Technology
Deloitte’s first Disability Inclusion @ Work 2024 survey reveals that workplace accessibility is a significant challenge for many
Published
2 years agoon
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Nearly nine in 10 respondents have disclosed having a disability, chronic health condition, or being neurodivergent to someone at work; most disclosing to HR or their direct supervisor.One-quarter of respondents who have disclosed their disability, neurodivergence or health condition at work have requested accommodations. Of those, 74% have had at least one request rejected; almost two in 10 have had all their requests rejected.Fears of negative perception, concerns about being seen as difficult, and past negative experiences are some of the reasons why some respondents have not asked their current employer for workplace accommodations.Six in 10 respondents have been unable to attend some kind of work event due to inaccessibility.Forty-one percent of respondents say they have experienced either microaggressions, harassment and/or bullying at work over the past 12 months.
NEW YORK, Dec. 3, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — Deloitte Global’s first Disability Inclusion @ Work 2024: A Global Outlook report provides insights into the workplace experiences of 10,000 respondents with disabilities, chronic health conditions or who are neurodivergent across workplaces in 20 countries. The findings paint a picture of varying attitudes toward self-identification and disclosure, hesitancy in asking employers for workplace accommodations, inability to participate in work events due to a lack of accessibility, and experiences with non-inclusive behaviors. However, the data also shows various actions and factors that can help enable and accelerate disability inclusion at work.
The survey finds that while many respondents experience different levels of difficulty while doing certain activities—such as walking, seeing, hearing, concentrating, and communicating—they do not always identify as being a person with a disability or chronic health condition, or as someone who is neurodivergent. The research reflects the views of both those who self-identify as a person with a disability, chronic or long-term health condition or as someone who is neurodivergent and those who report experiencing at least some level of difficulty in one domain of activity.
“Despite companies being more aware of the importance of disability inclusion, this important survey shows that much still remains to be done,” says Emma Codd, Deloitte Global Chief Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Officer. “While we see high levels of workplace disclosure, this sits alongside concerns about negative perceptions when it comes to requesting workplace accommodations, requested accommodations being declined, work events that are not accessible, and experiences of non-inclusive behaviors. All these factors combine to create an ‘access gap’ that should be addressed.”
Formal disclosure at work is high, although many choose not to share their disability, neurodivergence or chronic health condition with their team
The findings reveal that although nearly nine in 10 respondents (88%) have chosen to disclose their condition at work to at least one person or through a human resources information system (HRIS) or self-identification program, many choose not to share their disability, neurodivergence, or chronic health condition with all their colleagues, with many choosing not to share with peers. The data reveals 35% of respondents chose to disclose to colleagues who were less senior or of equal seniority and 31% to other colleagues outside their team. Compared to 78% of respondents who choose to disclose to HR and 73% to a direct supervisor.
Of those who have chosen to keep their condition private, respondents revealed concerns that they may be discriminated against, that managers would consider their ability to do their job to be impaired, or that their career progression could be impacted. Twenty-one percent cited a negative experience after disclosing to a previous employer.
Despite high workplace disclosure rates, requesting workplace accommodations is not yet the norm
While disclosure at work is high, one quarter of respondents who have disclosed with their employer have asked for workplace accommodations. Seventy-five percent have refrained—of those, 43% believe they don’t need any; 20% cite fears that their supervisors would perceive the request negatively, and 11% feel discouraged by a negative experience at another company.
Meanwhile, many of those who have requested accommodations have had their requests denied. Almost three quarters of respondents who requested an accommodation have had at least one request rejected; these respondents say they were told that their request was costly (41%), too difficult to implement (30%), and that it was unreasonable (29%). The most frequently rejected requests reported by respondents are those that likely attract cost—namely alternative communication methods, access to assistive software solutions, and coaching for specific issues. Conversely, the most frequently accepted requests are those that likely do not attract cost, such as working from home when needed, adjustments to work schedules, taking frequent breaks, and access to private working spaces.
