Understanding the need for Accessibility in the Tourism industry

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As travel gets easier and cheaper, more people have taken to the skies, dedicating their hard-earned spare income to exploring the world. But as more people travel, including a significant portion of the 1.3 billion disabled people worldwide, accessibility becomes an increasingly important topic for the tourism industry.

Despite growing awareness, many businesses still fall short of meeting the needs of their disabled customers. Accessibility in tourism is not just about following rules – it’s about levelling the playing field and ensuring that everyone, regardless of their abilities, can enjoy travel experiences.

Types of Accessibility in Tourism

Accessibility in tourism generally falls into three categories, with each type focussing on different aspects of the user experience. Efforts to cover all three should leave your business barrier-free and open to everyone, whether a tour operator, bed and breakfast, museum, or other.

Physical accessibility

The ability of people with mobility challenges to access buildings, attractions, and services (e.g., ramps, accessible toilets).

Digital accessibility

Websites, apps, and booking systems are usable for everyone, including those with visual, hearing, or cognitive impairments.

Communication accessibility

Clear and inclusive communication, such as offering information in multiple formats (e.g., audio guides, sign language interpreters).

Strategies for improving Web Accessibility in Tourism

For customers, a lot of the travel experience starts online. This could be booking flights, searching for the best deal on hotels, or comparing tour operators. Therefore, ensuring web accessibility is crucial in the tourism industry, and a great place to start.

Accessible booking forms

In the tourism industry, booking forms are often needed for things like enquiries or room reservations. Ensure your booking forms are accessible by adding relevant labels to fields, ensuring keyboard accessibility, and using large, readable fonts. Provide appropriate placeholder text that gives examples or instructions, and make sure error messages are prescriptive and clear.

Accessible checkouts

Design your checkout process such that it is easy to navigate and can be easily read by screen readers. To do this, streamline the amount of steps required to complete the checkout process, avoid overwhelming users with too many elements, and label all fields clearly so that screen readers can interpret them accurately. An accessible checkout process reduces the risk of your customers abandoning their order at the last minute and improves customer satisfaction.

Clear colour contrasts

High colour contrast between text and background makes online content much easier to read for those with visual impairments. For instance, using dark text on a light background (or vice versa) makes it easier to distinguish between elements. This small change can make a world of difference for people with low vision.

Consider offering your website users a full suite of customisation options by adopting software, such as Recite Me’s accessibility toolbar, which allows anyone to tailor your site and its content to their own specific needs.

Image alt text

Every image on your website should have descriptive alternative text, otherwise known as ‘alt text’. This helps visually impaired users who rely on screen readers to understand the content of the image. For example, a photo of a seaside resort could have the alt text: “A sunny day at a beachfront hotel with palm trees and clear blue water”. Note that alt text should be descriptive enough for the user to understand exactly what the image represents, but not so descriptive that it becomes overwhelming or confusing. Keep it clear and to the point.

Accessible Navigation

Many users with motor impairments are unable to use a mouse effectively. As such, they rely on moving through your site and consuming your content using a keyboard only. However, this can only work if you have set up your site accordingly.

Test your web pages to make sure buttons, links, and other elements can be accessed using keyboard functions, like the ‘tab’ key. Add clear focus indicators, such as a visible outline, to help users know where they are on the page.

Detect Web Accessibility issues on your Website

Detecting accessibility issues has never been easier than it is now. At Recite Me we offer a free automated scan of your websites homepage. This will identify and highlight any non-compliance on your website. Followed by recommendations on how to implement the necessary changes to improve your websites accessibility score and standing.

Strategies for improving Physical Accessibility in Tourism

Once your customers have accessed your online resources, made their reservations, or booked their transport, the next step is to visit your business and its facilities. This is where physical accessibility comes into play. Improving physical accessibility ensures that everyone, regardless of their mobility challenges, has full access to things like buildings, transport, facilities, etc.

Ramps and Lifts

Installing ramps or lifts as an alternative to stairs allows wheelchair users and individuals with mobility issues to access all areas of your premises. A resort, for instance, can ensure that all facilities—dining areas, rooms, and swimming pools—are reachable by those who have difficulty walking.

Accessible Toilets

Accessible toilets with proper handrails, wider entrances, and enough space for wheelchairs are essential. Hotels and tourist attractions should ensure accessible facilities are available in multiple locations, granting guests easier access without excessive detours.

Accessible Parking Spaces

Dedicated parking spaces for disabled guests should be close to entrances and wide enough to allow for wheelchairs or similar assistive devices to be unloaded within the bay. Thoughtful planning like this ensures visitors can enjoy your venue without stressing about where to park, how to unload, or the walks to and from the car.

