Perceivable
Information should be presented in ways people can perceive, including through text, contrast, structure, captions, and alternatives for visual or audio content.
Accessibility Statement
Rolling With Keke™ is committed to accessible digital content, accessible event strategy, and operational systems that support real participation.
Rolling With Keke™ approaches accessibility as a governance issue, an operations issue, and a human issue. Accessibility is not something to sprinkle on after the agenda is finished, after the venue is booked, or after the website goes live.
We believe access has to be considered early enough to shape the plan, the environment, the communications, the staffing, the timing, and the participant experience.
This website is part of that commitment. It is designed with attention to structure, readability, keyboard access, mobile responsiveness, plain language, and compatibility with assistive technology wherever possible.
Rolling With Keke™ aims to align its website and digital materials with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, commonly known as WCAG. WCAG provides standards for making digital content more accessible to disabled people, including people who use screen readers, keyboard navigation, magnification, captions, transcripts, alternative formats, and other access tools.
Information should be presented in ways people can perceive, including through text, contrast, structure, captions, and alternatives for visual or audio content.
People should be able to navigate and use content without being forced into one interaction style, one device, or one way of moving through information.
Content should be clear, consistent, readable, and structured so people can understand what is being said and what action is being requested.
Digital content should work with current and future assistive technologies as much as possible, including browsers, screen readers, and other access tools.
Compliance matters, but compliance alone is not the full measure of access. Real people still have to use the thing.
Access has to be supported by decisions, timelines, staffing, vendors, communication, and recovery space.
Accessibility on this website and across Rolling With Keke™ materials includes attention to:
Digital access matters. Event access matters too.
Rolling With Keke™ works from the understanding that events are not just agendas, rooms, and run-of-show documents. Events are operating environments for human beings with bodies, needs, limits, disabilities, sensory realities, mobility needs, communication needs, food needs, medication needs, caregiving responsibilities, and recovery needs.
If the event plan does not account for the body, the body becomes the contingency plan.
That applies to attendees. That applies to staff. That applies to speakers. That applies to disabled participants. That applies to leaders who think they can schedule human beings from morning to evening with no real recovery and still call it strategy.
Accessibility is ongoing work. Rolling With Keke™ reviews website content and digital materials with the goal of reducing barriers and improving access over time.
Some third-party tools, embedded content, forms, scheduling platforms, social media platforms, or external links may not be fully controlled by Rolling With Keke™. When we become aware of access barriers, we aim to address what is within our control and provide reasonable alternatives where possible.
If you experience an accessibility barrier on this website or with Rolling With Keke™ materials, please reach out.
Email: hello@rollingwithkeke.com
Please include the page, document, or material where the barrier occurred, along with a brief description of what happened.
Last updated: June 2026