Olark’s Accessibility Journey: Annual Report for GAAD + the Messy Middle
Global Accessibility Awareness Day (GAAD) is here!?As part of this important celebration, we’re sharing our yearly progress and lessons in accessibility. This is a blogging tradition we started?in 2021 (plus a deep dive on how we got started)?and we continued the practice?last year. Come along with us as we reflect!
If you’re reading this, we probably don’t have to tell you how crucial digital accessibility is or why it matters (but here’s a quick rundown, just in case). It’s a key value to Olark to be inclusive. That means designing our communication tools to make life easier for?everyone.
We now find ourselves smack in the middle of this accessibility-by-design journey. Beginnings are often flashy and exciting, while the middle — as any storyteller can tell you — risks being more of a “muddle.” If you’ve been on the a11y train awhile too, we’re guessing you can relate.
The clear path we charted seems both more messy and sometimes more mundane, as we take the daily steps to meet our vision. We have to stay compassionate with ourselves: sometimes we’re raising the bar quite a bit, doing everything we did before and much, much more. The middle is the period where the most change and growth happens. It’s the heart of the story. Persistence is the name of the game here, along with lots of juicy lessons and fun!
Next, we’ll share details about how we did in our 2022 goals and what we’re aiming for this year.?The last year saw us getting further traction in our agent-side accessibility, enriching our feedback from customers, and adding supportive internal processes.
We hope that following us in this annual ritual will give you ideas and inspiration of your own. So let’s go!
Our 2022 Commitments: How did things go?
Last year, we set seven accessibility goals. Here’s how we’re scoring our performance and what we did to meet each goal.
Rating scale:
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Commitment #1:?Evaluate our new agent chat experience & establish our WCAG baseline: REALLY, REALLY GREEN
ORIGINAL 2022 GOAL:?In addition to getting feedback from testers with disabilities and customers with accessibility expertise, we’ll hire a third-party auditor to help us understand where this product stands relative to WCAG guidelines. This information will inform our go-to-market plans and our product roadmap in 2023.
We went all in on this goal and then some. Not only did we decide where we wanted to land on WCAG, but we also met an ambitious internal goal quickly by reaching a new standard (WCAG 2.1 AA) with the help of usability and accessibility feedback from?Fable, third-party certification by our accredited auditor?Allyant, and pilot programs with customers who have assistive technology users in customer-facing roles (more on this in the next commitment). Decisions we made early in our design process because of our accessibility commitment — like the choice to build on?MUI, one of the most accessible component libraries — helped lay the groundwork for fast progress. We hit this target a month ahead of schedule, in time for the 2023?CSUN conference.
It’s worth noting that the agent chat experience was more challenging to make accessible than the customer-facing chat box. It features more information, more notifications, and more functionality. Now, both staff with disabilities and customers have the same level of chat access. We set a high bar for ourselves and weren’t even sure if we could hit it. Overall, we are proud to say that we met this goal 200%.
Commitment #2:?Collaborate directly with chat agents who rely on assistive technology: GREEN
ORIGINAL 2022 GOAL:?We aim to make an agent chat app that is more than WCAG-compliant and?nice to use?for disabled customer support reps in their work environment. To achieve this, we need to partner with people who chat or perform related customer messaging tasks as part of their daily work. Frankly, this is hard to do because there are not a lot of accessible options on the market for customer support reps who use AT, but this is also why it’s so important that we build one and make it great.
We are actively collecting feedback from users with disabilities testing our chat experience and implementing their recommendations. For example,?Clusiv, an eLearning platform built for the blind community to learn key skills for employment, has shared feedback to improve the accessibility and experience of the Olark chat tools, to help ensure the best usability for users who are blind or visually impaired.
Another pilot customer,?A. T. Guys, has a web storefront of products, services, and training for blind and low vision users. Their team also has blind and low vision staff, so they are able to share the experience on both the agent and customer sides too. We also have a third pilot participant that has been providing invaluable feedback on how Olark works for their constituents and staff with spinal cord injuries and paralysis. It’s been both meaningful and valuable to us to work with these customers. The more we get real-world responses, the more we can make our chat not simply accessibility-compliant, but?good?and hopefully a pleasure to use. We’re excited at our progress with this goal and our partnership with our customers.
Commitment #3:?Make the ASL Zoom integration available to other customers who want it: YELLOW
ORIGINAL 2022 GOAL:?We’re so excited to launch this innovative feature with our partner. Our goal is to enable this functionality for others who need a similar integration.
We put in significant effort on this integration and worked through how we would build the feature. However, other aspects didn’t go as planned. Along the way, through no fault of anyone’s, we no longer had the partnership to drive this feature forward. One lesson we learned: accessibility alone does not mean your chat solution will have all the functionality a business needs. And a strong business use case makes it more likely that your feature will be supported to the finish line. In good news, we got about 60% of the way to shipping this feature and are still open to exploring its completion, if it is of interest to an engaged customer willing to provide feedback.
Commitment #4:?Publish best practices for accessible chatbots: RED
ORIGINAL 2022 GOAL:?We have strong opinions about chatbots. One of those opinions is that they can be a blessing?or a curse?for accessibility. This year we’ll share what we’ve learned about how to build chatbots that are helpful to people with disabilities, and we’ll give Olark customers guidance and feedback on how they can find a happy medium between automation and accessibility.
