SimpleSense
SimpleSense met teams where they already worked. Accessibility testing usually means logging into one more tool or waiting weeks on a consultant’s report. SimpleSense delivered via a GitHub repo instead, a familiar place for the people responsible for remediating issues.
Requests were unlimited, managed in a queue, and available at a flat monthly price. The end-to-end service design was a joy to solve for someone that has audited and been audited.
The point was to let teams test as often as they ship and learn from the fixes, rather than route accessibility through a separate track. For the teams who used it, that held up.
But I closed SimpleSense in 2025. I do accessibility everyday. I didn’t want to do it every night, too.