Cultural Change to implement Digital Accessibility: 6 steps

 

Change makers make cultural change when implementing digital accessibility. The word, Changemaker, is on the spacebar of a keyboard.

Cultural change: 

the first step

Digital accessibility ensures that everyone, including people with disabilities, can access websites an

So much of our lives: work, education, healthcare, social connection, happens online. But the digital world isn’t always built for everyone. Many people, especially those with disability and the elderly, are left out when digital spaces aren’t truly accessible. To fix this, society needs a culture change that puts accessibility at the heart of how we think about technology and communication.

Digital accessibility isn’t just about ticking technical boxes. It’s a mindset shift that values inclusion and equal access for all. That change doesn’t happen overnight. It happens through small steps, deliberate actions, and shared responsibility across communities, businesses, schools, and governments at every level.

What does cultural change look like? How we can start doing it? The answer is one step at a time.

d online services. Automated tools like WebAIM (WAVE), Axe, and Lighthouse help organisations quickly find accessibility issues. They are fast, easy to use, and good at identifying obvious technical problems.

However, automated tools only catch the low-hanging fruit. True accessibility requires human testing, clear content, and user-focused design.

Read on to understand why automated tools are helpful, their limits, and how DASAT supports organisations in achieving real digital inclusion.

Street sign with 5 pointers. The words, where, what, when, how and who are on the pointers.

Why Cultural Change Matters

Before we talk about steps, it’s necessary to understand why culture matters so much:

Changing culture around accessibility leads to better products, happier users, stronger brand reputation, and a fairer society for all.

Hand moving a blue pawn one step forward.

Step-by-Step: Building an Accessibility-Friendly Culture

1. Start with Awareness:

Talk About It

Cultural change begins with understanding.

  • Raise awareness in schools, workplaces, and community groups about what digital accessibility is and why it matters.
  • Share stories and examples of people affected by poor accessibility.
  • Celebrate Global Accessibility Awareness Day each May to encourage conversations and learning. (GAAD – Global Accessibility Awareness Day)

Tip: Awareness isn’t just for designers and tech teams. It matters for leaders, content creators, marketers, HR teams, and everyday users.

2. Educate and Train — Build Confidence

Once people know why accessibility matters, they need to know how to do it.

  • Learn the basics of accessible content — like writing clear headlines and adding descriptive text to images.
  • Use resources such as digital accessibility courses and training. The team at DASAT provides practical training and guidance on how to put accessibility into practice. Visit dasat.com.au to explore guides and support. (DASAT – Digital Accessibility and Communication)

Start small. Add an hour each week to learn and practise something new. Little steps build lasting habits.

3. Set Simple, Practical Goals

Rather than trying to “fix everything at once,” focus on achievable actions:

These sound like tiny tweaks. They make a big difference. A balanced, step-by-step approach helps avoid overwhelm and gets real results.

4. Test with Accredited Bodies That Include People with Disability

Accessibility isn’t abstract. It’s lived.

  • Work with accredited accessibility bodies that have people with disabilities on their team.
  • These organisations provide real-world testing and feedback, uncovering barriers that automated tools can miss.
  • Using accredited testers ensures your digital products are evaluated fairly and professionally, with lived experience at the centre.

Making accredited testing part of your process enhances outcomes, fosters trust, accountability, and improves digital experiences for everyone.

5. Embed Accessibility into Everyday Work

Accessibility should be part of everyday decisions.

  • Make it part of procurement — choose tools and vendors that prioritise accessibility.
  • Include accessibility checkpoints in your project plans and review processes.
  • Encourage teams to consider accessibility from the outset, not as an afterthought. (Do better campaign – Digital Accessibility)

This shift, from reactive fixes to proactive design, is the essence of cultural change.

6. Measure Progress and Celebrate Wins

What gets measured gets improved.

  • Set simple indicators like: “All new content meets basic accessibility checks.”
  • Share progress regularly with teams and leadership.
  • Celebrate achievements, even small ones, because they show that change is happening.

 

Emblems of people with disability and normal peo0le.

The Big Picture: Accessibility as Normal

Cultural change means normalising accessibility so that it isn’t just a special task for one person or team. It becomes part of the way we think, teach, create, and share.

Accessible digital design benefits everyone, not just people with disability. Clear language, good structure, and multiple ways to consume information make content easier to use for all audiences. (DASAT – Digital Accessibility and communicaiton)

By making digital accessibility a habit, step by step, society becomes more inclusive, more equitable, and more connected.

 

The last piece is being put into the puzzle. The final thought.

One final thought

Changing culture doesn’t happen overnight, but every small step, whether it’s adding alt text to an image or talking about accessibility in a team meeting, moves us toward a digital world that truly belongs to everyone. What is the first step you will take today?

 

The words, Helpful Tips written on paper.

Helpful Resources