M&C Saatchi

"Everything should be as simple as possible, but no simpler" - Albert Einstein

Accessibility statement

We have endeavoured to make this site usable and accessible. We would like all visitors to be able find the information they are looking for quickly and easily.

Navigation shortcuts

the M&C Saatchi site navigation is structured in such a way that the tab key can be used to logically cycle through the navigation, with the enter key being used to activate a highlighted link. each shortcut has an access key assigned

Access keys

This site utilises accesskeys for those who wish/need to navigate the site without the aid of a mouse. these are activated in different ways on different platforms. in internet explorer or mozilla based browsers on windows, you can press ALT + an access key. on a Macintosh, you can press Control + an access key, Then press Enter to activate the link.

Below are the access keys currently in use on this site:

  • s - Skip the navigation and jump straight to page content
  • 1 - Jump to homepage
  • f - jump to 'Facts & figures'
  • a - jump to 'Our approach'
  • w- jump to 'Our work'
  • p- jump to 'In the press'
  • 9 - jump to contact
  • 0 - jump to accessibility statement (this page)

These access keys have been chosen to follow the uk government website guidelines where possible

Structured, semantic markup

HTML heading tags are used to convey document structure. H2 tags are used for main titles, H3 tags for subtitles etc.

Navigation menus are marked up as HTML lists ensuring that the number of links in the list is read out at the start and it can be skipped easily

Images

All content images used in the home page and all archives include descriptive ALT attributes. Purely decorative graphics include null alt attributes.

Standards compliance

The M&C Saatchi website is designed to conform to Level A compliance as specified by the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines and endorsed by the Royal National Institute for the Blind (RNIB). The majority of Level AA and AAA requirements are also met.

w3c aaa icon

All pages strive validate as XHTML 1.0 Transitional and use structured semantic markup.

 XHTML 1.0 Transitional

Accessibility references

Accessibility software and services

  • Bobby, a free service to analyze web pages for compliance to accessibility guidelines.
  • HTML Validator, a free service for checking that web pages conform to published HTML standards.
  • Web Page Backward Compatibility Viewer, a tool for viewing your web pages without a variety of modern browser features.
  • JAWS, a screen reader for Windows. A time-limited demo is available.
  • Lynx, a free text-only web browser.