Accessible Me

Accessible Me We are committed to creating an inclusive world where everyone has equal access to information and Accessible Me Ltd.

is dedicated to making content accessible for everyone. Based in the UK, we provide comprehensive digital accessibility solutions, including audits, inclusive marketing strategies, and specialised training programmes - whether face-to-face, eLearning or virtual. Our services help organisations identify and remove barriers, ensuring compliance with accessibility standards. We also offer innovative

tools like our Accessibility Escape Room experience, which fosters empathy and understanding of accessibility challenges. Our mission is to create an inclusive world where everyone has equal access to information and opportunities. Partner with us to unlock the full potential of your content and reach a wider audience.

A few days ago, Michael had a conversation with Chloe Ith about getting started in accessibility.The question was a fami...
10/06/2026

A few days ago, Michael had a conversation with Chloe Ith about getting started in accessibility.

The question was a familiar one:

Where do you start when accessibility feels so broad?

His answer was simple:

Start with what you know.

For Mike, that started with colour blindness.

His best friend at school is red-green colour-blind. His father-in-law is blue-green colour-blind. Those early experiences helped him notice how small design choices can either include people or shut them out.

From there, he built out.

Vision.

Hearing.

Mobility.

Cognitive accessibility.

Learning design.

Workplace systems.

Not all at once. Not perfectly. Just step by step.

Chloe later sent this hand-drawn doodle, with that line above it.

“Start with what you know.”

It is a useful reminder for anyone who wants to make their work more accessible but feels unsure where to begin.

You do not need to know everything before you start.

Pick one real barrier.

Learn from people with lived experience.

Make one thing better.

Then keep going.

Illustration by Chloe Ith, shared with permission.



Image description: A hand-drawn, sketch-style portrait of Michael Osborne on a white background. He is shown from the shoulders up, with short dark hair, dark eyebrows, a beard, and a grey jumper. The drawing uses dark blue linework with soft pink shading on the cheeks. Above his head, curved handwritten text reads, “Start with what you know.” At the bottom, large handwritten text reads, “Michael Osborne.”

3,000+ followers.Thank you.Every follow, comment, share, conversation, webinar attendee, client, partner and quiet reade...
05/06/2026

3,000+ followers.

Thank you.

Every follow, comment, share, conversation, webinar attendee, client, partner and quiet reader helps us move this work forward.

Accessible Me exists to remove barriers that stop people from learning, working and living fully. We do this by helping organisations build accessibility into digital design, learning, content and workplace practice from the start.

We are especially grateful to the people who are helping make accessibility feel more practical, human and achievable.

Because inclusion grows through systems.

Through culture.

Through decisions.

Through the small design choices that either create barriers or remove them.

If your team creates learning, content or communications and wants to understand how inclusive it really is, you can take the quick scan here:

How inclusive is your digital content?
https://accessibility-quick-scan.scoreapp.com/



Image description: A square Accessible Me milestone graphic on a very light grey background. The Accessible Me logo sits near the top. Large dark green text in the centre reads “3,000+ followers”. Smaller black text underneath reads “Thank you, LinkedIn”. The background includes subtle honeycomb shapes to represent connected systems and support, and a faint DNA strand to represent accessibility being built in by design.

The A11yShip swag bags are officially ready!And honestly? We’re ridiculously happy with how these turned out.Simple.Bold...
27/05/2026

The A11yShip swag bags are officially ready!

And honestly? We’re ridiculously happy with how these turned out.

Simple.
Bold.
High contrast.
Playful.
Accessible.

Each bag features the A11yShip logo alongside “powered by Accessible Me” branding, with different colour variations to help bring a bit more personality and visibility to events, workshops, escape room sessions, and accessibility conversations.

One thing we’ve always believed at Accessible Me is that accessibility doesn’t need to feel cold, clinical, or compliance-driven.

It can still feel creative.
It can still feel human.
It can still be fun.

