Accessibility, Banking

The curb-cut effect and how building for accessibility creates value for banks and its employees ft. Bank of America

  • How does a bank build software that is accessible for its employees and what value does this work bring back to the firm? 
  • Dive into how designing for accessibility brings value to the bank and what role UX research and the inclusion of disabled employees play in this work.
close

Email a Friend

The curb-cut effect and how building for accessibility creates value for banks and its employees ft. Bank of America

Accessibility isn’t just a customer-facing value. In fact, in cases where it’s done well, it comes from within the organization, through its culture, purpose, and employees. Accessibility as a corporate value is built upon, and championed by, employees with disabilities whose work is informed by their lived experiences. But like disabled customers, disabled employees need their enterprise software to be designed with them in mind. Otherwise, we risk exclusion.

But how does a bank build software that is accessible for its employees and what value does this work bring back to the firm?

The curb-cut effect

The answer may lie in what is called the “curb cut effect”. Traveling through cities wasn’t always accessible to wheelchair users, especially not in the 1970s, when sidewalks had no sloping ramp for easing transitions onto the road. In the early 1970s, Michael Pachovas, a disability advocate, accompanied by like-minded friends changed that, by pouring cement in the shape of a ramp onto a sidewalk. It wasn’t the first curb-cut but it had the biggest impact. Disability advocates rallied and the first government approved curb-cut was built into the intersection on Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley, CA. After, America began to see accessibility and mobility differently and finally disability advocates saw a win when in 1990, the Americans with Disabilities Act was signed, casting non-inclusive environments into the realms of illegality and by extension made curb-cuts mandatory. So why is this piece of history important to how accessibility is rendered into reality in the financial institutions of America?


subscription wall for TS Pro

0 comments on “The curb-cut effect and how building for accessibility creates value for banks and its employees ft. Bank of America”

SMB Finance, The People Starting Things

The magic behind serial entrepreneurship: How Suneera Madhani is translating the learnings from her first fintech to the second

  • Building a fintech isn't a task for the faint of heart, especially given the current climate. But case studies like Suneera Madhani show that it not only gets easier every time you set out to build a fintech from the ground up, it also allows you to work on the ecosystem rather than just a narrow problem set.
  • Madhani's story is an instructive example of how aspiring entrepreneurs can find the right muse, how they should build their networks and what levers they should pull to build successful business models.
Rabab Ahsan | July 16, 2024
Banking

Innovating for the Silver Economy: Insights from Charlie’s approach to senior-focused financial services

  • America's aging population provides a challenge and an opportunity for financial services providers to service customers and protect them from bad actors.
  • From AI-driven fraud protection to innovative wealth decumulation strategies, Charlie's CEO Kevin Nazemi offers insights into the future of personalized banking for seniors and the broader implications for the financial services industry.
Zachary Miller | July 15, 2024
Banking, Making better partnerships

Why bank-fintech partnerships go sour and how to prevent the hug of death

  • Fintechs perform best when they can move fast and focus on growth, but when partnering up with big banks, some fintechs can experience the "hug of death".
  • This hug keeps the fintech from focusing on its own priorities and instead diverts its attentions to what the banks needs and locks it in a cycle of meetings and bureaucracy. Fintechs that want to avoid getting over indexed need to focus on establishing clear boundaries from the start and keeping the scope of the partnership in check.
Rabab Ahsan | June 28, 2024
Member Exclusive, SMB Finance

How Relay, a Toronto-based neobank, is gaining ground in the US SMB market

  • What motivated Relay's Canadian founders to target the US market?
  • Co-founder & CEO Yoseph West shares about Relay's US SMB target market, growth strategies, and the challenges associated with serving this segment
Sara Khairi | June 27, 2024
Banking, Path to growth

How Majority’s immigrant focus doubled users and is on track to reach $2 billion of deposits in a year

  • Growing neobanks and fintechs that focus on niche consumer segments is difficult because t's become easier for big banks to branch out and start to cater to niche consumer segments.
  • One immigrant focused fintech, Majority, has emerged stronger. Dive into how the firm has used a 'diaspora by diaspora' strategy and community engagement to double its user growth.
Rabab Ahsan | June 21, 2024
More Articles