I’m excited to share a significant step in my personal and professional journey—I’ve just started the “How To Design for Accessibility: for UX Designers (WCAG 2.2)” course on Udemy by Liz Brown.
As someone who relies on assistive technology every day, digital accessibility isn’t just a technical concept to me—it’s about real, meaningful inclusion. Navigating the online world can be an everyday challenge for people with disabilities, and I’ve always wanted to do more to understand the principles and practices that can make the digital space genuinely welcoming for everyone. That’s why I signed up for this course.
What has impressed me most so far is Liz Brown’s straightforward, no-nonsense approach. She covers topics ranging from accessible color contrast and user-friendly buttons and links to integrating accessibility considerations at every stage of the UX design process. Each lesson is rooted in the latest WCAG 2.2 guidelines, but Liz makes the content approachable, even if you’re not a professional designer. The course is packed with practical tips, case studies, and actionable advice—perfect for anyone who wants to create products that work, not just for some, but for all users.
Whether you’re a designer, developer, product manager, or just someone who cares about digital inclusion, I genuinely believe you’ll find real value in these lessons. We all have something to gain by better understanding accessibility—whether that means making your websites more usable for someone like me or ensuring your apps are truly barrier-free for every user.
And here’s something special for you: I’m sharing a coupon code that gives you 100% off the course price! Click here to claim your free spot (code: FREEBIRD, valid until November 27). Seriously—there’s no catch, just an open invitation to learn alongside me.
Let’s keep moving toward a digital world where no one is left behind. I can’t wait to take what I learn from this course and advocate for accessibility in every project I’m part of—and I hope you’ll join me!


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