Why Accessibility Work Usually Fails Without Ongoing Ownership
Accessibility improvements can slip quickly when no one owns them after launch. This guide explains why accessibility work needs operational ownership, not just a one-time review.
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Articles from Best Website focused on content governance. You’re viewing page 8 of 8.
Accessibility improvements can slip quickly when no one owns them after launch. This guide explains why accessibility work needs operational ownership, not just a one-time review.
Urgent website changes often become riskier than they need to be because nobody has documented who can approve them, who should be pulled in, and who can reverse them if something goes wrong.
Letting one outside partner control the domain, DNS, and hosting can be efficient, but it also concentrates risk. This article explains what should be documented before that setup becomes fragile.
Accessibility work often slips backward through small editorial exceptions, not just major redesigns. This article explains how heading and link inconsistency keeps reintroducing avoidable problems.
Many website emergencies become worse because key information was never documented while things were calm. This guide explains what website owners most often forget to record.