Upskill employees with training to support people with sight loss
Our visual awareness training has been designed to transform your organisation and upskill the people within it to support people with sight loss.

A woman with sight loss in a pink top lent on a table reading braille with a woman sat down opposite holding an iPad and wearing headphone next to a laptop.
Develop the skills needed to be there for over two million people
For people with sight loss, your organisation and the people within it, may be, to all intents and purposes, invisible. However, RNIB has been a leader in promoting accessibility for blind and partially sighted people for more than 150 years. Today, guided by the latest research and delivered by experts, our bespoke training courses, not only provide a unique perspective but also equip your business with the practical tools needed to address the needs of blind and visually impaired individuals. Helping ensure your business is even more inclusive.
Our tailor-made training sessions have been designed to meet your business’s unique needs. Whether you need help adapting digital environments to support blind and visually impaired users, you’re looking for ways to make your built environments more friendly to visually impaired guests and colleagues, or want to empower your employees, we’ll leave your people with the skills necessary to enact impactful change.
Personalised programmes that fit your business goals
Built around what matters to you
Whatever your end goal – whether it’s sales and marketing, organisational change, meeting regulatory needs, or simply awareness – we’ll help you to achieve it
Your training will be delivered by RNIB's experts
Many of our experts have lived experience of sight loss, bringing a valuable and authentic experience to your training
Cost-effective
See this training as an investment. Designed with the flexibility to meet the needs of any organisation, regardless of size, it can help ensure your business communicates more effectively with the two million people in the UK who have sight loss.