Working from home is more accessible, but many do not have that option
Nearly half (48%) of respondents that work from home at least some of the time say that their home is more accessible than their employer’s premises. Those that can work from home cite many benefits, including making work easier to get done (57%), reducing threats to their health (55%), providing direct access to care within the home (46%), and reducing discrimination and harassment concerns (29%).
However, just 9% of respondents say they can work from home every day. While a further 28% say they can work from home for specific agreed periods, and 24% say they can work from home for part of their working time and do not need advance approval. For those able to work from home, some choose not to. Missing out on professional opportunities ranks highest (39%) as a reason they elect not to work from home, while others cite concern that people will think less of them (30%) or believe that being in a physical workplace is better for their career (30%). Additionally, 22% say that their supervisor would prefer them to work in the office even though working from home is an option.
Work events are not yet fully accessible—and as a result, many are missing out on ‘moments that matter’
Sixty percent of respondents say they have missed one workplace event or meeting due to a lack of accessibility. Thirty-eight percent say they have been unable to attend at least one work-related event outside their workplace, and 33% have been unable to attend a work event in their workplace, due to a lack of accessibility. An additional 26% say they have been unable to socialize outside the workplace with colleagues due to a lack of accessibility at the chosen venue. The most common barriers have been inaccessible restrooms and a lack of breaks in the agenda.
Non-inclusive behaviors permeate work experiences, but many aren’t reported
Thirty percent of respondents say that people made negative assumptions about their competence in the past year. Further, over a quarter say they were passed over for a promotion and the same number says their performance was negatively evaluated in the last year.
Forty-one percent of respondents say they have experienced microaggressions, harassment or bullying at work in the past year, with microaggressions being experienced the most (by 26% of those surveyed), followed by bullying and harassment (10% and 7% respectively). Respondents say only about half (52%) of these non-inclusive behaviors were formally reported to someone in authority in their organization. The most commonly cited reasons for not reporting were concerns that the behavior would worsen, thinking that the complaint would not be taken seriously, and not feeling that the behaviors was serious enough to report.
The path forward: Helping to enable and accelerate disability inclusion at work
Alongside providing this critical insight, this survey has also identified five steps that employers can take to help make meaningful progress on disability inclusion at work:
Make disability inclusion a visible leadership priority, at board level—accompanied by meaningful actions. Encourage senior role models, which in turn can help enable people with disabilities, chronic health conditions or neurodivergent individuals to thrive and succeed at work.Provide roles that help enable strengths—and managers and leaders who both understand the importance of disability inclusion and help enable it.Embed accessibility into business as usual throughout the career lifecycle, including ‘moments that matter’.Recognize the importance of providing workplace accommodations when they are needed—and that the accommodations application process is clear, timely and stigma-free. Provide a disability-inclusive culture, address non-inclusive behaviors, and help enable everyone to report without concern.
“Organizations have a responsibility to support their employees and create an environment where everyone feels included and can reach their full potential,” says Elizabeth Faber, Deloitte Global Chief People & Purpose Officer. “To build more disability-inclusive organizations, leaders need to remove barriers and provide opportunities necessary to help support all employees to succeed in their careers.”
For more information and to view the full results of Deloitte’s Disability Inclusion at Work report, visit: www.deloitte.com/DisabilityAtWork.
Methodology
Between January and April 2024, Deloitte Global surveyed 10,000 people with disabilities or chronic health conditions or who are neurodivergent in workplaces across 20 countries (Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Germany, India, Japan, Kenya, Malaysia, Mexico, Netherlands, Nigeria, Poland, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, the UAE, the United Kingdom, and the United States). All respondents were in full- or part-time employment. Respondents did not include any Deloitte people. Respondents were included either if a) they self-identified as a person with a disability, chronic health condition or as someone who is neurodivergent, or b) if they report experiencing at least “some difficulty” in one domain of an adapted version of The Washington Group Short Set (WG-SS), a widely used set of questions designed to identify and measure disability in public surveys. The adapted WG-SS used in this report consisted of questions covering difficulties respondents experience in carrying out certain activities across seven domains: vision, hearing, mobility (e.g., walking/climbing stairs), cognition (i.e., memory/concentration), self-care, communication and participation in work on an equal basis with others. The survey aimed to understand the experiences of these individuals in the workplace, including whether and how they disclose their condition(s), their needs and expectations around accessibility and accommodations, the presence of non-inclusive behaviors, and how employers can enable and accelerate disability inclusion in their workplaces.
