Document Accessibility reads a PowerPoint or PDF the way an auditor would, every image, every reading path, every contrast ratio, then writes the fix. WCAG 2.2 AA remediation and a per-file compliance report, at the speed of a batch job, not a manual pass.
Upload a file and get back a score, not a guess. Every finding is checked against a specific WCAG 2.2 success criterion, so your team knows exactly what failed and why.
Each image gets alt text that describes what actually matters in context, plus a long description for complex charts and diagrams, checked against WCAG guidance before it ships.
In production this runs against entire PPTX and PDF libraries, hundreds of files queued in one pass, with low-confidence fixes routed to a person instead of applied blind.
The European Accessibility Act and ADA don't just expect accessible documents, they expect proof. Every remediation produces a report that ties each fix to the rule it satisfies.
The European Accessibility Act and rising ADA litigation mean inaccessible documents are now a legal exposure, not just a courtesy.
A 60-page manual review runs into thousands of dollars per document. Document Accessibility does the bulk of that work in minutes.
Low-confidence fixes are flagged for a person to confirm, nothing gets applied blind to a document that goes out under your name.
A documented remediation trail across the whole library, before a complaint arrives, not after.
Decks and reports that reach every audience, without a manual accessibility pass on every release.
Onboarding and training materials that meet Section 508 and ADA requirements by default.
European Accessibility Act and public-procurement obligations met at the speed public services move.