VadimGuzhva – stock.adobe.com
GSMA has launched a framework of guidelines aimed at helping the mobile industry close the digital accessibility gap, which leaves a number of people with disabilities unable to use mobile technology.
The guidelines, titled Principles for driving the digital inclusion of persons with disabilities, outline ways mobile firms and other digital providers can tackle some of the barriers which prevent people with disabilities from using mobile devices.
“Removing the barriers faced by persons with disabilities requires informed action from all stakeholders,” said Mats Granryd, director general of the GSMA.
“It’s time for the mobile industry to take steps to ensure our products and services are accessible, unlocking the power of connectivity so that all people thrive. I am delighted that Dialog Axiata PLC, Optus, Orange Group, Safaricom PLC, Telefónica Group, Turkcell, Vodacom South Africa and Zain Group have already signed up to the Principles, and I look forward to many more industry participants joining us in this commitment.”
Recent research by BCS found the number of IT professionals in the UK with a disability – meaning those with physical or mental disabilities lasting for more than a year, making it difficult to carry out day-to-day tasks – has increased since 2015, but was still low at 11% in 2019.
Digital exclusion is still rife in the UK across many different groups – for example, around 700,000 people in the UK don’t have access to digital devices at all for one reason or another, and recent research by Purple found 75% of people with disabilities have had to leave a store or website because their disability was not catered to in a way that would allow them to finish their purchase.
The GSMA’s guidelines, which have been developed alongside help from mobile operators and disability and accessibility experts, outline three “core principals” for increasing digital inclusion for disabled people, including ensuring disability inclusion is embraced at every level of an organisation, understanding how to reach and serve people with disabilities and delivering inclusive products and services.
When it comes to ensuring disability and inclusion is present at every level of an organisation, GSMA makes several recommendations including making sure disability inclusion is championed by senior leadership, embedding disability inclusion in internal policies, business strategies and KPIs, and helping people with disabilities to thrive within an organisation.
Actions recommended by the GSMA to ensure organisations aim to reach and serve disabled communities included collecting and analysing data to better understand how disabled customers are using services, and conducting consumer research to find out how to better understand and meet the requirements of customers with disabilities.
The GSMA also suggested developing handsets, content, products and services to be affordable and accessible to all, as well as putting provisions in place such as customer service advisors trained in teaching customers how to use such as devices as potential ways to ensure the delivery of inclusive products and services.
The goal is to have mobile operators and “digital stakeholders” endorse the guidelines to encourage and support a more digitally inclusive society going forward.
Pointing out World Health Organisation figures found that one billion people have disabilities, only 10% of which have access to assistive technology to help them live their lives, the GSMA developed the guidelines to encourage the mobile industry to close this gap.
The WHO also found that 80% of people with disabilities are more likely to come from low and middle-income countries, and the GSMA found disabled people from these countries are less likely to own a smartphone or use mobile internet than people without disabilities.
The GSMA claimed mobile phones are the most “cost-effective tools” available to ensure several different assistive technologies to help disabled people are delivered on a single device.
Its framework has been supported by several mobile operators, endorsed by several official bodies, and has been funded using aid from the UK government.
The Covid-19 pandemic has transformed our networking habits. In this 17-page buyer’s guide, Computer Weekly looks at how firms are coping with the shift to remote working, the new challenges facing IT leaders and the alternatives to strained virtual private networks.
CIO dashboards can be a vital tool for assessing metrics in real time to gain insight on IT performance and support better …
The business response to COVID-19 has accelerated technology adoption, making emerging technologies a more accessible and …
The Open Group is teaming up with a United Nations agency on best practices, guides and standards to show resource-strapped …
The NSA issued a cybersecurity advisory warning government agencies to mitigate as soon as possible, as the vulnerability was …
Now hiring: As organizations increasingly favor proactive cyber threat hunting and detection over bare-bones prevention, SecOps …
SecOps tools offer many capabilities to address common threats enterprises face, including domain name services, network …
Network teams can avoid signal coverage issues by performing different wireless site surveys as they evaluate new spaces, set up …
SD-WAN, SASE or some combination of the two — which approach will deliver the best and most secure network connectivity in your …
Celona 5G technology uses Citizens Broadband Radio Service spectrum to bring private mobile networking to the enterprise, …
In any multi-tenant IT environment, noisy neighbors can be an issue. Here’s a closer look at how the challenges differ in the …
Use this data center selection checklist to make fair and comprehensive comparisons between colocation data center providers …
One offers more control, while the other offers more flexible space. If you’re considering a colocation facility, how do you …
Collibra CEO discusses the importance of data governance for enterprises and how to tie data governance to business terminology …
The enterprise edition of the MySQL database is being enhanced on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure to enable users to run analytics …
The U.S. government has made data sets from many federal agencies available for public access to use and analyze. Check out some …
All Rights Reserved, Copyright 2000 – 2020, TechTarget
Privacy Policy
Cookie Preferences
Do Not Sell My Personal Info