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Accessibility remediation roadmap · prioritized fix plan

The Remediation Roadmap
After the audit, what actually gets fixed first? A prioritized plan with owners and milestone dates — not another 200-page PDF.

A WCAG 2.1 AA audit hands you a finding list. A remediation roadmap turns that list into a real schedule: prioritized by impact and effort, with assigned owners, milestone dates, and a budget envelope. The document most accessibility firms don't actually deliver.

πŸ—ΊοΈPrioritized by impact + effort
πŸ‘€Owner assigned per finding
πŸ“…Milestone dates, not "ASAP"
πŸ’°Budget envelope per phase
Real prioritizationHigh-impact + low-effort issues fixed first. The 200-page audit dump is the wrong tool.
Ownership clarityEach finding has a name on it: dev team, content team, vendor, or P4. No "someone should fix this".
Trackable progressA real schedule means real progress — week-over-week, you can see what closed.

One accountable partner, fast decisions, and a premium result that looks expensive and feels simple. We confirm scope, build fast, and ship.

Real style preview
Looks premium · Works on mobile
Prioritized accessibility remediation roadmap document
Conversion-first structureOne primary action. Proof before persuasion. Clean sections that push "Yes".
Performance you can measureSpeed posture built-in (Core Web Vitals-ready). No heavy scripts. No bloat.
Proof assets includedResults cards, screenshots, metrics, and a simple quote flow that works on mobile.
Built for: Orgs sitting on an audit report with no path forwardBuilt on Netlify (fast + reliable)
Built for: Orgs sitting on an audit report with no path forward.

The remediation roadmap, in detail

Most accessibility audits hand you a long list of findings sorted by WCAG success criterion. That's the wrong organization for actually fixing things. Two SC 1.4.3 (Contrast) violations might be one CSS change fixing both; ten "image missing alt text" findings might be one content-team workflow change covering all of them.

A real remediation roadmap re-organizes the findings by the work it takes to fix them. The high-impact + low-effort wins come first (often: alt text on hero images, focus visible styles, form label fixes). The lower-impact + high-effort items get phased into a second or third tranche. Items that require vendor changes get a separate "vendor track" so you know to start those contract conversations early.

Each finding cluster gets an assigned owner — dev team, content team, vendor, or P4 — and a milestone date. "Fix all contrast violations on the marketing site by 2026-09-30" beats "fix contrast" by a mile. The roadmap becomes a real schedule that management can track week-over-week.

For Title II public entities working toward the 2027 / 2028 deadline, the roadmap is also the artifact you reference in your accessibility statement and your written accessibility plan. Title II expects a documented, dated approach to compliance — the roadmap is that document.

We build the roadmap as a follow-on to any audit (ours or a competitor's). If you commissioned an audit from another firm and they handed you the unprioritized PDF dump, we can take that PDF and turn it into a real roadmap. Bring the audit, we build the path forward.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a roadmap if I already have an audit?

If the audit hands you a real prioritized fix plan with owners and dates, no. If it hands you a list of findings sorted by WCAG SC and calls it a day, yes — that's the most common audit deliverable and it doesn't convert to action without a roadmap step.

Can you build a roadmap from another firm's audit?

Yes. Bring the audit (PDF, spreadsheet, whatever format), we turn it into the prioritized roadmap. Common with audits from BoIA, Deque, AudioEye, Accessibility.Works, Equalize Digital, and others.

How does the roadmap relate to weekly monitoring?

They're complementary. The roadmap turns audit findings into a fix schedule. Weekly monitoring watches for new issues (or fixes that didn't fully land). Together they form the closed loop most accessibility programs are missing.

How much?

Standalone roadmap (from another firm's audit): $497–$1,997 depending on findings volume. As part of our own audit: included. Request a quote.

Will following the roadmap make me "compliant"?

No. Compliance is a legal determination only your counsel can make. Following the roadmap will improve your site's conformance with WCAG 2.1 AA. That's the technical baseline, not a legal verdict.

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