Accessibility consulting, training, and tools

Helping organizations create content that is accessible and works for everyone

If you are working with documents, courses, or digital materials, ADDA can help you make sure nothing important gets left behind.

Why this matters

Most accessibility problems are practical to fix once you know what to look for. The challenge is knowing where to start.

Michele Brannon-Hamilton, ADDA Founder

How ADDA can help you

Whether you need a one-time review, ongoing training, or an AI-powered tool, ADDA offers practical support that fits your situation.

  • Accessibility Consulting and Reviews

    Get a clear, actionable picture of where your documents, courses, or digital content fall short and exactly what to do about it. ADDA reviews your materials and gives you practical recommendations you can act on right away.

    Learn about consulting
  • Training and Course Support

    Build accessibility into how you create content from the start. ADDA offers training for educators, instructional designers, and content teams who want to produce accessible materials consistently, not just once.

    Learn about training
  • Pilot product

    Document Accessibility Assistant

    ADDA's first AI-powered tool helps you identify and fix accessibility issues in your documents, without needing to be an expert first. Currently available to a small group of pilot participants.

    Learn about the pilot

First pilot product

The Document Accessibility Assistant

Creating accessible documents takes time and specialist knowledge most teams do not have. The ADDA document accessibility assistant helps you identify issues, understand what they mean, and make your documents more accessible without needing to be an expert first.

Currently available to a small group of pilot participants only. Not yet publicly available.

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Your content may already be leaving people out

Most documents, courses, and digital materials are not accessible by default. PDFs with missing tags, images without descriptions, and forms that screen readers cannot navigate are common problems that affect real people every day.

For organizations in education, government, or regulated industries, inaccessible content also carries legal and reputational risk. Most accessibility problems are practical to fix once you know what to look for.

What accessible content means in practice

  • More people can access and use your materials
  • Reduced legal and compliance risk
  • Stronger professional reputation
  • Content that works across devices and assistive technologies

Ready to make your content more accessible?

Start with a conversation. ADDA will help you understand where you are and what to do next.