Accessible Room Design

In hotels, accessible rooms should feature wider doors, roll-in showers, and lower bed heights to accommodate guests with mobility issues. Providing rooms with visual and auditory alarms for fire safety also ensures a comfortable and safe stay for those with disabilities.

Strategies for improving Communication Accessibility in Tourism

Much of the tourism industry is about conveying the right information at the right time. This means communicating around bookings, itineraries, directions, etc, as clearly and concisely as possible to people that may face some form of impairment or who don’t necessarily speak English as their first language. In this way, communication accessibility is just as important as its physical and digital counterparts.

Offer Audio Guides

Many museums, historical sites, and tour companies offer audio guides alongside their tours. These guides allow customers with visual impairments to partake in and consume information about sites and exhibits that they may not otherwise be able to. Audio guides even serve as a complementary add-on for non-disabled users, enhancing the user experience for everyone, even those without visual impairments.

Use Simple Language

Using simple, clear language in all written and verbal communications helps convey key information accurately to those with cognitive disabilities, as well as non-native speakers. Simplified language means avoiding technical jargon or unnecessarily complex words. It means being efficient with your use of words and avoiding excessive sentences. Doing so ensures that everyone can understand directions, instructions, or anything else pertinent to their travels.

Translate Important Information Into Different Languages

Tourists come from all over the world, and, as such, speak an abundance of different languages. While it may not be possible to translate your materials into every language, focussing on a few key languages can go a long way to serving your customer base.

Try to figure out which are the primary languages spoken by most of your customer base and start with those. For example, a guided tour of a historic landmark in Europe might choose to provide brochures in English, Spanish, German, and French. The likelihood is that most tourists will be familiar with at least one of these languages.

Sign Language Interpreters

For customers who are deaf or hard of hearing, having sign language interpreters available can make a significant difference. Tourist attractions, theatres, and tours can hire interpreters for specific events or provide video interpretations to enhance accessibility. This is particularly worth investing in if you are aware of a significant deaf contingent in your customer base.

Online Accessibility and Inclusion Toolkit

This year we published our Digital Inclusion Toolkit that was developed to help businesses make a real difference to the lives of the millions of people around the world who encounter online barriers. The 40 page document provides practical advice covering the complete landscape of online accessibility from how to write an accessibility statement to our top tips for providing an inclusive recruitment journey.

Legislation to be aware of as an Accessible Tourism provider

In Australia, several key guidelines and programs are designed to ensure accessibility in tourism. By complying with these standards, tourism businesses can cater to a broader audience and avoid legal issues.

Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG)

The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) sets an international standard for digital accessibility. It offers recommendations with key criteria on things like colour contrast ratios, descriptive alt text, and much more.

For example, tourism providers, as with all other businesses with an online presence, are required to maintain a colour contrast ratio of 4.5:1 across all their web pages. While not legally binding, these criteria form the digital basis of broader accessibility laws in Australia, like the Disability Discrimination Act (DDA).

Disability Discrimination Act (DDA)

The Disability Discrimination Act (DDA) ensures that people with disabilities are not discriminated against in the provision of services, making it illegal for tourism providers to discriminate against people with disabilities. Instead, businesses must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate people with disabilities, including both physical accessibility and accessible online services. It is worth noting that compliance with DDA can largely be met by following the WCAG’s guidelines.

Australian Tourism Industry Council – Accessible Tourism Program

As part of the Accessible Tourism program, the Australian Tourism Industry Council (ATIC) provides businesses a comprehensive online accessibility assessment and an accessibility information guide.

Once the self assessment is complete, the participating business will receive an accessibility guide which can be shared with customers, as well as an internal report which helps identify areas of further improvement. Tourism providers that meet the required standards for any of the five disability categories will receive badges which can be shown off to customers as evidence of accessibility.

Benefits of building an Accessible Tourism business

Making your tourism business accessible is part of playing your role in contributing to a fairer society. However, that doesn’t mean your business can’t benefit at the same time. This section outlines some of the most compelling business benefits when it comes to investing in accessibility in the tourism industry.

  • Increased customer base: Cater to the 1 billion people globally with disabilities, expanding your market reach.
  • Enhanced customer satisfaction: Accessible services lead to happier customers, generating positive reviews and repeat business.
  • Improved brand reputation: Demonstrating commitment to accessibility enhances your brand image, appealing to socially conscious travellers.
  • Legal compliance: Adhering to accessibility laws reduces the risk of costly legal issues and fines.
  • Competitive advantage: Making your business accessible is one way to stand out from the crowd, offering services that competitors may overlook.

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