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Connectivo Governance

Structured reporting that demonstrates ownership, process, remediation, and continuous improvement

Fixing errors is the easy part. Demonstrating a plan to keep them fixed is the real challenge

Accessibility compliance is not only a technical requirement; it is an administrative one. Institutions are expected to demonstrate planning, ownership, documented processes, and continuous improvement. Regulators and legal teams do not only ask whether a website is accessible. They ask whether a documented program exists, whether it is active, and whether progress can be proven. Connectivo includes a structured Accessibility Program and Planning Report aligned with standards such as the ATI Web Accessibility Annual Report to address these requirements.

What This Report Is

This is the documentation auditors actually request. Correcting isolated issues does not demonstrate the existence of a program. In the same way that fixing spelling errors does not prove the presence of a writing curriculum, correcting accessibility issues on individual pages does not establish an accessibility program. The report documents how accessibility is managed as an ongoing system rather than a one-time effort. It captures the core pillars of institutional compliance.

How Connectivo Automates It

Institutional policies are operationalized through data. Many organizations have accessibility policies that exist only as documents. The challenge lies in maintaining them with current, verifiable evidence. Connectivo keeps accessibility plans active by continuously supplying live metrics and documentation.

Plan Publication and Stakeholder Access

Connectivo provides a dedicated, organization-specific web page that publishes the accessibility plan for stakeholder access. This page allows internal teams, leadership, auditors, and external stakeholders to view the current accessibility program, governance structure, and progress in a transparent and controlled manner.

By publishing the plan in a consistent, accessible format, organizations can demonstrate active governance, ongoing commitment, and measurable progress without assembling documentation on demand.