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Bearing Disability: Creating a Hearing-Friendly Website | Guest Post

laptop with a video and transcript on the screen. Contains post title: Creating a hearing-friendly website.

When people can’t fully access your content, they can’t fully become your customers—no matter how great your product is. A website that is not hearing-friendly excludes many, but most of all, those with hearing loss. Ensuring visitors with hearing impairments can enjoy and access your site is both the right thing to do and smart business: clearer communication, better SEO, and higher conversions.

Brief Hearing-Friendly Tips

What “hearing-friendly” really means

Hearing accessibility isn’t just “add captions and call it a day”. It’s designing so no one misses the message when audio is off, unavailable, or overwhelming. That means text equivalents for spoken content, clear visual indicators for alerts, and quiet alternatives to phone-only support such as chatbots and understanding the benefit of Relay UK. Adding these elements will ensure as many people as possible can access your website.

Quick wins you can ship this week

Hearing-friendly checklist

Make hearing-friendly access part of your brand promise

When you commit to accessibility, conversions improve across the board—busy commuters watch muted videos, open-plan offices mute by default, and many users skim before they commit. The key is to ensure users can access core information, review simple, high-impact tips and fold them into your publishing checklist.

Table: common hearing-access barriers and practical fixes

Barrier you’ll spot on many sitesWhy it’s a problemBetter practiceBonus upside
Autoplay hero video with voiceover and no captionsEssential info is locked in audioAdd captions and on-screen text; provide a “pause” controlClearer message for all users, better Core Web Vitals if you compress
Podcast episode page with just an audio playerSearch and skimming are impossiblePublish a clean transcript with headings and timestampsSEO lift and easier quoting for press
Phone-only support or salesExcludes customers who prefer text or relay servicesAdd chat, SMS, and email; note TTY/relay availabilityFaster resolution and better tracking
Sound-only alerts in apps or formsErrors go unnoticedPair sounds with visible labels and ARIA live regionsFewer abandoned forms and tickets
Auto-generated captions with errorsMiscommunication and frustrationEdit captions for accuracy, speaker tags, and sound cuesProfessionalism and brand trust

Video and audio that include everyone

Write like everyone’s reading (because many are)

Don’t hide the help

People with hearing impairments often prefer text-first support. Make alternatives obvious.

Content production workflow (so you never forget captions again)

  1. Plan: Add “caption file + transcript” as required deliverables in your content brief
  2. Produce: Record with a script outline to speed caption editing; capture speakers’ names and terms
  3. Edit: Clean up auto-captions, add sound cues, format transcript with headings
  4. Publish: Embed media, place transcript on the page, include a 2–3 sentence summary above the fold
  5. QA: Test with audio muted, keyboard-only navigation, and a screen reader
  6. Maintain: Update captions/transcripts when you revise the video or correct product names

Design cues that do the heavy lifting

Inclusive events and webinars

Measure what matters

FAQ

Aren’t auto-captions good enough now?

They’re a solid starting point, but they still miss names, jargon, and context. Always review and correct them, add speaker tags, and include important sound cues.

Do transcripts hurt video views?

Typically the opposite. Transcripts help people decide a video is worth their time and make it easier to re-find and share the exact moment they need.

Is hearing-friendly accessibility only for media-heavy sites?

No—forms, alerts, customer support, and small UI sounds all matter. Any time audio conveys meaning, provide a visible equivalent.

How much time will this add to publishing?

With a simple workflow and a captioning vendor or tool, most teams add 10–20% to production time at first; it shrinks as you template steps and reuse styles. Also consider using GDPR-compliant storage solutions.

Bottom line

If your website speaks clearly without sound, more people will hear you. Start with captions and transcripts, add visual cues for every audio-dependent moment, and offer text-friendly support. Make accessibility a habit in your publishing workflow and you’ll earn trust, widen your audience, and turn more visitors into customers.

A website that is not hearing-friendly excludes many, from those with hearing impairments to those in environments where playing sounds is just not fesible. This guest post has been written by Tanya Lee. I hope you find it useful.

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