VPAT for Government Sales

Selling software, web applications, or digital products to federal, state, or local government agencies almost always requires a VPAT. Government buyers need documentation that a product meets accessibility requirements before they can complete a purchase, and the VPAT is the standard format procurement officers expect to see. Federal agencies operate under Section 508, which requires … Read more

Accessibility Issue Tracking Software

Accessibility issue tracking software organizes WCAG findings from audits and scans into a structured workspace where teams can assign owners, set priorities, and monitor remediation progress. Each issue carries the success criterion it relates to, the location where it was identified, severity, and the steps to remediate. Instead of chasing spreadsheets, teams work from a … Read more

Prioritize Accessibility Issues After an Audit

Prioritizing issues after an audit comes down to two scoring factors: user impact and risk factor. User impact measures how much an issue affects people relying on assistive technologies. Risk factor measures the likelihood of the issue contributing to a complaint or lawsuit. Issues that score high on both move to the top of the … Read more

EAA vs ADA Difference

The EAA vs ADA difference comes down to where each law applies, who it covers, and how it treats digital accessibility. The European Accessibility Act applies across European Union member states and covers specific products and services placed on the EU market. The Americans with Disabilities Act applies in the United States and covers public … Read more

After an Accessibility Audit: Next Steps

Once an accessibility audit report is delivered, the work shifts from evaluation to action. The report lists every issue identified, where it appears, the WCAG success criterion it relates to, and guidance on how to fix it. That document becomes the working file for the next phase: remediation. Remediation typically follows a prioritized order. Issues … Read more