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Making the web work for everyone

I build charities and non-profits websites that are genuinely inclusive and I share what I learn along the way.

What I do

I work in the middle of accessibility, development, and AI — building tools, writing about the industry, and helping organisations make digital services that everyone can use.

Accessibility consulting

I audit websites, advise on WCAG 2.2 compliance, and work with teams to make accessibility a natural part of how they build — not an afterthought.

Frontend development

I build clean, well-structured websites with accessibility baked in from the first line of code, not bolted on at the end.

Writing and podcasting

Through my blog and podcast, I share practical thinking on accessibility, AI, and the state of the web — for developers and non-developers alike.

How I can help

Whether you're starting from scratch or improving an existing site, here's what I offer — particularly for charities and non-profits.

Accessibility audits

A thorough review of your website against WCAG 2.2 AA — combining automated tools with hands-on testing using keyboard, screen reader, and cognitive accessibility checks. You'll get a clear report with practical next steps, not just a list of errors.

Inclusive development

Building websites the right way from the start — with clean, semantic HTML, thoughtful structure, and progressive enhancement. No expensive retrofitting later.

AI-assisted auditing

Using AI to scale accessibility testing across larger sites — spotting patterns, generating reports, and covering more ground, while keeping human judgement at the centre of every decision.

Why accessibility matters for charities

Accessibility isn't just a legal checkbox — it's about making sure the people you exist to serve can actually reach you.

1 in 4 people in the UK have a disability

An inaccessible website doesn't just frustrate users — it shuts people out entirely. That's especially significant for charities whose beneficiaries are more likely to include disabled people.

There are legal requirements

The Equality Act 2010 and the Public Sector Bodies Accessibility Regulations require organisations to make digital services accessible. I can help you understand what that means in practice.

Accessibility improves everything

A site built with accessibility in mind is clearer, faster, easier to navigate, and simpler to maintain — for all users, regardless of ability or device.