Now we just need to decide what goes inside them…

Swag AccessibleMe DesignForEveryone

We're excited to share mockups for the eye mask/blindfolds for A11yShip - Accessible Me's Accessible Me accessibility-th...
18/05/2026

We're excited to share mockups for the eye mask/blindfolds for A11yShip - Accessible Me's Accessible Me accessibility-themed escape room-style empathy-driven experience.
Watch this space to find out how they look in practice

We're excited to share mockups for the 'swag bags' for A11yShip - Accessible Me's accessibility-themed escape room-style...
18/05/2026

We're excited to share mockups for the 'swag bags' for A11yShip - Accessible Me's accessibility-themed escape room-style empathy-driven experience. Watch this space to find out how they look in practice

“WOOOOOOOO!You wanna talk about elite websites?!You wanna talk about championship-level user experience?!Then stop build...
11/05/2026

“WOOOOOOOO!

You wanna talk about elite websites?!

You wanna talk about championship-level user experience?!

Then stop building digital country clubs where only a handful of people can get through the front door!
Because accessibility, brother… that’s first class usability!

I’m talking readable contrast! WOOOOO!

Keyboard support! WOOOOO!

Captions on every video! WOOOOO!

Resizable text! Logical headings! Clear focus indicators! Forms that actually tell people what went wrong! WOOOOOOOO!

See, too many companies wanna strut around talking about innovation while users are sitting there pinching the screen trying to read eight-pixel grey text on a white background!

That ain’t luxury!

That’s embarrassment, baby!

A real champion website doesn’t just look good under perfect conditions.

A real champion works:
• on mobile
• on keyboards
• on screen readers
• under stress
• under fatigue
• in bright sunlight
• in noisy rooms
• for real people living real lives

Style AND usability! Function AND flair! Beauty AND accessibility!

That’s what separates the world champions from the amateurs!

And let me tell you something else.

Plain language?

That’s confidence.

You don’t need complicated jargon to sound intelligent. You need clarity. You need structure. You need respect for the audience.

Because when somebody lands on your website already overwhelmed… already tired… already juggling twenty things in life…

and your content actually helps them succeed?

THAT is premium experience, baby!

WOOOOOOOO!

So next time somebody tells you accessibility ruins creativity…

tell ‘em the Nature Boy said this:
If your design only works for perfect users in perfect conditions…

then it ain’t stylin’ and profilin’.

It’s fragile.

WOOOOOOOO!”

How would you make something like a Rubik’s Cube accessible to someone who is colour blind?What if the person was totall...
11/05/2026

How would you make something like a Rubik’s Cube accessible to someone who is colour blind?

What if the person was totally blind and could not see it at all?

A common response is: “Replace the colours with braille or patterns.”

That does improve access for some people.

But there is an important accessibility lesson here.

If we strip out the colour completely, we may also remove part of what makes the cube engaging, recognisable, and enjoyable for other people.

Accessibility is not always about creating a separate “special” version.

Sometimes the better approach is inclusive design: keep what already works for many people, then add additional ways to interact with it.

So instead of removing the colours, what if we:
• kept the colours
• added raised surfaces or textures
• included tactile markers people could feel
• designed one version that more people could use and enjoy together

That shift in thinking matters far beyond puzzles.

It applies to websites, forms, apps, documents, services, and public spaces too.

Good accessibility design often adds options instead of taking experiences away.

How would you approach this challenge?

“Well let me tell you somethin’, baby…Accessibility ain’t about charity. And it ain’t about pity.It’s about people.It’s ...
10/05/2026

“Well let me tell you somethin’, baby…

Accessibility ain’t about charity. And it ain’t about pity.

It’s about people.

It’s about the single mum tryin’ to fill out a form on a cracked phone screen at two in the mornin’.
It’s about the old worker whose eyes ain’t what they used to be.
It’s about the young kid usin’ captions because the world is loud and confusing.
It’s about the person navigatin’ with a keyboard because a mouse just don’t work for ‘em.

