Profiles of startups founded by people with disabilities, including Be My Eyes, Eone Timepieces, Purple, Inclusively, Fable, and Open Style Lab, exploring how lived experience drives product innovation and the competitive advantage of designing from the margins.
Disability-Founded Startups: Entrepreneurs Turning Lived Experience into Innovation
The best products are built by people who understand the problem intimately. When entrepreneurs with disabilities create companies, they bring a depth of insight that no amount of market research can replicate. This article profiles six ventures founded by people with disabilities and examines why lived experience is a powerful competitive advantage in product design and service delivery.
Be My Eyes
Founded: 2012, Denmark
Founder: Hans Jorgen Wiberg, who is visually impaired
What it does: Be My Eyes is a free mobile app that connects blind and low-vision users with sighted volunteers and company agents through live video calls. When a user needs visual assistance, such as reading a label, navigating an unfamiliar space, or checking an expiration date, they open the app and are connected within seconds.
How lived experience shaped it: Wiberg experienced firsthand the moments when a quick visual check from another person would solve an otherwise frustrating barrier. Rather than building a complex assistive device, he created a simple platform that leverages something abundant: human willingness to help.
Impact and growth: Be My Eyes has attracted over 6 million sighted volunteers and serves hundreds of thousands of blind and low-vision users in over 150 countries and 180 languages. The platform has expanded to include Be My AI, integrating artificial intelligence to provide visual descriptions when no volunteer is needed. Corporate partners including Microsoft, Google, and L'Oreal use Specialized Help to provide accessible customer support directly through the app.
The lesson: The simplest solutions often come from deeply understanding the problem. Wiberg did not try to replace human connection with technology. He used technology to facilitate it.
Eone Timepieces
Founded: 2013, United States
Founder: Hyungsoo Kim, inspired by a blind classmate at MIT who could not tell time discreetly
What it does: Eone (Everyone) designs tactile watches that can be read by touch using two ball bearings, one on the watch face and one on the outer edge, held in place by magnets. The design is elegant enough to appeal to sighted users as a fashion statement while being fully functional for blind users.
How lived experience shaped it: Kim observed his classmate at MIT checking the time by activating a talking watch, which announced the time out loud in quiet settings like classrooms and meetings. This was conspicuous and, as his classmate put it, socially awkward. Kim realized that a watch designed primarily for blind users could also be beautiful and desirable for everyone.
Impact and growth: The original Eone Bradley (named after Paralympic swimmer Bradley Snyder) raised over $600,000 on Kickstarter. The company has expanded its product line and is sold in retail stores worldwide. The watches have won multiple design awards, including a Red Dot Design Award.
The lesson: Designing for disability does not mean designing a medical device. When you design for the margins, you often create something everyone wants. The curb cut effect in product form.
Purple
Founded: 2017, United Kingdom
Founder: Mike Adams OBE, who has a physical disability
What it does: Purple is a disability consultancy and social enterprise that helps businesses improve their disability inclusion across employment, customer service, and digital accessibility. Purple operates the Purple Tuesday initiative, the world's largest accessible shopping event, and provides training, audits, and strategic consulting.
How lived experience shaped it: Adams spent years experiencing the gap between corporate diversity rhetoric and disabled people's actual experiences as employees and customers. He recognized that many businesses wanted to improve but lacked practical, authentic guidance, and that guidance was most credible when delivered by people with disabilities.
Impact and growth: Purple works with major brands including Sainsbury's, Barclays, Channel 4, and the NHS. Purple Tuesday has grown to include thousands of participating businesses across the UK and internationally. The organization emphasizes the "Purple Pound," the spending power of disabled people and their households, estimated at over 274 billion pounds annually in the UK alone.
The lesson: The disability market is not a charity case. It is a massive, underserved customer base. Founders who understand this from lived experience can articulate the business case in ways that resonate because they are both the expert and the customer.
Inclusively
Founded: 2020, United States
Founders: Charlotte Dales and Tiffany Yu (Yu is a disability advocate and wheelchair user)
What it does: Inclusively is a workforce inclusion platform that connects job seekers who need accommodations, known as "Success Enablers" in Inclusively's terminology, with employers committed to providing them. The platform allows candidates to specify their accommodation needs (flexible schedule, remote work, assistive technology, etc.) and matches them with employers who have pre-approved those accommodations.
How lived experience shaped it: Yu's experience navigating the job market as a person with a disability revealed a fundamental mismatch: candidates were afraid to request accommodations for fear of being screened out, and employers genuinely willing to accommodate could not signal that in their job postings. Inclusively bridges that gap by making accommodations part of the matching algorithm rather than an awkward afterthought.
