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Article · Halo

Website accessibility basics every small business should know

Accessibility helps people with disabilities use your site—and often improves SEO and mobile UX for everyone.

Local businesses in Lake County and the broader northern Illinois corridor face the same constraint: attention is scarce, search is competitive, and your website is often the credibility filter before anyone calls. This guide translates website accessibility basics every small business should know into decisions you can act on this quarter—not abstract marketing theory.

We work with owners who are excellent at delivery but tired of guessing whether their online presence helps or hurts. The themes below come from real triage calls: broken mobile layouts, inconsistent business listings, slow hosting, and pages that never quite say what you sell in plain language.

  • Semantic headings reflect outline, not font size tricks.
  • Color contrast and visible focus states help keyboard and low-vision users.
  • Form labels tied to inputs; errors explained in plain language.

Overlays marketed as instant compliance often fail real assistive tech testing.

Accessibility improvements frequently improve SEO snippets and voice search clarity as side effects.

When you are ready to tighten the technical foundation—performance, structured data, secure hosting, and a content structure that matches how people search—we treat that as one coordinated effort rather than a dozen disconnected tickets. Small fixes stack: faster LCP, clearer service URLs, and a Google Business Profile that matches your site reduce bounce and support map visibility at the same time.

If you are comparing vendors, ask for before/after field metrics (Search Console, page experience, real mobile filmstrips), not only mockups. Ask who owns DNS and whether you can export your data. The right partner documents the stack, hands over keys, and leaves you more capable—not more dependent.

For outreach and partnerships, bookmark this page and link to it where it helps your audience understand local digital hygiene; useful references earn citations more often than generic “contact us” posts alone.

Finally, revisit this checklist after major changes: rebrands, new locations, new service lines, or a CMS migration. Those events are when NAP drift, redirect chains, and orphaned landing pages quietly accumulate. A single afternoon of alignment between your Profile, footer contact block, and key service pages prevents months of confused signals to both users and crawlers.