For a healthcare hardware multinational, the accessibility requirements problem is the same. The accessibility requirements are handled inconsistently. Inconsistent handling means some products meet the requirements and some do not. Not meeting the requirements costs $230,000. Ford's assembly line innovation says: standardize the process, repeat the process, improve the process. Standardization creates consistency. Consistency eliminates the fines.
The Core Principle (7/43)
. Instead, the team builds accessibility into every step of the development process.
Ford did not handle quality by inspecting each product at the end of the line and hoping the inspection would catch all the defects. He handled it by standardizing the process, repeating the process, and improving the process. The standardization created consistency. The consistency eliminated defects. Eliminating defects reduced costs. Reducing costs built Ford. (9/43)
Four Steps to Apply Assembly Line Innovation to Handling Accessibility Requirements
1. Create a Standardized Accessibility Procedure That Every Team Follows for Every Product Starting from the First Day of Development (11/43)
Ford created a standardized procedure. The procedure was followed by every worker. Every worker following the procedure created consistency. Consistency built Ford. You should create a standardized accessibility procedure that every team follows for every product starting from the first day of development.
For a healthcare hardware multinational, the standardized accessibility procedure might look like this. The accessibility director creates a 26-page document with five sections. (12/43)
Section three covers accessibility testing tools. Seven tools are listed: screen reader testing, color contrast analysis, keyboard navigation testing, text resizing testing, audio description testing, cognitive load testing, and motor impairment simulation.
Section four covers accessibility roles. Defining roles creates accountability. Every team has an accessibility champion who is responsible for ensuring the procedure is followed. (15/43)
. The reduction saved the company $142,000 in fines and remediation that would have happened without the standardized procedure.
For a Kanban team of 50+, the standardized accessibility procedure should be a document with at least five sections. It should be distributed to all teams. For Kanban, the procedure should be part of the team's workflow as a workflow step. (18/43)
Station four is the pre-release audit. The standardized test is a full review covering all 112 requirements. An external auditor executes the audit. Independence ensures objectivity. If it passes, the product moves to the next station. If it fails, the product is revised.
Station five is post-release monitoring. The standardized test is a monitoring plan that tracks accessibility issues after release to ensure the product continues to meet the requirements. (25/43)
For a Kanban team of 50+, the accessibility assembly line should be a workflow with at least five stations. Each station should have a standardized test. For Kanban, the assembly line should be part of the team's board as a board column.
3. Assign an Accessibility Champion to Each Team Who Is Responsible for Running the Standardized Tests at Each Station and Blocking Progress If the Tests Fail (27/43)
. Correctly running the tests creates quality. Quality means defects are caught.
The accessibility champion has the authority to block progress. If a test fails, the product cannot move to the next station. The product cannot move until the test passes. This ensures defects are fixed before the product advances. (30/43)
For a Kanban team of 50+, the accessibility champion should be a trained developer assigned to each team. The champion should have the authority to block progress. For Kanban, the champion should be part of the team's workflow as a workflow role.
4. Run a Feedback Loop Every Month to Review Accessibility Performance Across All Teams and Improve the Standardized Procedure Based on the Data (32/43)
Ford ran a feedback loop that reviewed performance. Reviewing performance meant the process could be improved. Improving the process built Ford. You should run a feedback loop every month to review accessibility performance across all teams and improve the standardized procedure based on the data.
For a healthcare hardware multinational, the feedback loop might look like this. The accessibility director runs a one-hour meeting at the end of every month. The meeting has two parts. (33/43)
For a Kanban team of 50+, the feedback loop should happen at the end of every month. It should review at least four metrics. It should result in at least one improvement. For Kanban, the feedback loop should be part of the team's workflow as a workflow activity.
Closing on Standardizing Over Inspecting (38/43)
. Your 12,400-employee company stops losing $230,000 per quarter on fines and remediation because a healthcare hardware multinational learned to handle accessibility requirements from a manufacturing pioneer who proved that the best way to handle quality is to stop inspecting at the end and start standardizing the process.
#Accessibility #Kanban #Healthcare #MedicalDevices #Agile #Compliance #WCAG #Section508 #QualityAssurance #ProcessImprovement (43/43)