Accessibility · Last updated 2026-02-05

Accessibility statement

We aim to make this website usable for as many people as possible, across devices and assistive technologies, with practical support if something is difficult to use.

Our commitment

We want this website to be usable and understandable for as many people as possible. Accessibility is part of clear communication and professional delivery.

We aim to build pages that can be navigated by keyboard, read by assistive technologies, and used across modern browsers and devices.

How we build for usability

We focus on semantic structure, readable hierarchy, sensible contrast, and predictable interaction patterns. Where interactive visuals exist, we aim to keep core meaning available in text and avoid making essential information dependent on a single visual mechanism.

We avoid unnecessary motion and try to ensure interactive elements can be used without precision input.

Known limitations

Some complex visual components may not provide perfect support for every assistive technology or interaction method. When limitations are identified, we treat them as engineering tasks and prioritise fixes that improve real-world usability.

If you encounter a problem, context helps: device, browser, page URL, and what you were trying to do.

Feedback and contact

If you need content in an alternative format, or if something is difficult to use, contact us via the Contact page and mark your message “Accessibility”. Include the page URL and a short description of the issue.

We will respond and either provide an alternative or make a correction where reasonable.