Soda’s mission is to help organisations engage people with lived-experience of disability, chronic illness, neurodivergence, and those facing the most significant health inequalities in design processes, as experts.
We work with impact driven companies and public sector organisations who want to reach more users by centring accessibility and inclusion in everything they do.
When people with lived-experience lead the way in creating and innovating healthcare solutions, the impact is more inclusive and more equitable products and services for all.
Soda can support you in your journey to accessibility and inclusion through:
You know users and communities are experts by experience, but you don't know how to go about bringing them into your design processes. From co-design workshops to full scale co-produced health initiatives, we help you identify and deliver the right level of engagement at the right time in a productive, non-tokenistic way.
You want to find out more about how people with different access needs experience barriers to your healthcare product or service. We will connect you with a tailored community of disabled, chronically ill and neurodivergent innovators to provide insights and solutions to your design challenges.
You want to learn more about Inclusive Design and how to practice it in your organisation. We create cutting-edge learning programmes, workshops and events delivered by disabled experts to shift mindsets and transform how you work.
Through opportunities for long-term involvement in Soda’s work and community, we ensure people we work with feel they belong to a collective that is wider than one single design process. We take a trauma-informed approach which acknowledges that people bring different histories with them which can impact their sense of belonging in the present.
Accessibility is woven into how we work; we ensure that access needs are always considered across cognitive, physical, sensory, mental,, non-visible, undiagnosed disabilities, and neurodiversity. We recognise that access benefits all, not just people who live with disability. We are committed to going beyond compliance to accessibility standards and always learning to adapt through new approaches.
We are committed to fighting oppression and prejudice. We follow the principles of design justice, which centre decolonisation and the perspectives of intersectional identities, including QTBIPOC people. We are committed to an anti-racist way of working and actively look for opportunities to bring a more equitable approach to design processes.
Inclusion and resisting prejudice is a journey; there are always new ideas and approaches to iterate and improve from. We recognise that we don’t always get it right. We are curious and committed to learn and adapt our own practice from every design process, and are always open to change.