ADA Compliance Risks for Business Websites
Accessibility-related risk grows when important tasks are hard to complete and the business has no clear process for finding and fixing barriers.
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Articles from Best Website focused on website support. You’re viewing page 22 of 44.
Accessibility-related risk grows when important tasks are hard to complete and the business has no clear process for finding and fixing barriers.
A long service page is not automatically a bad page. Before splitting it into several shorter ones, it is worth comparing whether the real issue is page quality, ordering, proof, or clarity rather than length itself.
Routine maintenance should make the website safer and more stable. It can create the opposite effect when staging, backups, and heavy maintenance jobs are competing with the same resources the live site depends on to stay responsive.
Internal links can strengthen high-intent pages without turning the main navigation into a crowded menu. The right links give context, not clutter.
Website risk increases when critical control over domains, DNS, and vendor accounts lives in memory instead of documentation. Those details should be clear before urgency forces the issue.
A replatform or rebuild should begin with clarity, not momentum. A useful audit separates platform limitations from content, process, and architecture problems before a major move is approved.
SEO content struggles when the main pages it supports disagree about priorities, proof, or next steps. Mixed signals weaken trust, relevance, and conversion momentum at the same time.
Routine website updates often go wrong for predictable reasons. A practical review should check scope, shared elements, dependencies, and rollback readiness before the change reaches the public site.
A real website health check should review more than whether the site is currently online. It should look at trust, user paths, maintenance risk, and the patterns that make problems likely to return.
A service page should do more than describe the work. It should prove that the company understands the problem, can deliver the outcome, and knows what matters before a prospect has to ask.