diff --git a/content/guides/accessibility-for-teams/product-management.md b/content/guides/accessibility-for-teams/product-management.md index 36cd9b47a6..cd93780950 100644 --- a/content/guides/accessibility-for-teams/product-management.md +++ b/content/guides/accessibility-for-teams/product-management.md @@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ Consider how everyone will use the product. ### Steps to take 1. **Don’t assume that your users don’t have accessibility needs.** Even if your product serves a small subset of users, any one individual may experience disabilities that are situational (working in a loud environment) or temporary (having an arm in a cast), or develop a permanent one. -2. **Consider inclusion in your research and usability testing with a range of people** across ages, races, locations, devices, interests, abilities, languages, English proficiency, gender identities, sexual orientations, and access to reliable internet. +2. **Engage with various perspectives** in your research and in usability testing, considering a range of experiences and abilities. 3. **Consider testing your product with people in their own context**, such as people who use alternative reading devices, have color blindness impairments, or motor impairments. 4. **Set a regular cadence** for testing accessibility scenarios.