"How many disabled visitors did we have last month?"
It's a fair question.
But it's the wrong one.
The real question — the uncomfortable one — is this:
"How many disabled visitors never came at all?"
The ones who looked at your website but couldn't picture the layout. The ones who couldn't find clear access information. The ones who weren't sure whether the wheelchair access was easy to find, whether the toilets were suitable, or whether they could face the embarrassment of having to ask for help.
So they chose somewhere else.
Or they stayed at home.
No complaints. No feedback. No metrics.
Just lost opportunities.
We talk a lot about "the customer who doesn't come back."
But there's another group entirely:
The customer who never came in the first place.
And they are completely invisible to your data.
Because accessibility doesn't begin with ramps, lifts or regulations.
For many people, it begins with confidence.
You may have invested heavily in your venue, your facilities and your marketing — but if somebody looking at your website or social media doesn't feel confident about visiting, then they probably won't.
And the truth is, almost everybody already understands this behaviour.
How many times have you checked a place on Google Street View or Google Maps before visiting somewhere new?
How many times have you paused, looked at it, and quietly thought:
"Nope."
When people can't plan, they often don't go.
But when they can?
Then everything changes. The barrier is removed before the barrier is even raised.
We're seeing it more and more — venues that provide clear, honest, visual information aren't suddenly becoming "more accessible" overnight.
They're becoming more understandable.
And that builds trust.
Simple walkthrough videos. Clear descriptions. Realistic expectations.
Not polished marketing spin. Not performative inclusion.
Just enough information for somebody to decide whether your venue, business or destination works for them.
That confidence is often the difference between somebody arriving… or never attempting the journey in the first place.
So if you want to understand the real impact of accessibility, don't just measure the people who came.
Think about the people who never did.
Because the customer who never came isn't just a customer you never had – it's a customer you lost – and one you can't recover.
#Accessibility #CustomerExperience #InclusiveDesign #AccessibleTourism #BusinessGrowth
About Ocean 3D (North East)
We help organisations understand the customers they never see.
By using immersive visual experiences and accessible information, we help remove uncertainty before arrival and build confidence before a visit ever takes place.
Find out more at: www.ocean3d.co.uk