About Deloitte
Deloitte refers to one or more of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited (DTTL), its global network of member firms, and their related entities (collectively, the “Deloitte organization”). DTTL (also referred to as “Deloitte Global”) and each of its member firms and related entities are legally separate and independent entities, which cannot obligate or bind each other in respect of third parties. DTTL and each DTTL member firm and related entity is liable only for its own acts and omissions, and not those of each other. DTTL does not provide services to clients. Please see www.deloitte.com/about to learn more.
Deloitte provides industry-leading audit and assurance, tax and legal, consulting, financial advisory, and risk advisory services to nearly 90% of the Fortune Global 500® and thousands of private companies. Our people deliver measurable and lasting results that help reinforce public trust in capital markets, enable clients to transform and thrive, and lead the way toward a stronger economy, a more equitable society, and a sustainable world. Building on its 175-plus year history, Deloitte spans more than 150 countries and territories. Learn how Deloitte’s approximately 457,000 people worldwide make an impact that matters at www.deloitte.com.
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/deloittes-first-disability-inclusion–work-2024-survey-reveals-that-workplace-accessibility-is-a-significant-challenge-for-many-302315519.html
SOURCE Deloitte Global
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Technology
New Datingsmatch Survey: 1 in 5 Users Say a Wink Led to a Conversation
Published
15 minutes agoon
July 19, 2026By
New findings from a Datingsmatch.com user survey show that the smallest gestures are doing more of the communication work than most people realize.
GIBRALTAR, July 19, 2026 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ — People tend to think about opening messages as the moment a conversation actually starts online. The carefully worded introduction, the line someone spent time writing and then rewrote. What the data from a recent Datingsmatch survey points to is something different: for a meaningful share of users, none of that is where things began. It began with a wink.
According to the survey, 1 in 5 users of Datingsmatch reported that a wink was what got a conversation going. One-fifth of respondents, spread across different age groups and usage habits, identified that a single small gesture as the moment something actually started between two people.
What the Datingsmatch Survey Found
The survey was conducted among 5,000 users of the Datingsmatch online communication platform in June 2026, with participants asked to voluntarily share their experiences. The aim was to get a clearer picture of how conversations tend to begin, what it is that people hesitate about, and what eventually prompts someone to go ahead and reach out.
The wink finding was among the more consistent findings from the responses. Among users who described a conversation they felt good about, a notable portion were able to trace it back to a wink being sent first, whether they had sent it or received it. The reverse situation, where someone sent a cold message with no prior signal of any kind, was something respondents described as harder on both sides of the exchange.
That tracks with what broader research also points to. A 2023 Pew Research Center survey found that 55% of online daters felt insecure about the number of messages they received, and 36% felt overwhelmed by incoming contact. What that suggests is not that people don’t want to connect — it’s that the way contact gets initiated matters a great deal for how it lands.
Why Small Signals Carry More Weight Than They Seem
The Datingsmatch survey also looked at what stops people from reaching out when they want to. Uncertainty came up repeatedly. Not knowing whether someone is open to hearing from you. Not wanting to guess wrong and feel like you’ve overstepped.
What respondents described is not a lack of interest in connecting. It’s the absence of a clear enough signal that the other person is open to it. A Datingsmatch wink feature provides exactly that. It’s visible, unambiguous, and low-commitment enough that neither person has to feel exposed by it. For those still finding their footing on the platform, the beginner’s guide to the Datingsmatch platform walks through how these features work and how to use them effectively.
This connects to a 2024 study published in the journal Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking that examined online rejection: ghosting was the most common form of rejection in digital communication, even after substantial prior exchanges. The fear that a message will simply be ignored — without any acknowledgment — is a real barrier. A lower-stakes signal reduces that barrier because the cost of no response feels smaller.
Datingsmatch notes, based on what survey participants shared, that this kind of low-friction signal seems to work differently than most people expect. It doesn’t just start conversations. It seems to reduce the gap that many users described feeling between “I want to reach out” and “I actually did.”
