Customer Stories
Our tools have helped a huge number of people and businesses around the world.
Hear some of their stories, and discover what we’ve done for them.
Our tools have helped a huge number of people and businesses around the world.
Hear some of their stories, and discover what we’ve done for them.
Discover how the LEO Academy Trust use Texthelp tools to drive learning, excellence and opportunity.
Coventry City Council serves 345,000 citizens in the West Midlands. The Council is a hub of local information, helping residents and visitors to take advantage of the many great things that Coventry has to offer. Read their customer story to hear how they've created a friendly and inclusive online experience for their users.
Libraries are all about access: to content, to the online world, and to information and support. In order to provide equal access to services to all its users, websites must be fully accessible to everyone. Especially those with disabilities, low literacy or English as a second language. County of Brant Public Library recognises this. ReachDeck supports them as they work hard to improve website accessibility and readability for all.
The Homeseeker Plus Partnership added the ReachDeck Toolbar to their website to help make online information more accessible to everyone.
Hull University Teaching Hospitals (HUTH) are on a journey to improve digital accessibility for the patients they serve. But, with a small communications team, they sought tools to help them on their way.
ReachDeck is helping them to find accessibility errors quickly and easily. It’s also supporting their large employee-base to create content that’s easier for everyone to understand. Read on to hear their story.
Yorkshire & Humber Academic Health Science Network (AHSN) is 1 of 15 AHSNs set up by NHS England. Across the country AHSNs act as a bridge between health care providers, commissioners, academia and industry. The goal of an AHSN is to ‘improve the health and prosperity of their region by unlocking the potential of new ideas’.