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Inclusivio

Published Jul 24, 2025

Updated Jul 24, 2025

Description

Inclusivio is an AI-powered accessibility platform designed to help business their websites are ADA and WCAG compliant without relying on clunky, outdated manual tools.

Role

Visual Branding & Product Designer

Links

Tools

Figma, UX Research, Competitive Analysis, way too much Reddit

Inclusivio

My Contributions

Inclusivio is one of the more technical and interesting projects I've worked on. I came on as the visual branding and product designer, working closely with a founder who brought the idea to me. The idea was simple: use AI to make web accessibility effortless — something most tools today completely fail at.

This wasn't just about building another scanner. The product needed to analyze websites, detect accessibility issues in real time, and give clear, actionable fixes.

I partnered with the founder from day one to shape the product and brand from the ground up. I worked across:

  • Worked through the entire user flow, from onboarding → scanning → summary reports
  • Designed a breakdown of issues by severity, suggested fixes, and even breakpoints for testing various screen sizes
  • Created a developer-first experience, including an IDE-style interface for directly fixing code inside the platform
  • Mapped out how we'd parse and render the DOM tree to help users pinpoint problem elements
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Dashboard Design

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Pitch Deck Design

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Challenges & Learnings

Designing for a space I wasn't familiar with, accessibility tooling and dev workflows, was a big shift. I had to learn on the fly: how accessibility issues are structured, how they're resolved, what frustrates people using existing tools.

There were moments where I questioned whether we could even design something intuitive around such technical complexity, but breaking it into smaller chunks helped.

Also: making this product feel trustworthy, while still modern and developer-focused, was a balancing act.

This project taught me how to:

  • Bring technical constraints into visual design decisions
  • Think like both a designer and a developer
  • Design for complexity without making it feel heavy
  • Ask better questions, especially around edge cases and ethical UX
  • Own an entire product scope — from pitch to polish

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