Cross-Cutting Inclusive Design Principles
These principles were established through affinity mapping themes from the initial design considerations from the 10 Personatypes. This set of principles adds and expands beyond existing sets and also draws from important foundational work by Microsoft and others.
These principles are derived from the Disability Characteristics Model, providing practical guidance for implementing inclusive design based on the theoretical framework.
1 - Honor User Expertise
Preserve standard conventions and allow power users to bypass friction. Design with trust in disabled users' expertise.
2 - Make it Clear
Use plain, direct language and consistent UI to reduce ambiguity and build confidence.
3 - Design for Varying Pace
Support slow, fast, or fluctuating engagement with options for sequencing, re-entry, and progressive disclosure.
4 - Reduce Effort, Increase Access
Cut unnecessary steps, offer shortcuts, and keep the default path efficient.
5 - Support Autonomy Without Disclosure
Offer access without requiring users to disclose disability or justify needs.
6 - Adapt for Change Over Time
Build systems that flex with evolving identities, access patterns, and life circumstances.
7 - Respond to Subtle Signals
Treat minor friction, drop-off, and indirect feedback as meaningful indicators of exclusion.
8 - Design for Psychological Safety
Avoid coercion, urgency, and punishment. Offer control, recovery, and reassurance.
9 - Offer Multiple Ways to Interact
Ensure input and output can match diverse sensory, motor, and cognitive preferences.
10 - Co-Create and Communicate Clearly
Involve disabled people in shaping solutions. Be transparent about access policies and design intent.
New and Expanded Aspects
The Personatypes framework contributes unique psychological, experiential, and privacy-based dimensions that traditional universal/inclusive design frameworks tend to underrepresent or miss, particularly in relation to:
- Disability identity development
- Invisible/internalized barriers
- Emotional regulation
- Non-disclosure and misrecognition
Related
Learn more about the theoretical foundation behind these principles in the Disability Characteristics Model.