How People Actually Use the Wink Feature on Datingsmatch
Survey responses offered a more specific picture of the behavior. Winks were not being used randomly or as a form of mass outreach. Respondents described using them deliberately, on users they had spent time looking at, toward people they were genuinely interested in but not yet sure about approaching with a message.
Some users described sending a wink as a way of checking whether there was any openness to further contact, without having to commit to a full message exchange in order to find out. Others who had been on the receiving end of a wink said it was something they found easier to respond to, in part because it did not feel like it was asking too much of them too soon. There were also respondents who noted that when a wink had gone back and forth between two people, the first actual message felt less like an approach out of nowhere and more like a natural continuation of something that had already started.
Datingsmatch customer service regularly hears from users that knowing how to start a conversation is one of the things people think about most when they first join the platform. The survey data puts some numbers to what those conversations have long suggested.
What This Means for How the Platform Thinks About Connection
Datingsmatch highlights that findings like these shape how the platform continues to think about the role of small, low-pressure interactions in the overall experience. A conversation that begins with a wink is not a lesser conversation. Survey respondents who traced their most valued exchanges back to a wink described those conversations in consistently positive terms.
The platform sees value in giving users multiple ways to signal interest at different levels of commitment. A message is a commitment. A wink is an invitation. Both have a place, and the data suggests that for a meaningful portion of users, the invitation comes first and matters more than it might look like from the outside.
About Datingsmatch
Datingsmatch is an online communication platform that gives people a range of ways to connect online. The platform is built around the idea that how a conversation starts shapes everything that follows, and that not every interaction needs to begin with a message. Datingsmatch operates globally and continues to develop its communication tools based on how users actually engage with each other.
Media Contact
Elizabeth Fielden, Datingsmatch, 1 5869132511, review@datingsmatch.com, https://datingsmatch.com/
View original content:https://www.prweb.com/releases/new-datingsmatch-survey-1-in-5-users-say-a-wink-led-to-a-conversation-302828676.html
SOURCE Datingsmatch
Technology
Pudu Robotics Showcases Full Product Portfolio at WAIC 2026, Winning the “Most Investor-Attractive Enterprise” Award
Published
3 hours agoon
July 19, 2026By
SHANGHAI, July 19, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Pudu Robotics, a global leader in commercial service robotics, is showcasing its full portfolio of intelligent robotics solutions at the 2026 World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC), held from July 17–20 in Shanghai. A key highlight of this year’s exhibition is the offline global debut of the PUDU D7, Pudu’s next-generation semi-humanoid robot. In tandem with its exhibition highlights, Pudu Robotics was also honored with the 36Kr “Most Investor-Attractive AI & Embodied Intelligence Enterprise” Award, recognizing the company’s growing influence in the embodied AI sector and continued confidence from the investment community.
Full Product Matrix on Display: Demonstrating Multi-Scenario Capabilities
Pudu’s comprehensive presentation at WAIC 2026 showcased its complete technical and product layout, spanning service delivery, commercial cleaning, industrial delivery, and general embodied intelligence.
The PUDU D5 quadruped robot demonstrates advanced terrain adaptability and autonomous navigation across an on-site obstacle course mimicking sand, gravel, steps, and slopes, simulating autonomous inspections in complex environments such as power substations and industrial parks. Additionally, the D5 performed high-speed “drifting” demonstrations at the booth, reaching peak speeds of up to 5 m/s and showcasing industry-leading mobility and responsiveness.
Making its global offline public debut, the PUDU D7 engaged visitors with several immersive and interactive live experiences. Attendees posed for photos with the D7, instantly receiving unique snapshots taken directly from a “robotics perspective.” The robot also demonstrated advanced multi-robot coordination by autonomously walking and guiding the PUDU D5 quadruped around the booth while seamlessly avoiding pedestrian traffic, vividly illustrating collaborative workflows between different robotic form factors.
