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Dashbords
The Dashboard is part of the Real-Time Scanning section and provides an overview of accessibility performance for a single selected website.
Once the QualiBooth tracking script is installed, Real-Time Scanning automatically analyzes every visited page. The collected data is continuously processed and aggregated, then visualized in the dashboard to give you an up-to-date view of your site’s accessibility status.
Note: The dashboard always reflects data for the currently selected site. There is no site selector within the dashboard itself.
Available Filters
You can refine the displayed data using the following filters:
Tag Filter (Optional)
Filter results based on custom tags applied during Real-Time Scanning. This allows you to focus on specific page groups, templates, or areas of your website.
Date Range (Required)
Defines the time window used across all dashboard charts, except the Accessibility Score, which always represents the most recent aggregated score for the site.
Available options:
- Last 24 hours: Selecting this filter will result in displaying results for the last completed 24 hours. For example, if it’s 14:47 on Jan 2, the chart reflects data from Jan 1 at 14:00 to Jan 2 at 13:59.
- Last 7 days: Shows the past 7 full days. If it’s Jan 10, results span Jan 3 to Jan 9.
- Last 30 days: Similar to above, covering the previous 30 full days.
- Last 12 months: Monthly aggregates from the start of each month. If today is Jan 1, it reflects Jan–Dec of the previous year.
- Custom Date Range: Select any period based on your analysis needs.
Accessibility Score
A dynamic metric offering a snapshot of your site's accessibility level, with real-time scoring based on the most recent data, primarily reflecting the previous day's score for accuracy.
New users: For newly integrated sites, the score is initially calculated based on the latest hour and switches to daily once more data is available.
For details on how the accessibility score is calculated, see the Accessibility Scoring System page.
Score Levels
- High (Green): Scores 85-100 signify strong compliance with accessibility standards.
- Medium (Orange): Scores 60-85 highlight partial compliance, indicating areas for improvement.
- Low (Red): Scores below 60 denote significant accessibility barriers.
Hourly Score
The hourly score is an average value from all page visits' score during that hour. If there are more heavily visited pages on a website (for example its homepage), those will have higher weight in determining the hourly score since there will be more processed scans for such pages compared to others. Thus, the score is based on the average user's experience and not just an average number for all scanned different pages.
Daily Score
Same principle as hourly score, but aggregated over a 24-hour period.
Scan History
Track how your website’s accessibility evolves over time with interactive charts. Data can be reviewed hourly, daily, monthly, or across a custom range.
Charts include:
- Accessibility Score: Visual trend of your site’s score changes.
- Accessibility Issues: Count of ongoing issues detected over time. An issue remains counted until resolved.
- Issue View Count: Measures how often visitors encounter specific issues. For example, if two users experience the same issue, the count is 2. This highlights real-world impact, not just technical presence, and helps for issue prioritization.
- Affected Pages: Tracks how many unique pages contain accessibility issues.
Issues by Severity
Displays the distribution of issues based on their severity level over the selected period:
- Critical (highest)
- High
- Medium
- Low (lowest)
Clicking on any severity label within the chart will open the corresponding issue report for the selected severity level and time period.
Issues by Violation Level
WCAG 2.1 guidelines are categorized into three levels of conformance to meet the needs of different groups and different situations: A (lowest), AA (mid-range), and AAA (highest). Issues marked as A are a must have, AA – should have, AAA stands for good to have. Addressing level A and level AA issues is usually enough to meet accessibility compliance. Addressing AAA as well will make your website fully accessible and easy for use to people with different kinds of disabilities using different types of devices.
Clicking on any violation label within the chart will open the corresponding issue report for the selected violation level and time period.