Contribute to whatisADA.com

Are you an accessibility professional, developer, attorney, or advocate? Share your expertise with thousands of readers who rely on whatisADA.com for accurate ADA and accessibility information.

Types of Content We Accept

In-Depth Guides

Comprehensive tutorials and how-to articles on accessibility implementation, ADA compliance strategies, or WCAG conformance. Minimum 1,500 words.

Case Studies

Real-world examples of accessibility improvements, ADA lawsuit outcomes, or remediation projects. Include measurable outcomes where possible.

Industry-Specific Analysis

Deep dives into accessibility requirements for specific industries like healthcare, eCommerce, education, finance, or government.

Legal Analysis

Summaries of important ADA rulings, regulatory updates, or analysis of emerging legal trends in digital accessibility. Must be written or reviewed by a legal professional.

Technical Tutorials

Step-by-step coding tutorials for implementing accessible components, ARIA patterns, or testing methodologies. Include working code examples.

Glossary Contributions

Definitions for accessibility terms not yet covered in our glossary. Definitions must include context, examples, and references.

Guest Contributor Guidelines

We welcome contributions from accessibility professionals across all disciplines. To maintain our editorial standards, we ask that all contributors adhere to the following guidelines:

  • Original content only — submissions must not have been published elsewhere. We do not accept republished or syndicated content.
  • No promotional content — articles must be educational, not sales material. You may include a brief author bio with a link to your website or company.
  • Cite primary sources — all claims must be backed by references to official sources such as DOJ guidance, W3C specifications, published case law, or peer-reviewed research.
  • Plain language — write for a general audience. Avoid jargon without explanation. Aim for an 8th-grade reading level where possible.
  • Accessible formatting — use proper heading hierarchy, descriptive link text, alt text for images, and simple table structures.

Editorial Standards

All submissions go through our editorial review process:

  1. Initial review — our editorial team reviews your pitch or draft for topic relevance, originality, and alignment with our content strategy.
  2. Fact-checking — all claims, statistics, and legal references are verified against primary sources.
  3. Technical review — code examples and technical guidance are tested and validated by our development team.
  4. Copy editing — articles are edited for clarity, grammar, readability, and accessibility best practices.
  5. Final approval — the completed article is reviewed by a senior editor before publication.

How to Submit

  1. 1

    Send a pitch

    Use our contact form to submit your proposed topic, a brief outline (3-5 bullet points), and your relevant experience or credentials.

  2. 2

    Get approved

    We will review your pitch and respond within 5 business days. If approved, we will provide a detailed content brief and deadline.

  3. 3

    Write and submit

    Submit your completed article as a Google Doc or Markdown file. Include all images, code samples, and source citations.

  4. 4

    Review and publish

    Your article will go through our editorial process. We may request revisions. Once finalized, it will be published with your author byline.

Ready to contribute?

Submit your pitch through our contact form to get started.