Making digital accessible for an older audience

Why do you need to consider the needs of older people when creating websites and mobile apps?

In this webinar, from September 2020, our team discuss the often overlooked value of the silver pound, how the pandemic has made older people a key new audience for digital products, the sorts of access barriers they face from a combination of lack of skills or capabilities, and what older people really want from digital.

Through personal stories and practical examples, the team share practical tips on how developers, designers, content authors can make older people’s lives easier by taking their digital access needs into account.

You can also find these tips summarised in a poster.

Join HiHub for free access to this webinar recording... and much more

HiHub is your home for exclusive access to resources, tools and tips about digital accessibility and inclusion, from Hassell Inclusion.

Membership of HiHub is free and gives you full access to our webinar video archive, downloads & guidance to help you on your accessibility journey whether you’re: an advocate for diversity and inclusion; your organisation’s accessibility lead; a product or campaign manager; or a member of a team creating sites and apps.

Get our Designing for Older People Poster

Older users make up 20% of the population. So not considering their needs significantly reduces your website or app’s potential audience.

Our poster summarises 5 key considerations when designing products to be inclusive for older people who may have multiple minor impairments that affect their sight, hearing, touch, understanding, and memory.

Many may not have, know about, or want to use assistive tech to help them.

Download our poster as a handy aide memoire.

 

 

If you’ve only got 1 hour a month to improve your digital accessibility knowledge, spend it with us! Digital Accessibility Experts Live

Come and join us at our free monthly webinar:

Upcoming webinars:

  • 30 January – ‘Trends in Digital Accessibility 2025’
  • 27 February – ‘Debunking Accessibility Myths’