Two big things stalled us on this goal: our immediate aims for the CSUN conference and the disruptive force that is ChatGPT. We mainly channeled our resources into our first big, ambitious goal of the WCAG standard by CSUN time, and we started research into how ongoing changes in AI change the picture. Early last year MITRE (a nonprofit which manages federally funded research and development centers) shared their best practices around accessible chatbots. While their coverage of the material is fairly exhaustive, we know we still have thoughts to add. Overall, we haven’t done this yet and are rethinking what type of best practices would be most useful for the community, especially given AI.
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Commitment #5:?Put every Olarker through role-specific accessibility training: GREEN
ORIGINAL 2022 GOAL:?Accessibility is everyone’s job. This year we will ensure everyone at Olark knows how to do their job in a way that supports disabled people. Each team will set its timeline and curriculum for training, but our Accessibility Working Group will provide oversight and resources. We’ll also lean on our new HR manager to ensure all new hires receive role-specific training within their first 100 days at Olark.
Our goal here was to make sure that everyone understood how their individual role impacted accessibility for our customers. Each team decided on what level of training would be sufficient for all full-time employees in its department, and everyone is on a timeline to be done with training in the near future. We have also added onboarding-specific training for new Olarkers.
Commitment #6:?Report the status of all accessibility issues quarterly: GREEN
ORIGINAL 2022 GOAL:?To quote our friends at Pope Tech, “there’s no point hiding your accessibility issues because people who have disabilities already know what they are”. We agree. We also think that it’s a lot to ask of people who’ve found our bugs to report them. We can save them the trouble by publishing the summary of our accessibility tickets.
Since the last GAAD, we’ve?published an accessibility status report?quarterly for people to see.
Commitment #7:?Speak at (or host) another GAAD event in 2023: GREEN
ORIGINAL 2022 GOAL:?We had a lot of fun presenting at CSUN, in part because it showed us how far we have to go to make our presentations, demos, and meetings accessible. We are committed to attending GAAD annually — we have already learned so much and it’s helpful for time-boxing our goals.
We’d call this goal achieved in spirit, if not exactly in letter. Multiple Olarkers are participating in an A11y camp this year. And our marketing director, Kelly, is now on the board of the GAAD Foundation, and has been contributing to advancing its goals. For example, she worked on an initiative called the?GAAD Speakers Fund?— which helps everyday tech professionals with disabilities cover expenses to speak at an in-person event — and is helping with the GAAD day-of launch.
Note on our overall scoring:?Olark uses?OKRs?(which stands for Objectives and Key Results) as our company goal-setting framework. We don’t get into the nitty-gritty of our scoring above. However, we wanted to mention that in this framework, if you get a 75%, say, that means it was a good, sufficiently aspirational goal. You didn’t set a goal that was too easy or too hard. In several cases above, we hit 75% or 85% of our target, which means we’re proud of where we landed.
Other neat accessibility accomplishments in 2022:
Along the way, we made other valuable contributions that we didn’t quantify in our accessibility commitments above.
Our 2023 Commitments: Where are we headed?
This year is about deepening the gains we’ve made and going more “global” in our external and internal accessibility. Here are our?new?commitments.
Reflections: what we’ve learned lately
This year in his?talk at CSUN, our CEO Ben summarized some valuable lessons we’ve learned. Here are just a few of the highlights:
Workplace accessibility matters.?One key theme on our minds is the importance of doing our part to address the employment gap for people with disabilities. Sadly (as you may know), staff-facing tech is often not accessible, even today. The best way we know to chip away at that gap is by making our employee-facing chat technology the most accessible it can be. We’re also bringing on amazing disabled team members to help us advance these efforts.
There is a?Maslow’s hierarchy?of becoming more accessible.?At the base of this pyramid is compliance, which often means an audit. (We’ve moved up this pyramid ourselves, by the way! And sometimes you can move down again for a while.) The next step up is usability, where you can start to work with testers. Up from there, you have integration. In our case, this is where we added real customers with core needs around accessibility. And finally, at the tip of the pyramid, you can experience the joy and fun of solving problems!
Motivation over obligation.?We’ve learned that people — both staff and customers — who are motivated trump people who are obligated to work in accessibility. That means we’re especially excited to work with customers who aren’t just checking a compliance box, but who are also motivated to support the larger goals and values of inclusion.
Next steps in Olark’s accessibility
From WCAG 2.1AA to meaningful customer input, we’re proud of the progress we’ve made this year. And of course, the journey is never done. We look forward to putting the final accessibility touches on our agent-side experience, making our website more accessible, sharing our lessons internally and externally, and listening to the needs of a wider set of customers using assistive technology. We’re continuing to embrace progress over perfection. Thank you for reading. It’s been super valuable for us to hold ourselves publicly accountable to these goals and we hope you got some useful takeaways for your own efforts.
Have a wonderful GAAD and we’ll see you next time on the same bat channel!
Partnership Development Manager | IT Consulting & Web Development
1 年Thanks for sharing!
We place high-quality long-term Tech Talent for your projects / Great Place To Work 2022-2023 Certified / Business Development Representative at FusionHit
1 年Ben, thanks for sharing!
Dean Delpeache worth perusing.