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Webinar: Designing accessible websites
Notice: This is a past event
16th May 2012, 2:00pm - 3:00pm, At your desk
- What makes a website accessible or 'inclusive'?
- How do you make a website accessible without restricting creativity and flair?
This webinar will help you to answer these questions and give you confidence to create a website that is creative, interesting and accessible.
Free to gold members!
To access your free gold member place, follow the booking process below, but add WEBMAY12 to the Coupon Code box on the payment page. Click 'apply to order' and the event will become free, then complete your order.
This offer is only for gold members. Please do not use the code unless you are a gold member.
Not sure if you are a gold member? Click here to see an updated list of our gold members.
Speaker:
- Jonathan Hassell, Head of Usability and Accessibility, BBC Future Media
Why attend?
- Understand the business drivers for making your websites accessible
- Maximise your creativity while ensuring that you appeal to a wider audience
- Understand the needs of different disabled users and the solutions available to ensure that your websites are accessible
- Ensure that your websites are designed according to recognised web standards, whilst also giving you design flexibility
- Learn from the experience of successful designers and who apply principles of creative design to a wider audience
Who should attend?
- Designers
- Communications and marketing teams
Member login & registration
Disability news
May 2012
- 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
- Growth needed in care sector, says Carers UK







