with business cases, and that I neglected on my first attempts, is that they put the focus on, well, \u201cthe business\u201d.<\/p>\nThe ultimate goal is to build a powerful response to the question \u201cWhy should WE spend money and resources on this and not on something else?\u201d not \u201cWhy is it good?\u201d in general.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
After some trial and error, I understood a bit better how to tackle the main comments and answer this question to move the conversation forward. Of course, the business case and strategy you build will depend a lot on the specific situation of your company and your product, but here is my contribution, hoping it can help.<\/p>\n
In this article, I will focus on two of the most common situations: pushing for accessibility in a new product or feature and starting to bring accessibility to existing products that didn\u2019t consider it before.<\/p>\n
Implementing accessibility has a cost. Everything in a project has a cost. If developers are solving accessibility issues, they are not working on new features, so at the very least, you have to consider the opportunity cost. You have to make sure that you transform that cost into an investment<\/strong> and that that investment provides good results. You need to provide some more details on how<\/em> you do it, so here are the key questions that help me to build my case:<\/p>\n\n- Why should we spend money and resources on this and not on something else?<\/li>\n
- What exactly do we want to do?<\/li>\n
- What are the expected results?<\/li>\n
- How much would it cost?<\/li>\n
- How can I make a decision?\n
<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
\n
\n 2025-04-30T09:33:23+00:00
\n <\/header>\n
- \n
- It doesn\u2019t bring much value to us.<\/li>\n
- It doesn\u2019t impact the revenue.<\/li>\n
- The regulation doesn\u2019t apply to us, so there is no reason.<\/li>\n
- Accessibility is just for a few people with disabilities.<\/li>\n
- It would cost too much.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
\u201cPeople don\u2019t manage to understand the real value. How can they say it has no impact?\u201d<\/em> I thought. After some time of processing my frustration and thinking about it, I realized that maybe I was not communicating the value correctly<\/strong>. I was not speaking the same language, and I was just approaching it from my perspective. It was just a presentation, not a business case.<\/p>\n
If there is something I had to learn when working that I didn\u2019t in university, it is that if you want to move things forward in a company, you have to have a business case<\/strong>. I never thought that being a UX Designer would imply building so many of them. The thing with business cases, and that I neglected on my first attempts, is that they put the focus on, well, \u201cthe business\u201d.<\/p>\n
The ultimate goal is to build a powerful response to the question \u201cWhy should WE spend money and resources on this and not on something else?\u201d not \u201cWhy is it good?\u201d in general.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
After some trial and error, I understood a bit better how to tackle the main comments and answer this question to move the conversation forward. Of course, the business case and strategy you build will depend a lot on the specific situation of your company and your product, but here is my contribution, hoping it can help.<\/p>\n
In this article, I will focus on two of the most common situations: pushing for accessibility in a new product or feature and starting to bring accessibility to existing products that didn\u2019t consider it before.<\/p>\n
Implementing accessibility has a cost. Everything in a project has a cost. If developers are solving accessibility issues, they are not working on new features, so at the very least, you have to consider the opportunity cost. You have to make sure that you transform that cost into an investment<\/strong> and that that investment provides good results. You need to provide some more details on how<\/em> you do it, so here are the key questions that help me to build my case:<\/p>\n
- \n
- Why should we spend money and resources on this and not on something else?<\/li>\n
- What exactly do we want to do?<\/li>\n
- What are the expected results?<\/li>\n
- How much would it cost?<\/li>\n
- How can I make a decision?\n
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