Accessibility.
8 real jobs AI can take on for a accessibility team - most of them inside the licence you already pay for. The colour on each card is the kind of AI; the line at its foot is what it takes to get it.
THE COLOUR IS THE KIND OF AI — AUTONOMY RISES LEFT TO RIGHT
The line at the foot of each card is what it takes to get it - a free chatbot, the licence you already pay for, or a build.
If these words are new, the homepage walks the whole spectrum →
Day in the life.
See how people can use your AI assistant to perform common tasks throughout their day to save time, generate value, and improve their wellbeing.
People with ADHD stay on top of priorities, cut distractions and finish the work that matters most each day.
Try it in your own AI
- Context: I have ADHD and my day fragments - the list below is today, everything feels equally urgent, and switching tasks costs me more than it costs most people.
Objective: Help me shape the day: pick the one thing that matters most and say why, break it into starts small enough to begin right now, park everything else somewhere I can trust it isn't lost - and when I come back distracted, re-anchor me without judgement. [Paste the list.]
Style: Tiny steps, one at a time - never the whole mountain.
Tone: Steady and practical - no productivity sermons.
✓ In the licence you already pay for
Colleagues with hearing loss follow every conversation through live captions and recaps, and never miss what was decided.
Uses your suite's meeting AI - how this lands varies by licence.
Try it in your own AI
- Context: I'm deaf / have hearing loss and follow meetings through captions and transcripts. Conversations sometimes move on before I've caught the last point, and the recap is where I make sure I have what was decided.
Objective: From the transcript below, give me the meeting as I need it: the decisions made, who's doing what by when, anything addressed to me directly, and the points where the conversation moved fast or people overlapped - so I can check I didn't miss a turn. [Paste the transcript.]
Style: Decisions and actions first; the fast-moving moments flagged with timestamps.
✓ In the licence you already pay for
Blind employees absorb written information and produce new content by voice, working independently and at full pace.
Try it in your own AI
- Context: I'm blind and work by screen reader and voice. Long documents with odd layouts - tables, text boxes, scanned pages - are where my tools struggle most.
Objective: Read the document below for me: its structure first, so I know what's where, then the content of each part in clean linear text, tables described row by row only where the detail matters - and tell me if anything, like an image or a chart, can't be conveyed, so I know to ask a colleague. [Attach the document.]
Style: Structure, then content; no visual references like 'as shown above'.
✓ In the licence you already pay for
People with mobility impairments complete daily tasks with far less typing, reducing strain and effort throughout the day.
Try it in your own AI
- Context: I have a mobility impairment and keep typing to a minimum - I work by voice and short inputs. Composing long text is the expensive part.
Objective: I'll give you the bones in a few words; you build the full version - email, note, document - and read it back so I can adjust with short corrections rather than retyping. [Say what you need written.]
Style: Confirm in one line before drafting anything long; take corrections as deltas - 'warmer', 'shorter', 'move the ask up'.
✓ In the licence you already pay for
Dyslexic staff process dense documents quickly through simplified summaries, reading with confidence and less fatigue.
Try it in your own AI
- Context: I'm dyslexic. Dense documents cost me more time and energy than they should, and the fatigue is the real tax - not the ability.
Objective: Take the document below and give it to me in a form that works: the point in one line, then the substance in short plain sentences, jargon translated, nothing important lost in the simplifying - and flag anything you compressed hard so I can drill in. [Paste the document.]
Style: Short sentences, generous spacing, one idea per line where possible.
✓ In the licence you already pay for
Autistic employees interpret the tone and intent behind messages clearly, communicating with more confidence and ease.
Try it in your own AI
- Context: I'm autistic and sometimes the intent behind messages isn't obvious to me - especially brief ones, or ones where what's said and what's meant differ.
Objective: Read the message below and tell me: what it literally says, what the sender most plausibly means and feels, whether anything in it expects an action from me, and one or two reasonable ways to reply. Be honest about ambiguity rather than inventing certainty. [Paste the message and any context.]
Style: Literal, likely meaning, expected action, reply options - in that order.
Tone: Matter-of-fact - decoding, not therapy.
✓ In the licence you already pay for
People protect their wellbeing by simplifying their day, easing overload and keeping attention on what truly matters.
Try it in your own AI
- Context: My days overload me - too many inputs, no gaps - and by mid-afternoon I'm reacting rather than choosing. Today's calendar and list are below.
Objective: Help me simplify: what can be declined, shortened or moved (draft the polite one-liners), where the recovery gaps go, and the two things that, once done, make today a good day. [Paste the calendar and list.]
Style: A lighter version of today, side by side with the original.
Tone: Calm and permission-giving - the point is a sustainable day, not a fuller one.
✓ In the licence you already pay for
Non-native speakers work seamlessly with colleagues across languages, removing barriers and communicating with confidence.
Try it in your own AI
- Context: I work in [language] as my second language at [company]. I understand everything; drafting at speed in meetings and email is where I lose time and nuance.
Objective: Be my language partner. I'll draft rough, or in [first language]; you return it in natural workplace [language], keeping my meaning and my voice - and tell me the one phrase that would have sounded off, so I learn it. [Paste your draft.]
Style: My text back, natural but recognisably mine; the learning note in one line.
✓ In the licence you already pay for
Most of these run on the licence you already pay for.
The gap is that nobody's pointed it at the job yet. That's the work we do, and it starts with a half-hour call - bring the one that looked most like your week and we'll tell you whether it's a quick win or a proper build. No licence yet? We'll help you pick one first.
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