Despite this, there's a significant gap in how businesses address accessibility. Alarmingly, Harvard Business Review reports that while 96% of companies worldwide have an Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) strategy, only 4% include accessibility as a key component.
I started on this journey because of personal experiences and a desire to drive systemic change. My experience of being fired after requesting a reasonable adjustment, which was later implemented company-wide, highlighted to me just how much of a problem this was. I’ve been disabled with an invisible energy and pain disability for nearly two decades, facing barriers to education, the workplace and society for most of my life. I built a career working from home in human resources and operations, and after being headhunted and then fired a few months later for asking for a reasonable adjustment, I founded SIC, a non-profit to support other disabled people and companies through the employment process.
In 2023, I stepped away from SIC to pursue consultancy work and focus on my Churchill Fellowship, which looked at best practices in inclusion and accessibility across the USA and Europe. During this journey, I engaged with academics, lawyers, politicians, and global leaders in accessibility, including Heads of Accessibility from major companies like Google, Walmart, and ING Bank. Their insights have been invaluable in shaping my understanding of inclusive practices that actually work for organisations beyond the token workshops or speakers on awareness days.