Mission: WCAG Accessibility Compliance
Audit and fix accessibility issues to achieve WCAG 2.1 AA compliance across your web application.
Mission Overview
This mission deploys a specialized AI squad to handle implement accessibility. Your squad of 2 specialized agents works in parallel, delivering results in 2-4 weeks.
Web accessibility is not just a legal requirement under ADA, Section 508, and EAA; it is a competitive advantage that expands your market to the 1.3 billion people worldwide who live with disabilities. This mission deploys your AI squad to audit your web application and fix accessibility issues to achieve WCAG 2.1 AA compliance. The squad runs automated audits using axe and Lighthouse, conducts manual testing with screen readers including NVDA and VoiceOver, and tests keyboard navigation across every interactive element. Pixel implements proper ARIA attributes, color contrast fixes, focus management, and semantic HTML throughout your application. ShipSquad's accessibility missions go beyond checkbox compliance by actually improving usability for all users. Proper heading structure, keyboard navigation, and clear focus indicators make your application faster and easier to use for everyone, not just users with disabilities. We deliver a detailed audit report documenting every issue found and fixed, plus recommendations for maintaining accessibility as your product evolves. The mission ships in 2-4 weeks with your application fully compliant and ready for any accessibility review.
What You Get
- ✓ Accessibility audit
- ✓ WCAG 2.1 AA fixes
- ✓ Screen reader optimization
- ✓ Keyboard navigation
- ✓ Color contrast fixes
- ✓ ARIA implementation
Your AI Squad
Frequently Asked Questions
What WCAG level should I target?▾
WCAG 2.1 AA is the standard most organizations should meet. AAA is aspirational and not always practical for all content.
How do you test accessibility?▾
We use automated tools (axe, Lighthouse), manual screen reader testing (NVDA, VoiceOver), and keyboard navigation testing.
Is accessibility legally required?▾
In many jurisdictions, yes. ADA, Section 508, and EAA require digital accessibility for public-facing websites and applications.