Our accessibility target
We are working toward conformance with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, WCAG 2.2 Level AA, as our technical target. Accessibility is an ongoing practice, not a one-time certification, and this statement does not claim that every page or third-party service is free of barriers.
Measures in the current site
- Semantic headings, landmarks, lists, links, buttons, fieldsets, and labels.
- A skip link and visible keyboard focus indicators.
- Keyboard-operable navigation, forms, disclosures, and multi-step controls.
- Text contrast, responsive reflow, browser zoom support, and readable touch targets.
- Alternative text for meaningful imagery and empty alternatives for decorative images.
- Reduced-motion support for people who request it at the operating-system or browser level.
- Clear form purpose, autocomplete information, and privacy notices near collection points.
- Content that remains visible if animation or client-side scripting is unavailable.
Third-party dependencies
Scheduling, CRM, analytics, advertising, embedded media, PDF, and other third-party services may have accessibility characteristics we do not fully control. We review customer-facing components for keyboard access, labels, contrast, zoom, reflow, error handling, and assistive-technology compatibility, and we work to provide an accessible alternative when a vendor experience creates a barrier.
Feedback and accommodation
If you cannot access content or complete an action, email jack@earlybirdassistants.com. Please include the page address, what you were trying to do, the barrier you encountered, and your browser or assistive technology if you are comfortable sharing it. We will review the issue and work to provide the information or service through an accessible alternative.
Assessment approach
The site is reviewed through a combination of semantic inspection, automated checks, keyboard testing, responsive and zoom testing, reduced-motion testing, and manual visual review. Automated results are used as one signal and are not treated as proof of complete accessibility.