At Scriberia, we know that the most powerful ideas are the ones everyone can access and engage with. And we’re always asking ourselves: how can we make the things we create more accessible, more intuitive and more effective?
That’s why we are so pleased to welcome Alice Kell to the visualiser team. Alice is driven to make visual content that more people can connect with and understand. Her own experience of dyslexia, combined with her extensive work alongside neurodiverse communities, gives her a deep insight into accessible design. Alice is dedicated to the art and science of designing with accessibility and inclusion in mind. Here's an animation she made on the experience and often overlooked benefits of being dyslexic.
As Microsoft's CEO of Microsoft, Steve Ballmer, once said: “Accessible design is good design - it benefits people who don’t have disabilities as well as people who do.”
At its core, accessible design means recognising that our ability to access and process information varies greatly from person to person - like any other trait or ability. Whether someone has dyslexia, ADHD, low vision or sensory processing differences, the design choices you make will either include them or shut them out.
“To put it into perspective, people with disabilities or neurodivergent minds make up the world’s largest minority - around one billion people globally. That’s a huge audience too often excluded by default design practices”, says Alice.
“But a lot of visual communication still seems to assume a pretty narrow audience - people who are neurotypical, non-disabled and totally fluent in the usual design conventions. That’s exactly what we want to challenge.
"And here’s the added bonus: when you design to include more people, you usually make things better for everyone. Clarity, consistency, and thoughtful structure don’t just help those with specific needs - they help all of us take in information more easily."
Here is an animation that Alice created to explain how dyslexia
“When you treat accessibility as a creative challenge rather than a challenge to creativity it pushes you to think harder, experiment better and land stronger ideas,” says Alice.
“Working within clear parameters - like legibility, clarity and inclusion - sharpens your focus and strengthens your storytelling.”
Accessible design isn’t about stripping things back to the bare bones. It’s about making smart, purposeful choices. And when you do, your message gets clearer, your audience gets wider and your content becomes better for everyone.