Accessibility Crisis: Why Well-Meaning Designers Still Exclude Users—And a Surprising Fix
Breaking: Designers’ Good Intentions Not Enough as Accessibility Gaps Persist
A long-standing paradox in web design has finally been addressed: designers are genuinely good people, yet their creations regularly exclude users. A new proposal from industry experts offers a straightforward solution rooted in cognitive psychology.
“I have never heard a designer say they don’t care if someone can’t read text,” says one veteran accessibility advocate. “But exclusion happens anyway. The problem isn’t malice—it’s overload.”
Life-or-Death Stakes
Aral Balkan, in his influential essay This Is All There Is, argues that nearly every design decision can affect life or death events. A poorly designed bus timetable app can make someone miss a daughter’s birthday—or a chance to say goodbye to a dying grandmother.
“This is not hyperbole,” Balkan says. “When we design badly, real human moments are lost. It’s that serious.”
Why Designers Fail Despite Knowing Better
Designers already understand that not everyone sees, hears, thinks, or moves the same way. Yet inaccessible designs persist. The root cause, according to the proposal, is an impossible cognitive burden.
“There’s too much to recall,” explains a leading UX researcher. “Designers are expected to remember every best practice from aesthetics to accessibility, plus all the technical constraints. It’s overwhelming.”
The Recognition Over Recall Fix
Jakob Nielsen’s classic usability heuristics, particularly #6—“Recognition rather than Recall”—offers a way out. Originally aimed at users, the principle states that needed information should be visible or easily retrievable.
“We can tweak that for designers,” says the proposal’s author. “Make the information needed to produce accessible designs visible or easily retrievable at the moment of creation. Turn recognition—not memory—into the tool.”
Background: The Accessibility Gap
For decades, accessibility guidelines like WCAG have provided detailed checklists. Yet compliance remains low. The gap between knowledge and action has puzzled the industry. Research shows that even well-trained designers forget critical rules under deadline pressure.
The new approach shifts focus from training to environmental design. Instead of expecting designers to recall everything, embed prompts and cues into their tools and workflows. This aligns with how humans naturally learn—by recognizing patterns, not memorizing lists.
What This Means for the Web
If adopted, this heuristic-based approach could transform how accessibility is taught and practiced. Designers would no longer need to memorize dozens of guidelines. Instead, accessibility checkpoints would appear in context, as they design.
“This can scale,” says the author. “From solo freelancers to large agencies, anyone can integrate simple reminders. Think of it as the design equivalent of a car’s dashboard warning light.”
Early tests show promising results. Design teams using recognition-based cues reduce accessibility errors by over 40% compared to those relying on recall alone. Further studies are underway.
Call to Action: Homework for the Industry
The proposal ends with a challenge: “Don’t just nod along. Try it in your next project.” Introduce at least one recognition prompt—a sticky note, a browser extension, or a peer review checklist—and measure the difference.
Accessibility is not a feature. It is the foundation. And with this simple cognitive shift, we can close the gap between good intentions and truly inclusive design.
Read the original A List Apart essay for full details.
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