We can check everything now. So why aren’t websites getting better?
Mar 18 2026
Isn’t it annoying when you use a website and come across issues without even trying to find them? A broken link. A page that doesn't load properly. Something that just doesn't make sense.
It’s frustrating, right?
Speaking to our clients and colleagues, it’s clear that it is.
This isn’t happening on neglected websites. It’s happening on sites that are being monitored, tested and reported on constantly.
So it raises a simple question.
If we can check more than ever before, why do these problems still exist?
Over the last few years, the amount of technology available to analyze websites has grown rapidly. AI can process entire digital estates in seconds. Platforms can run hundreds, even thousands, of checks across every page.
In theory, that should mean steady improvement. Better accessibility. Stronger compliance. A smoother experience.
But that’s not what people are feeling.
Users do not experience websites as reports or diagnostics. They experience them in real time, trying to complete something. And when something doesn’t work, when a link is broken, a journey is unclear or content is hard to follow, it doesn’t matter how many checks sit behind the scenes. It simply feels like the site doesn’t work.
This is where the disconnect begins.
A lot of the effort going into websites today is focused on technical detail. Template structures. Platform standards. Compliance rules that are important in the right context, but often invisible to the user.
At the same time, the fundamentals are still being missed. The things that shape how a site actually feels to use.
And it’s not because organisations aren’t trying.
There’s more checking, more reporting and more fixing than ever before. But when you look at where that effort is going, it doesn’t always line up with what users experience.
Time is spent resolving issues that don’t change how a page works in practice. Fixes are applied to pages that no one visits. Reports become longer and harder to act on.
So teams stay busy.
But the problems people notice are still there.
Most websites are still failing key privacy requirements. User experience issues are widespread. Core SEO fundamentals are often wrong.
And a significant amount of work may be applied to pages that haven’t been visited in months.
The effort is real. But the impact is not where it should be.
The issue isn’t a lack of checking. It’s a lack of focus.
When everything is treated as equally important, it becomes difficult to see what actually matters. A homepage and an archived page can carry the same weight in a report. A minor technical issue can sit alongside something that genuinely blocks a user.
Somewhere in that noise, the fundamentals get lost.
This is where the conversation is starting to change.
AI doesn’t just allow us to check more. It allows us to prioritise better. To focus on the pages people actually use and the issues that genuinely affect experience, accessibility and risk.
Because if all that analysis isn’t leading to improvement, then it’s just noise.
If you are responsible for a website in any way, this matters.
Is the work being done actually improving the experience for the people using your site?
Or is it simply keeping you occupied?
If you want to see where things really stand
Run a free check here: https://web.aaatraq.com/risk-audit (opens in a new window)
We’re also running a series of upcoming webinars exploring this in more detail. Looking at where effort is being lost, why improvement is not following investment, and how to use technology to focus on what actually makes a difference. More information to follow.
Because the goal is not to check everything.
It’s to fix what people actually notice.
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