Professions
Content designers
How content designers ensure accessibility is considered in each phase of service delivery.
Content designers make DfE products and websites accessible, inclusive and easier to understand.
Well-structured, clear content helps everyone to use our services.
Our users include:
- school business professionals
- social workers
- parents and carers
- teachers
- pupils and students
Follow GOV.UK guidance to design accessible services, as a starting point.
In discovery
You should:
- start to plan a content strategy that focuses on user needs and policy intent
- make accessibility an integral part of the strategy, for example, research user language, and how you will make content clear
- review guidance for Service Standard 5: Make sure everyone can use the service
In alpha
You should:
- explore any offline user journeys and whether there is a phone number or email address for service support
- try to understand how this may be part of a wider journey that may involve content from other organisations, or users may use other products, as part of the journey
- design in an inclusive way, using the universal design principles
- consider how disability, age, gender and culture might impact the service - you could use HMRC's accessibility personas
- use the How many people tool and share data with stakeholders
- share the Plain Language standard with stakeholders, if necessary, to support your work
- write content in plain English
- use the language of your users
- test different ways to deliver content, for example, use a screen reader to make sure people can perceive content in multiple ways
- organise content crits to get feedback - the more content is reviewed, the more opportunities to identify accessibility issues
- consider how the service fits with wider DfE services for a consistent user experiences across services
- test the name of your service to ensure it reflects what the service does and uses user language
In beta
You should:
- continue to test content to check it's accessible and inclusive
- continue to test with users with access needs
- ensure any non-digital documentation is accessible, for example, printed letters
- make sure page titles and headings are unique and make sense
- check URLs are clear and readable
- write descriptive, unique text for links
- ensure headings follow the correct structure
- consider whether visuals, for example diagrams and images, need text or an alternative version on the same page
- write descriptive and understandable error messages
- review the accessibility audit with your team and action any content-related issues
- help your team create an accessibility statement, using the relevant statements template
In live
You should:
- continue to iterate your service based on research and data insights
- test content changes to make sure they meet accessibility requirements
- monitor and consider offline processes and their impact or relationship to the journey
- when content-related issues are fixed, ensure the accessibility statement is updated
This content was pair written with the DfE content design community.