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I'll make your website accessible to everyone with WCAG 2.2 compliant web accessibility implementation - opening your business to 15% more potential customers through inclusive website development in Pune.

Get a free accessibility audit and discover exactly what needs fixing. Let's make your website work for everyone while improving SEO and conversions.
Here's something most businesses don't realize - 15% of the world's population has some form of disability. That's 1.3 billion potential customers who might struggle to use your website. I've helped 40+ Pune businesses make their websites accessible, and the results go beyond compliance.
Web accessibility isn't just about following rules. It's about better SEO, improved user experience for everyone, and reaching a wider audience. When I made a local educational platform WCAG 2.2 compliant last year, their organic traffic increased 28% within three months. Google loves accessible websites.
I specialize in practical web accessibility services that work in the real world. I don't just run automated tests and call it done. I manually test with screen readers, keyboard navigation, voice control, and color contrast analyzers. Every interactive element gets verified. Every form gets tested. Every image gets proper alt text.
My approach combines pixel-perfect implementation with performance-based coding. You'll get clean, semantic HTML that assistive technologies understand. I build accessibility into your site's structure from day one, not as an afterthought. Plus, I add those delightful micro-interactions that work beautifully for both mouse and keyboard users.
What makes my website development in Pune different? I focus on sustainable accessibility. You'll get comprehensive documentation, training for your content team, and ongoing support. I've worked with healthcare, education, e-commerce, and government clients - each with unique accessibility requirements.
Every accessibility decision I make considers your business goals. More accessible websites mean better conversions, reduced legal risk, improved brand reputation, and happier users across the board.
I'll conduct a comprehensive WCAG 2.2 audit of your entire website. This includes automated scanning with axe DevTools and WAVE, manual testing with multiple screen readers, keyboard navigation testing, color contrast analysis, and form validation. You'll receive a prioritized report within 3-5 days showing all issues categorized by severity (critical, serious, moderate, minor). I test on real devices with actual assistive technology to catch issues automated tools miss.
Based on the audit, I'll create a detailed remediation roadmap. We'll prioritize critical issues that block users completely, then address serious barriers, and finally polish minor improvements. I'll provide effort estimates, explain technical approaches, and recommend whether to fix existing code or rebuild components. For large sites, we can phase implementation to balance urgency with budget.
This is where I get hands-on with your codebase. I'll implement semantic HTML, add ARIA attributes, fix heading hierarchies, create accessible forms, optimize keyboard navigation, and ensure proper focus management. All changes are documented with clear commit messages and tested in staging. I write clean, maintainable code that your team can understand and extend.
After implementation, I test everything with real assistive technologies. I navigate your entire site with screen readers (JAWS, NVDA, VoiceOver), keyboard only, voice control (Dragon), and screen magnification. I verify that every feature works correctly, every announcement makes sense, and every interaction is smooth. If anything doesn't work perfectly, I refine it.
When possible, I arrange testing with actual users who rely on assistive technology. This reveals real-world issues that technical testing might miss. I document their feedback, make necessary adjustments, and validate that your site truly works for everyone. This step often uncovers UX improvements that benefit all users.
Before launch, I create comprehensive documentation including accessibility guidelines, content creation best practices, QA checklists, and component usage instructions. I'll train your content team, developers, and designers on maintaining accessibility. You'll get video tutorials, written guides, and hands-on practice. I want your team confident in keeping the site accessible long-term.
My accessibility services start at ₹45,000 for small websites (10-20 pages) and go up to ₹2,50,000+ for large enterprise applications. The cost depends on your site's complexity, current accessibility state, and required compliance level (WCAG A, AA, or AAA). I'll provide a fixed quote after the initial audit. Most clients see ROI within 6 months through increased traffic and conversions, plus avoided legal costs.
A typical website takes 3-6 weeks from audit to compliant launch. Small sites (under 20 pages) can be done in 2-3 weeks. Large applications with custom components might need 8-12 weeks. The timeline depends on issue severity and whether we're fixing existing code or rebuilding components. Critical barriers can often be addressed within the first week for urgent compliance needs.
WCAG A is the minimum baseline - basic accessibility features. WCAG AA is the standard most organizations target - it covers the majority of accessibility needs and is what most laws require. WCAG AAA is the highest level with stricter requirements, typically needed for government or specialized services. I recommend WCAG 2.2 AA for most businesses - it's comprehensive, legally defensible, and serves the vast majority of users with disabilities.
Not negatively. I implement accessibility while preserving (or improving) your visual design. Sometimes we need to adjust color contrast or add visual indicators, but these changes typically enhance the overall design. I've never had a client unhappy with how their accessible site looks. In fact, accessibility often leads to cleaner, more intuitive designs that everyone prefers.
Most websites can be made accessible through remediation - fixing existing code rather than rebuilding. I'll assess your site during the audit and recommend the best approach. Simple sites built with modern frameworks usually need fixes only. Legacy sites with outdated code might benefit from selective rebuilding of problematic components. Complete rebuilds are rarely necessary unless the site needs updating anyway.
Yes, accessibility requires ongoing attention as you add content and features. I provide training so your team can maintain accessibility independently. I also offer quarterly audits (₹12,000-20,000/quarter) to catch issues before they become problems. Most clients handle day-to-day content with my guidelines and use my quarterly service for technical validation and new feature reviews.
Absolutely. Semantic HTML, descriptive alt text, proper heading structure, clear navigation, and fast load times (accessibility often improves performance) are all ranking factors. Search engines are essentially "blind users" that rely on the same semantic structure that assistive technologies use. Every accessible site I've launched has seen SEO improvements - typically 20-35% traffic increase within 3-6 months.
I can help with remediation if you receive a complaint or lawsuit. I'll prioritize the specific issues mentioned, implement fixes quickly, and provide documentation of compliance efforts. However, it's much cheaper to be proactive. Lawsuits can cost ₹5-15 lakhs in legal fees plus remediation costs. Proactive accessibility implementation costs a fraction of that and protects you long-term.
Yes, training is included in every project. I'll teach your content creators how to write descriptive alt text, structure content properly, create accessible PDFs, and test their work. Developers learn accessible coding patterns. Designers learn inclusive design principles. Training typically takes 4-8 hours spread over a few sessions, and I provide reference materials for ongoing use.
No, automated tools only catch about 30-40% of accessibility issues. They're great for finding obvious problems like missing alt text or poor contrast, but they miss context-dependent issues, confusing navigation, unclear instructions, and complex interaction problems. That's why I combine automated scanning with manual testing using real assistive technologies. Only human testing can verify that your site truly works for people with disabilities.
Yes, the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act 2016 requires all government websites to be accessible. While private sector requirements are less defined, many businesses proactively implement accessibility to avoid discrimination complaints, serve all customers, and prepare for likely future regulations. Plus, if you serve international markets, you may need to comply with ADA (US), EAA (Europe), or other regional laws.
The biggest mistake is treating accessibility as a checkbox exercise rather than user-centered design. Many sites run an automated scan, fix the flagged issues, and think they're done. But accessibility is about real people using assistive technology to accomplish real tasks. I see sites that technically pass automated tests but are impossible to navigate with a screen reader. The second biggest mistake is leaving accessibility until the end instead of building it in from the start.