Drip7 Accessibility Audit
Web Accessibility Remediation for Drip7 website to make it conforms with the WCAG technical standards and comply with the ADA.
This Drip7 accessibility audit and WCAG 2.1 AA remediation covered a United States cybersecurity-awareness platform that trains employees through bite-size, gamified microlearning.
Security-awareness training is meant for everyone in an organisation — including employees with disabilities. If the microlearning questions, leaderboards or sign-in are not accessible, some staff cannot complete required training, which is both unfair and a compliance gap.
Table of Contents

Why accessibility is critical for a training platform
Software and SaaS companies are not exempt from accessibility expectations. In the United States a company’s digital services are treated as a place of public accommodation under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Title III, and WCAG 2.1 Level AA is the standard, and for a product company it applies twice over — to the public marketing site and to the application itself. Required workplace training must reach every employee, so an inaccessible lesson is a compliance and fairness gap. A sign-up or demo form a screen-reader user cannot complete, or a product UI a keyboard user cannot operate, shuts paying customers and their own users out.
Scope and standard
Our Drip7 accessibility audit assessed the site and platform against WCAG 2.1 Level AA, mapped to ADA Title III, across the journeys that matter: marketing pages, sign-up and login, the microlearning question and quiz interface, leaderboards and progress, and navigation.
How we ran the Drip7 accessibility audit
- Screen-reader testing with JAWS and NVDA on Windows, VoiceOver on macOS and iOS, and TalkBack on Android
- Automated audits with Deque axe, Google Lighthouse and WAVE
- Keyboard-only operation of every step, with attention to focus order and a clearly visible focus indicator
- Colour-contrast analysis, plus 400% zoom and reflow testing for low-vision users
What accessibility means on each part of the site
Because Drip7 is a product-led site, our Drip7 accessibility audit focused on the marketing site and the path into the product:
- Feature, solution and pricing pages need a clear heading structure and readable text, so a screen-reader user can evaluate the product.
- Sign-up, login and demo-request forms need programmatic labels, clear instructions and announced errors, so getting started never depends on sight or a mouse.
- Any interactive demo or product UI needs keyboard operability, managed focus and names and states that assistive technology can read.
- Documentation and support content needs correct heading levels, readable code or examples, and link names that make sense out of context.
- Navigation and content need visible focus, sufficient colour contrast and clean reflow at 400% zoom.
Outcome
This Drip7 accessibility audit, combining manual and automated testing with remediation, brought the site into line with WCAG 2.1 AA expectations, so people using a screen reader or a keyboard can use it without barriers. Every fix was verified with assistive technology rather than assumed from an automated pass, so the result holds up in real use.
