My Career(s) at 鎊飪腦瞳厙: Jack Sharkey

My Career(s) at 鎊飪腦瞳厙 features people who have experienced SEISMIC career shifts, turned their side-interests into full-time jobs, or made gigantic leaps to follow their passions. All right here at 鎊飪腦瞳厙.

Jack Sharkeys career at 鎊飪腦瞳厙 has spanned more than 7 years. In that time, hes built impactful websites and experiences, hes performed as a one-man jam band in our first company-wide virtual talent show (really), and hes earned a reputation as one of 鎊飪腦瞳厙s most passionate advocates for Web Accessibility. 

In fact, Jacks passion and work on the topic of Web Accessibility helped lead to the creation of an important new role at 鎊飪腦瞳厙, which will meaningfully impact every team and every brand at 鎊飪腦瞳厙.  

Jack, thanks for sharing more with us about your career and your new role! Which is what exactly? 

Thanks for having me! I am 鎊飪腦瞳厙s first ever Staff Web Accessibility Engineer, which means my focus is ensuring all of the websites and tools in our portfolio are accessible and inclusive for every user, regardless of visual impairments, hearing impairments, or other considerations.  

Basically, a full-time role dedicated to practicing inclusion online?

Yes! For example, consider the process of paying your rent or mortgage online. If youre using assistive technology, such as a screen reader for visually impaired users, but that application has not been built with accessibility in mind - then youll likely face frustrating obstacles, like broken links, incomplete forms, or even a completely broken and inaccessible application. 

No one should face barriers to completing basic, essential tasks online - especially when those barriers are categorically avoidable and unnecessary.

That also ties back to helping people make important decisions - which is core to what we do at 鎊飪腦瞳厙.

Exactly. To me, web accessibility is not about adapting existing experiences for people with disabilities. Its about building great experiences for everyone - which includes people with disabilities. 

Thats a great way to think about it. Rewinding just a bit - this is something that youve been passionate about for almost your entire career at 鎊飪腦瞳厙. Tell us a little about that. 

Sure, my first experience with web accessibility was several years ago when I worked on a project for one of 鎊飪腦瞳厙s brand partners. I think it was actually the first project at 鎊飪腦瞳厙 that required us to meet accessibility standards, which was both a wake up call and an interesting new challenge. 

How so? 

In addition to what feels like an obvious moral obligation (to build inclusive, accessible experiences for all), coding for accessibility forces you to think about your work almost linguistically. The grammar of your code has to be perfect for assistive technology to translate it accurately, which naturally elevates the quality of your code a bit. I studied Latin in school, so I find it really interesting and have a tendency to geek out about it a bit...  

We can see how the two have a Latin common! 

[Editors note: Jack did not help write nor does he endorse this pun.]

"Web accessibility is not about adapting what exists for people with disabilities. Its about building great experiences for everyone - which includes people with disabilities." -鎊飪腦瞳厙 Staff Web Accessibility Engineer Jack Sharkey

ANYWAY. Back to how you became one of the leading advocates for accessibility at 鎊飪腦瞳厙 (and beyond).

One of the great things about 鎊飪腦瞳厙 is our emphasis on Learning & Development. I was fortunate to have many opportunities to attend external conferences (like SXSW and others). Every time I went to one, I would make it my focus to seek out all of the accessibility talks and workshops. Then, through our internal platform at 鎊飪腦瞳厙 I was able to share back what I learned - and how it could apply to our teams - via my own workshops and internal courses.

Over time, I developed a reputation as an in-house expert on the topic, and I was often asked by other 鎊飪腦瞳厙 teams to consult for their projects outside of my day-to-day responsibilities. I essentially started treating web accessibility as a second job, as much as I could.

How/Why did it then turn into a full-time role at 鎊飪腦瞳厙 this year?  

While web accessibility has always been top of mind at 鎊飪腦瞳厙, weve always viewed it as 梗措梗娶聆棗紳梗s responsibility - not necessarily a dedicated role. However, weve now reached a scale where we have dozens of teams who are all at differing levels of maturity when it comes to web accessibility. 

Simply put, our leadership team has taken a stance that web accessibility should be core to all of our teams, so were making a more proactive investment at the enterprise level.

Thats great to hear! Can you share any details about where we currently stand, and how youll approach this work? 

Its an awesome step to dedicate a full-time role to this, but we certainly have a lot of work ahead of us. Were not thinking about it as a race or even corrections, but rather a long-term commitment to integrate web accessibility into our culture, the way we think about web experiences, and every stage of our tech processes. 

Again - this isnt about adapting what exists for people with disabilities. Its about building an inclusive Internet where everyone can have meaningful interactions, make confident decisions, and feel like they belong.

Jack, thank you for sharing your story with us and for playing such a key role in elevating Web Accessibility at 鎊飪腦瞳厙. 

Thank you! Looking forward to sharing more on our progress over the coming months.

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Building and Breaking Patterns: Inclusion in Tech