There are no products in your shopping cart.
Disability business case - enabling global business
'Disability confidence - helping successful organisations to 'get it right' on disability'
With the support of our members and disabled opinion formers, we have taken a thought leadership role, defining a new approach to the rationale for investing in disability confidence, since we were launched by the UK business community in 1991.
Disability affects every aspect of your business - your people, markets, communities, suppliers and key stakeholders. Recent headline data (June 2011) from the 'World report on disability' indicates that there are over one billion disabled people in the world, or around 15% of the world’s population.
This business case toolkit builds on our 20 years unique experience enabling business leaders and disabled opinion formers, to radically reframe the rationale which justifies and motivates corporate investment in learning how to adapt for human beings, worldwide.
Remember - everyone is either disabled or potentially disabled.
The disability business case toolkit:
- Helps you to explain how disability confidence affects your talent pool, your people, your customers, your competitors, and the societies in which you operate.
- Outlines the business case rationales for investing in disability confidence.
- Helps senior disability champions or executive sponsors to maximise their impact.
- Provides facts, figures, case studies and other resources essential for building your business case.
Member login & registration
Disability news
May 2012
- Autistic adults bullied in the workplace
- Charity shop donation drive backed by Scope
- Microsoft Kinect to help diagnose autism
- Disability benefits changes to go ahead, says Iain Duncan Smith
- Sunderland worker 'set up to fail' by employers
- New ambassadors to help disabled people in the community
- ADHD sufferers face difficulty 'getting diagnosed'
- Employers are 'unaware' of Access to Work schemes
- Disabled people to get online training for public appointments
- Price comparison websites 'let down' disabled consumers






