The combined UK usability and accessibility market will be worth more than £100m in 2005, according to new research published by E-consultancy, the London-based internet marketing group.
The forecast is taken from E-consultancy’s new, 175-page ‘Usability and Accessibility Buyer’s Guide 2005’, where E-consultancy offers practical insight with 15 pages of new research into the market (costs, pricing models, trends, ROI studies), 3 pages of best practice tips (a checklist to help buyers choose the right partner) and 21 in-depth vendor profiles.
The UK market, worth £90m in 2004, will grow by a further 25% in 2005, to between £108m to £117m, driven by increased awareness of the benefits of improved website usability and accessibility.
E-consultancy CEO Ashley Friedlein commented: “Accessibility services have quickly grown to account for at least a fifth of market revenues. Our research shows that spending in this area has risen rapidly on concerns about being prosecuted, with companies obliged to comply with the Disability Discrimination Act.”
Overall, revenues earned by specialist usability and accessibility consultants or agencies amounted to around £20m for 2004; a figure projected to rise to £25m in 2005. Interactive agencies and in-house teams account for the remainder of this market.
Key findings, trends and issues from the Usability and Accessibility Buyer’s Guide 2005:
• Majority of consultants or agencies are bullish about prospects in 2005 and beyond, suggesting that turnover will increase by 10% - 60%.
• Increasing demand for qualified HCI professionals – recruitment is a big issue.
• Accessibility spending driven by legal concerns.
• Suggestions that the accessibility market has a limited shelf life of 3 years or so.
• Accessibility market threatened if there are no high-profile prosecutions when companies fail to comply with the DDA – ongoing growth may be determined by litigations (or the lack of them).
• Usability & accessibility companies seem united on how to move the industry forward.
• Client companies increasingly likely to see usability testing as an essential part of the development process – usability no longer seen as ‘nice-to-have’ but vitally important.
• Blue chips and Public Sector lead the way in spending while SMEs lag way behind.