
Inaccessibility affects me every single day.
Now, I could sit here—because, well, powerchair—ranting about not being able to access content like everyone else…
(okay, I will rant a little because I’m only human)
… I decided to actually do something about it.
Cue the dramatic music for the inspiring disabled person rising to the challenge.
My Origin Story
One does not simply enter the online business world without signing up for hundreds of bundles and summits. I did the same.
At first, it felt like I had everything I needed—an infinite amount of actionable courses, templates, and resources.
Or at least, that’s what I thought.
Turns out, most of those resources were inaccessible to me.
To date? Close to 2000 courses. Thousands of digital downloads.
Gosh, Ami, why so many?!
Because I keep hoping I’ll find ones that are actually accessible. Spoiler alert: It’s very hit and miss.
Accessibility really isn’t difficult.
I’d love to say I’ve had nothing but great experiences with course creators and digital product sellers, but… nope.
After reaching out to ask if they could provide an accessible version of their content, I quickly realized there were two types of people:
Those who don’t give a shit.
Those who don’t know what they don’t know.
And that’s when it hit me—the online business world desperately needs someone to bridge this gap. Someone to make accessibility clear, doable, and impossible to ignore.
I mean, I get it. Accessibility seems overwhelming at first. But once you know what to look for, and how to fix it, making things accessible becomes second nature.
My mission is to make accessibility the standard, not an afterthought.
People shouldn’t have to fight for the bare minimum of accessibility—yet that’s where the online world is still at… in 2025.
If you don’t know how to do it, I’ll show you.
If you think it’s complicated, expensive or takes up too much of your time, I’ll prove it’s not.
If you’re avoiding it… well, you won’t be able to anymore when you stick around in my little corner of the internet.
You wouldn’t build a shop with no door…
So why create content people can’t access?