Impact and growth: Inclusively has partnered with employers including Accenture, Bloomberg, and TD Bank. The platform serves candidates across a wide range of disabilities and accommodation needs. The company has raised venture capital funding and been featured in Forbes, TechCrunch, and Fast Company.
The lesson: The accommodation conversation is the biggest friction point in disability employment. By restructuring how the conversation happens, removing it from the interview and embedding it in the platform, Inclusively eliminates the moment most candidates dread and most employers handle poorly.
Fable
Founded: 2018, Canada
Founders: Alwar Pillai and Abid Virani
What it does: Fable is an accessibility testing platform that connects companies with people with disabilities to test digital products (websites, apps, software). Rather than relying solely on automated accessibility scanners, Fable provides feedback from real users who navigate with screen readers, switch devices, voice control, and other assistive technologies.
How lived experience shaped it: The founders recognized that automated tools catch only a fraction of accessibility issues. Real usability requires real people. By building a community of testers with disabilities, Fable created a service where the testers' lived experience is the product's core value proposition.
Impact and growth: Fable works with major technology companies and financial institutions. Their community includes hundreds of assistive technology users across different disability types and technology setups. The platform has helped clients identify and fix thousands of accessibility barriers that automated tools missed.
The lesson: People with disabilities are not just beneficiaries of accessibility. They are the most qualified experts in it. Fable turned this insight into a scalable business model where disability expertise is the service being sold.
Open Style Lab
Founded: 2014, United States
Founders: Grace Jun (who has a physical disability) and a team of designers and engineers at MIT
What it does: Open Style Lab is a nonprofit that designs functional, stylish clothing and accessories for people with disabilities. The organization runs an annual summer program that brings together designers, engineers, and occupational therapists to co-create wearable solutions with disabled clients. Projects have included magnetic closure jackets, one-handed shoe fastening systems, seated-wear trousers, and waterproof wheelchair covers.
How lived experience shaped it: Jun experienced the fashion industry's blind spot firsthand. Standard clothing is designed for a narrow range of bodies and abilities. Getting dressed each morning should not require an engineering workaround, yet for millions of people it does. Jun combined her design background with her lived experience to create a lab dedicated to closing that gap.
Impact and growth: Open Style Lab has completed projects for dozens of clients and published open-source design resources that other designers can use. Alumni of the program have gone on to work in adaptive fashion at major brands. The organization has been featured in the New York Times, Wired, and Fast Company.
The lesson: Fashion and function are not opposites. When designers with disabilities lead the process, the results are both beautiful and genuinely useful. Open Style Lab demonstrates that co-design with disabled people produces better outcomes than designing for them.
The Lived-Experience Advantage
These six ventures share a common thread: founders who experienced a problem personally and built a solution that no outside observer would have conceived in the same way.
Why Lived Experience Matters in Product Design
Authentic problem identification. Founders with disabilities do not need user research to understand the problem. They have lived it daily.
Nuanced understanding. There is a difference between knowing that screen readers exist and knowing what it feels like to encounter an inaccessible website at 11 PM when you need to complete a time-sensitive application. That nuance shapes product decisions.
Credibility. Customers and partners trust founders who have walked the path. Disabled customers are particularly attuned to whether a company genuinely understands their experience.
The curb cut effect. Products designed for disability often benefit a much wider market. Tactile watches appeal to sighted buyers. Captions help people in noisy environments. Flexible work arrangements benefit parents. Designing for the edge case frequently improves the experience for everyone.
Barriers Disability Founders Face
Despite the advantages, disability-founded startups face distinct challenges:
Access to capital. Venture capital remains heavily biased toward able-bodied founders. Disability is rarely represented in startup accelerators and pitch competitions.
Accessibility of entrepreneurship infrastructure. Coworking spaces, networking events, pitch stages, and accelerator programs are often physically or digitally inaccessible.
Underestimation. Investors and partners sometimes underestimate the market size or the founder's capability, reflecting broader societal biases about disability and competence.
What Needs to Change
Accelerators and incubators should actively recruit disabled founders and ensure their programs are fully accessible.
Investors should recognize that the global disability market represents over 1.3 billion people and their families and networks.
Policy-makers should ensure that disability entrepreneurship is included in small business support programs and grants.
Key Takeaways
Disability-founded ventures solve real problems because their founders understand those problems from the inside.
The most successful disability-founded companies do not position themselves as charity or niche. They compete in the mainstream market.
Lived experience is a genuine competitive advantage in product design, customer insight, and brand authenticity.
The ecosystem needs to do more to support disabled entrepreneurs, from accessible accelerators to inclusive investment practices.
When people with disabilities lead innovation, the results benefit everyone.