Most organisations still think of their website as a marketing tool. In reality, it is the first stage of your recruitment process.
Before a candidate reads a job description or attends an interview, they will have already interacted with your digital environment. For many people, this experience determines whether they can realistically apply at all.
If your website is not accessible, you are not just excluding customers—you may already be excluding future employees.
The Scale of the Issue: Accessibility Is Still Failing Online
Despite increased awareness and regulation, web accessibility remains a significant issue across the UK and globally.
- An estimated 1 in 5 people in the UK live with a disability
- Around 96% of homepages still contain detectable accessibility failures, according to independent web accessibility testing trends (WebAIM findings)
- Many users rely on assistive technologies such as screen readers, voice navigation, or keyboard-only navigation to access content
This means that for a significant proportion of the population, a poorly designed website is inaccessible by default.
Why Web Accessibility Matters for Organisations
Workplace inclusion does not begin at onboarding. It begins at the point of application.
For candidates with disabilities, neurodivergent conditions, or long-term health conditions, a website is often the first barrier in the employment journey.
This includes individuals with:
- Visual impairments
- Hearing loss or Deafness
- Mobility impairments affecting device use
- Autism or ADHD
- Dyslexia or other specific learning differences
- Anxiety-related or cognitive processing differences
If your website is not accessible, these candidates may be unable to:
- Find job vacancies
- Complete application forms
- Upload documents
- Understand instructions
- Navigate recruitment portals
Inaccessible websites quietly filter out talent before reviews even begin.
The Legal Framework: Accessibility Is Not Optional
In the UK, web accessibility is supported by several legal and regulatory expectations.
Public sector organisations are required to meet the Public Sector Bodies (Websites and Mobile Applications) Accessibility Regulations 2018, which mandate compliance with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 AA standards.
While private sector organisations are not always under the same reporting obligations, they are still subject to:
- The Equality Act 2010, which requires reasonable adjustments for disabled people
- Anti-discrimination provisions covering recruitment and employment practices
- Increasing expectations from procurement frameworks, investors and clients
In practical terms, if a candidate cannot access your application process due to a disability-related barrier, the organisation may be exposed to legal and reputational risk.
What WCAG Actually Means in Practice
The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) are built around four core principles:
A website must be:
- Perceivable – users can identify content using sight, sound, or assistive tools
- Operable – users can navigate without barriers such as a mouse-only interface
- Understandable – information is clear, consistent and predictable
- Robust – compatible with assistive technologies and future devices
This translates into design features such as:
- Text alternatives for images (alt text)
- Keyboard navigability for all functions
- Sufficient colour contrast
- Clear headings and structure
- Accessible forms with labels and error guidance
- Screen reader compatibility
When these are missing, users are effectively locked out of the system.
The Hidden Recruitment Barrier Most Employers Overlook
Many organisations invest heavily in employer branding, recruitment marketing and candidate experience. However, they often overlook a critical step:
Can everyone actually access the recruitment process in the first place?
Common accessibility barriers include:
Application forms that are too complex
Long, multi-step applications with unclear instructions increase cognitive load and disproportionately impact neurodivergent applicants.
Unlabelled form fields
Without proper labels, screen reader users cannot interpret what information is required.
Time-limited assessments
Timed tasks can disadvantage candidates with processing differences, anxiety, or certain learning disabilities.
PDFs that are not accessible
Many job descriptions are uploaded as non-tagged PDFs, making them unreadable for assistive technologies.
Inaccessible recruitment portals
Third-party systems often fail to meet accessibility standards, even when the employer’s main website does.
Each of these issues creates friction. Combined, they can completely block access.
Why Accessibility Is Becoming a Strategic Priority
More employers are now treating digital accessibility as a core workforce issue rather than a technical compliance requirement.
This shift is driven by several factors:
- Talent competition
With ongoing skills shortages, particularly in digital, analytical and technical roles, organisations cannot afford to unintentionally exclude candidates.
- Remote and digital-first recruitment
As recruitment becomes increasingly online, the website has effectively become the front door of the organisation.
If that door is not accessible, neither is the opportunity.
- ESG and inclusion reporting
Accessibility is increasingly linked to broader Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) frameworks, with investors and stakeholders expecting measurable inclusion progress.
- User expectations
Candidates now expect seamless digital experiences. Accessibility is increasingly viewed as a baseline requirement, not an enhancement.
The Business Case: Accessibility Improves Performance for Everyone
Accessible design does not only support disabled users—it improves usability across the board.
Examples include:
- Clear structure improves readability for all users
- Captions support users in noisy environments or non-native speakers
- Simple forms reduce drop-off rates
- Consistent navigation improves engagement
In many cases, accessibility improvements directly increase application completion rates and reduce recruitment friction.
Practical Steps Organisations Can Take Now
Improving website accessibility does not always require a full rebuild. Many changes can be implemented incrementally.
- Run an accessibility audit
Conduct a WCAG 2.1 AA audit across key pages, especially recruitment pathways.
- Test with assistive technologies
Use screen readers, keyboard-only navigation and automated testing tools to identify real-world barriers.
- Review recruitment journeys specifically
Do not just test your homepage—test job search, application forms, document uploads and assessment stages.
- Simplify structure and language
Reduce unnecessary complexity in job descriptions, application instructions and navigation.
- Fix high-impact barriers first
Prioritise issues that block access entirely (e.g., unlabelled forms, inaccessible PDFs, broken navigation).
From Compliance to Opportunity
A website that is not accessible does not just create inconvenience, it actively shapes who can apply, who progresses, and who is excluded before the process even begins.
As organisations compete for talent in a constrained labour market, accessibility is becoming a defining factor in recruitment success.
If your website is the first interaction a future employee has with your organisation, then accessibility is a first impression.
And that first impression answers a critical question:
“Do I belong here?”
The organisations that can confidently say “yes” at that moment are the ones that will access the widest, most capable talent pools in the future.
If your website is the first interview your organisation ever conducts, what is it really saying to the people it unintentionally excludes?
If your organisation is ready to build a truly accessible recruitment experience, Halo Staffing can help you get there. Find out how by clicking the button below!