Pudu is also exhibiting its mature commercial robotics portfolio, including the BellaBot service delivery robot, the PUDU T300 industrial delivery robot, and the PUDU MT1 Max and PUDU CC1 Pro commercial cleaning robots. Together, these products highlight Pudu’s proven deployments across hospitality, retail, F&B, manufacturing, warehousing, and other industries.
Winning the “Most Investor-Attractive Enterprise” Award Amid Sustained Capital Traction
The “Most Investor-Attractive Enterprise” award from 36Kr arrives alongside sustained backing from major global institutional investors. In April 2026, Pudu Robotics completed a new financing round of nearly USD 150 million, bringing its valuation to more than USD 1.5 billion. This brings Pudu’s cumulative funding to more than USD 300 million.
This strong capital interest is supported by concrete commercial performance. According to the “2025 Global Embodied Intelligence and Commercial Service Robotics Independent Market Research Report” released by Frost & Sullivan, Pudu Robotics accounts for 25% and 23% of the global commercial service robotics market in terms of revenue and shipments respectively, ranking No. 1 worldwide in both categories. Furthermore, Pudu Robotics has maintained a year-over-year revenue growth rate exceeding 100%, with international markets accounting for more than 80% of total revenue for consecutive years. While the broader Embodied AI industry remains in early exploratory phases, Pudu has approached a positive EBITDA, achieving large-scale commercial viability ahead of the market.
From Product Export to Ecosystem Integration: A Blueprint for Global Expansion
According to the Research Report on Chinese Enterprises’ Overseas Expansion from 2025 to 2026 published by the 36Kr Research Institute, Pudu Robotics was featured as a primary benchmark case study for Embodied AI. The report attributes Pudu’s international success to its systematic combination of technological innovation, product capabilities, and localized global operation. Analysts noted that Pudu has successfully transitioned from exporting products to exporting global brand equity and integrated robotics ecosystems, establishing a core reference blueprint for hard-tech global expansion.
By deploying versatile product forms that span specialized, semi-humanoid, and humanoid forms, Pudu Robotics continues to focus on integrating Embodied AI directly into real-world environments—transforming Physical AI from a technical concept into a practical productivity partner.
About Pudu Robotics
Pudu Robotics, a global leader in the commercial service robotics sector, is dedicated to empowering easier work and better lives through AI and robotics, with a vision of building a global intelligent robotics infrastructure that serves 10 billion people worldwide.
Pudu Robotics has developed key core technologies and components, including robotic joint modules and motion controllers, and has filed more than 1,900 patent applications worldwide. Built on three core technologies—Embodied Navigation, Embodied Manipulation, and Embodied Interaction—Pudu Robotics has pioneered a “One Brain, Multiple Embodiments” architecture, establishing a comprehensive product portfolio that includes specialized, semi-humanoid, and humanoid robots.
Currently, Pudu offers four major product lines: service delivery, commercial cleaning, industrial delivery and general embodied AI. Its solutions are widely deployed across industries such as retail, hospitality, manufacturing, real estate and property services, healthcare, entertainment and sport, education, and public services.
To date, Pudu Robotics has shipped over 130,000 units globally, with a presence in more than 85 countries and regions.
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/pudu-robotics-showcases-full-product-portfolio-at-waic-2026-winning-the-most-investor-attractive-enterprise-award-302829057.html
SOURCE Pudu Robotics
Technology
Best AI Productivity Tools for Creators (2026): CapCut Recognized for Faster Video and Image Workflows by Software Experts
Published
4 hours agoon
July 19, 2026By
NEW YORK, July 19, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Artificial intelligence continues to reshape how digital content is produced, with creators relying on AI tools like CapCut to handle editing, asset generation, and repetitive production tasks that once required several separate applications. As these tools mature, software reviews are placing more weight on workflow efficiency alongside creative output.
Best AI Productivity Tools for Creators
Seedance 2.0 – an AI video generation model that creates videos from text prompts and image inputsPhoto to 3D – an AI tool that transforms 2D photos into images with realistic three-dimensional depth and effects
The use of AI has expanded across independent creators, marketing teams, educators, and small businesses producing content for websites, social media, online stores, and digital campaigns. Rather than using AI for a single task, many creative professionals now incorporate it throughout the production process, from generating concepts and visuals to refining finished content. This has encouraged software reviewers to test how well platforms support complete creative workflows instead of evaluating individual features in isolation.