That’s who accessibility is for, daddy.

Now some folks build websites like locked steel cages. Buttons nobody can reach. Videos nobody can hear. Words nobody can understand.

And then they stand there confused when people leave.

But the hard times? The hard times are when people wanna participate in the world and the world shuts the door on ‘em.
That’s what inaccessible design does.

See, real design… good design… human design… that opens the ropes and lets everybody into the arena.

And baby, when you write in plain language, when you add captions, when you label your forms right, when you make your colours readable, when your website works with a keyboard…

you are tellin’ somebody:

“You belong here.”

That matters.

Because accessibility ain’t a side quest. It ain’t a little gold sticker you slap on at the end.

It is respect.

It is dignity.

It is understanding that people come to your website carrying different bodies, different minds, different pressures, different stories.

And every single one of ‘em deserves a fair shot.

So I want you to remember this, daddy:

The internet belongs to everybody.

Not just the fast. Not just the experts. Not just the folks with perfect eyesight and brand-new devices.

Everybody.

And when we build with accessibility in mind, we are not lowerin’ standards.

We are raisin’ humanity.

That’s hard times turned into better times, baby.”

Accessibility isn’t just a feature, brother. It’s the main event.When somebody lands on your website and the text is too...
09/05/2026

Accessibility isn’t just a feature, brother. It’s the main event.

When somebody lands on your website and the text is too small, the contrast is weak, the buttons don’t work with a keyboard, or the video has no captions, you know what happens?

People get locked out of the ring.

And that doesn’t work for the millions of people who rely on accessible design every single day.

I’m talking about people using screen readers. People navigating with keyboards. People with cognitive disabilities who need clear layouts and simple language. People watching videos with captions in noisy places. People using mobile phones in bright sunlight.

Accessibility helps everybody, dude.

See, the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, also known as WCAG, aren’t there to ruin creativity. They’re there so more people can actually use what you build.

That means:
• Headings that make sense
• Links that explain where they go
• Forms with proper labels
• Colour contrast people can read
• Captions for video content
• Buttons big enough to hit
• Content that works without a mouse

Because when your website is accessible, brother, you’re not building barriers.

You’re building champions.

And let me tell you something about plain language, dude.

If your content sounds like a legal contract written by a robot from outer space, people are gonna tap out fast.

Good accessibility means:
• short sentences
• clear instructions
• familiar words
• predictable layouts
• helpful error messages

That’s not “dumbing things down”.

That’s respecting people’s time and energy.

And here’s the big lesson, brother:

Accessibility is not a bonus round. It is not optional glitter on top of a project. It is part of quality.

You do not wait until launch night to think about accessibility.

You build it in from the start.

Because when accessibility enters the arena, everybody gets a fair shot at the title.

So the next time you design a page, write content, code a form, or upload a video, ask yourself one question, dude:

“Can everybody use this?”

And if the answer is no…

Then the work isn’t finished yet, brother.



Anyone else watched the Hulk Hogan: Real American docu

15,000 people choosing to engage with conversations around accessibility, inclusion, and removing barriers is something ...
08/05/2026

15,000 people choosing to engage with conversations around accessibility, inclusion, and removing barriers is something worth celebrating.

Thank you to everyone who continues to support Michael Osborne and
Accessible Me on this journey.

Accessibility is not just about compliance.
It is about people.
Better experiences.
Better systems.
Better outcomes for everyone.

We’re incredibly grateful to be building this community together.

Address

27 Old Gloucester Street
London
WC1N3AX

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 2:30pm
3:30pm - 6pm
Tuesday 9am - 2:30pm
3:30pm - 6pm
Wednesday 9am - 2:30pm
3:30pm - 6pm
Thursday 9am - 2:30pm
3:30pm - 6pm
Friday 9am - 2:30pm
3:30pm - 4pm

Telephone

+447708951567

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