Eliquo
Upcoming Eliquo Events

This session blends two connected realities: accessibility is shaped by design decisions long before export, and document quality often rises or falls at the source-file stage. It covers contrast, typography, spacing, hierarchy, reading order, alt text, structure, tagging, and export choices so teams can create documents that work in both visual and technical terms.

This session tackles the formats that generate the most friction and remediation work: forms, transactional experiences, dynamic content, video, audio, captions, transcripts, player decisions, and interactive patterns. The goal is to show how teams can reduce risk before these assets become expensive fixes.

This session turns quality control into a repeatable function instead of a last-minute scramble. It covers what should be reviewed, by whom, at what point, and with what level of rigor, then connects that review model to useful KPIs such as rework rates, defect patterns, turnaround time, template adoption, and high-risk asset counts.

This session combines a practical AI risk framework with a side-by-side demonstration of trained and untrained agents completing the same accessibility-related production tasks. It shows attendees why generic prompting is not enough, and why reliable AI use depends on standards, context, review discipline, and deliberate training.

This closing session looks ahead at how structured content, metadata discipline, semantic clarity, and accessibility-aware publishing influence both traditional search and AI-driven discovery. It gives attendees a forward-looking view of what content teams should strengthen now so their publishing capability remains resilient as search and retrieval continue to shift.
Events We Are Sponsoring

This session blends two connected realities: accessibility is shaped by design decisions long before export, and document quality often rises or falls at the source-file stage. It covers contrast, typography, spacing, hierarchy, reading order, alt text, structure, tagging, and export choices so teams can create documents that work in both visual and technical terms.

This session tackles the formats that generate the most friction and remediation work: forms, transactional experiences, dynamic content, video, audio, captions, transcripts, player decisions, and interactive patterns. The goal is to show how teams can reduce risk before these assets become expensive fixes.

This session turns quality control into a repeatable function instead of a last-minute scramble. It covers what should be reviewed, by whom, at what point, and with what level of rigor, then connects that review model to useful KPIs such as rework rates, defect patterns, turnaround time, template adoption, and high-risk asset counts.

This session combines a practical AI risk framework with a side-by-side demonstration of trained and untrained agents completing the same accessibility-related production tasks. It shows attendees why generic prompting is not enough, and why reliable AI use depends on standards, context, review discipline, and deliberate training.

This closing session looks ahead at how structured content, metadata discipline, semantic clarity, and accessibility-aware publishing influence both traditional search and AI-driven discovery. It gives attendees a forward-looking view of what content teams should strengthen now so their publishing capability remains resilient as search and retrieval continue to shift.