Software Experts has included CapCut among its 2026 selections for AI productivity tools for creators, citing the platform’s collection of AI-powered features that support faster video and image production. The review examined how integrated AI tools can simplify common creative tasks across video editing, image generation, music creation, and visual enhancement.
What Is Driving Interest in AI Productivity Tools?
Content creators are producing more material than ever across short-form video platforms, social media, online stores, blogs, newsletters, and marketing campaigns. A single project may require multiple image formats, several video versions, captions, background edits, and audio, all within a short production window.
Many creators also repurpose one piece of content into several formats. A long-form video may be edited into short clips for social platforms, paired with custom graphics, accompanied by AI-generated music, and published alongside promotional images. Completing these tasks manually often requires switching between multiple editing applications.
This has encouraged software developers to introduce AI features that reduce manual editing while keeping creators in control of the finished product. Instead of switching between several applications, many creators now prefer platforms that support multiple stages of production within the same workspace.
How Does CapCut Support Video and Image Workflows?
CapCut offers AI tools that assist throughout the creative process, from generating visual assets to preparing finished content for publishing.
Among the tools included are:
Seedance 2.0 for generating AI videos from text promptsGPT Image 2 for creating images from written descriptionsSeedream for AI-generated artwork and creative visualsSeedmusic for producing original music from text promptsAI Image Extender for expanding images while preserving visual consistencyPhoto to 3D for adding depth effects to imagesAI Background Removal for separating subjects from image backgrounds with minimal editing
Together, these features support projects ranging from social media posts and marketing materials to promotional videos, educational content, presentations, and visual concepts, allowing creators to complete more production tasks within a single platform.
Why Are Integrated AI Platforms Receiving More Coverage?
Earlier AI tools often specialized in a single task, such as image generation or video editing. Newer platforms are bringing these functions together to let creators complete more of their work without transferring files between multiple services.
This type of workflow can shorten production time while helping maintain visual consistency across different content formats. It can also reduce the amount of time spent exporting files, reformatting assets, or rebuilding projects in separate applications.
As a result, software evaluations are increasingly examining how efficiently creators can complete everyday production work. Instead of concentrating solely on the number of AI features available, reviewers are also looking at how those tools function together during real-world creative projects.
What Did Software Experts Evaluate?
The review looked at AI tools that support practical creative work across multiple production stages rather than concentrating on a single feature.
Areas included in the evaluation included:
AI-assisted video generationText-to-image creationAI-generated musicBackground removalImage expansionThree-dimensional visual effectsEditing tools that support faster creative workflows
The review also examined how these features work together during typical content production rather than evaluating each tool separately. This reflects the way many creators now build content using interconnected AI tools instead of isolated editing software.
What Does This Mean for Creators?
Creative software continues to incorporate AI across more stages of content production, giving creators additional ways to streamline editing while maintaining creative control. As publishing schedules become more demanding, workflow efficiency has entered software evaluations alongside editing quality and creative flexibility.
Software Experts’ 2026 review places CapCut among AI productivity tools supporting faster video and image workflows through its collection of AI-powered creative features. As AI continues to influence digital content production, reviews are placing emphasis on how effectively platforms help creators complete everyday projects from concept through final publication.
To read the full review, please visit the Software experts website.
About CapCut
CapCut is an AI-powered photo and video editing platform designed to make high-quality video creation accessible across devices. The platform supports creators, businesses, and everyday users with tools for video editing, AI video generation, captions, templates, audio, and visual editing. CapCut is available across mobile, web, desktop, and iPad experiences, helping users create, edit, and prepare video content for social media, marketing, education, and personal projects.
About Software Experts: Software Experts delivers in-depth news on the digital tools shaping today’s consumer experience. As an affiliate, Software Experts may earn commissions from sales generated using links provided.
View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/best-ai-productivity-tools-for-creators-2026-capcut-recognized-for-faster-video-and-image-workflows-by-software-experts-302828623.html
SOURCE SoftwareExperts.org
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