work in progress

All About… Our New Intern!

All About… Our New Intern!

We’re now three months on from joining Work In Progress and one of the inclusion areas we’ve focused on is in our staffing. When we signed up, we had just hired our new brewer, Michaela, whose addition increased the gender diversity of our team – but we thought there was more we could do.

So, a few weeks ago, we welcomed another James to Beerblefish. We’re very excited that we have partnered with West Lea School’s Supported Internship Programme. This is a programme that gives 16 to 24 year olds with Special Educational Needs (SEN), an opportunity to find work and encourages businesses to diversify their workplaces by employing people with SEN. 

As a result, James has joined us on a year long placement, fully supported by the programme and a dedicated Job Coach, making his transition into the brewery so much easier on us. We have wasted no time in putting James to work – he’s already helped us brew, bottle and label our beers! James has been given a plethora of tasks in his short time with us so far, and has proven that he is capable of carrying out brewery duties.

He’s also made us think about things in a different way – we need to try to look at the world through his eyes when we’re working with him, which is a great benefit to everyone else in the team too; we’re all learning from each other and we’re used to there being two Jameses in the team now!

James has always wanted to work in the beverage industry, and his enthusiasm and willingness to learn have shone through from the get go. We are very excited to be working with James and the Supported Internship Programme, and look forward to guiding him in the future.

We’re proud to be giving a young person with SEN an opportunity to work and we’d love any of our customers and suppliers who can to consider doing the same – you can find out more by contacting the West Lea Supported Internship Programme at sip@westleaschool.co.uk, or by visiting the SIP website.

Posted by Bethany in Beerblefish HQ News, Brewed for Good
Making Beer Accessible (Part 1 of Many)

Making Beer Accessible (Part 1 of Many)

I wrote a few weeks back about our plans to develop an Inclusion Strategy and wanted to give you an update on a few things that we’ve been up to in the meantime. As I mentioned then, there are lots of things that we can’t do because of our small size, but I really want to focus today on some of the things we CAN do, even as a really tiny brewery.

Most of these are things that we should always have been doing (and aren’t specific to the brewing industry), but sometimes we just need a moment to pause and really think about the impacts we have on the people we encounter and, perhaps more importantly, the people we don’t encounter because they don’t feel like a brewery, bar, pub or club is an inclusive environment.

We’ve identified that our online presence could be more inclusive by being more accessible to people with disabilities and to neurodiverse people. We know that there are many people who need websites to be easy to read and that a lot of people rely on screen readers to tell them the information that’s on websites.

At the same time as we signed up to Work In Progress, we were also planning a new website for the brewery. Within a couple of weeks, we should be ready to launch our new website. As we’ve been putting it together, we’ve been thinking very carefully about how we can make it accessible – this involves some give and take because things that are accessible to one person might be inaccessible to others. Therefore, we’ve had to balance out everything to try to find a middle ground that works for as many people as possible.

Luckily for us, much of this has already been thought through in the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), which provide suggestions for how to make websites more accessible. Many websites adopt these guidelines, but there are many that don’t. We already do quite a lot of the things mentioned in the guidelines, but we’ve not yet sat down and formally gone through them against our website.

The things we’ve considered so far in creating the new website are:

  • Background colour, text colour and the contrast between them
  • Fonts, including both the style and the size
  • Alt text for images
  • Using plain English with short paragraphs (I really need to work on this one!)
  • Testing it with a screen reader app, to make sure it makes sense when the app is used

Many of the WCAG principles are built into the template we’re using for the new website, but in the coming weeks (before and after launch), I’ll be working through the WCAG to assess whether we have any significant accessibility gaps. Then, I’ll make the necessary adjustments to the website to address those gaps.

We are certain that we won’t have this perfect straight away (or perhaps ever), but we are committing to try to make our website as accessible as we can. We are also committing to making our other online presences (such as social media) as accessible as we are able to – a lot of that is outside our control, but we can do things like adding alt text to images where that functionality is available.

We’ll be posting more about our Inclusion Strategy in future blog posts and we’ll put the pieces of our Inclusion Strategy on our Inclusion page as we build them.

Posted by Bethany in Brewed for Good
We are a Work In Progress Brewery

We are a Work In Progress Brewery

This week we learned from our friends at Brewgooder in Glasgow that they, along with Mondo Brewing Company, are setting up an initiative to try to help make the brewing industry more inclusive. It’s called “Work in Progress” and as soon as I read about it, I knew we had to sign up.

What is it?

‘Work In Progress’ is an open, de-centralised group of breweries that aspire to a more inclusive and representative beer industry, committed to taking action in our businesses and forging links with communities to increase opportunities and promote collaboration between brewers and under-represented groups in our society.

Why sign up?

Since we are already a social enterprise brewery with aims that include helping military veterans into civilian work and supporting educational charities, these ideals fit in with our business values and we want our involvement in this group to help us to think about more ways that we can be inclusive and serve the various communities we operate in.

What are we doing?

To start with, we’ll be doing a lot of thinking and discussing! As a member of Work in Progress, we’ve committed to act on the following core areas of inclusion: Anti-Racism and Black Asian and Minority Ethnic Representation – LGBT+ Representation – Female Representation – Disabled Persons Representation.

However, the group leaves it up to each brewery to develop their own unique approaches to inclusion, put them into action, and then report on them – sharing successes and failures with other members and the wider world. The group doesn’t believe there is a right or wrong way to begin a Work In Progress journey. All that is asked is that we hold ourselves and others to account, and support other members on their own journeys.

We believe that all the core areas listed above are important, but we also realise that we can’t change the world overnight, so over the coming weeks and months, we’ll be developing an inclusion strategy that focuses on what we think are realistic and achievable aims for our (very small) business, along with some aspirational ideas that we’d like to take on some day in the future.

What will we be focusing on?

All of the core areas of representation are important, and we can think of quite a few more that we want to look into as well. However, there are a few things that we’re particularly interested in:

  • As our founder and Managing Director, James, is dyslexic, inclusion relating to invisible disabilities is a key focus. We would like to explore the inclusivity of our branding, labelling and marketing in this regard, and we already have a number of ideas we’re mulling over.
  • We’ll be thinking about gender representation in a slightly less binary way. While female representation is extremely important, women are not the only underrepresented group in this category.
  • As one of our social enterprise aims is to help ex-military personnel to get back into work, we’re also interested in social inclusion and helping people to reach their potential.
  • One of the ways in which we’re already proud of being inclusive is that all of our beer and gin is vegan, allowing more people to get involved and enjoy our products.

What are the challenges?

The main challenge is our size – there are only three (soon to be four) of us working in the business and only half of the team is full time. This somewhat limits the amount we can do, and spend, on inclusion initiatives. But we really believe in doing what we can, so our strategy will include lots of little things that individually may have a small impact, but will add up to making a difference.

We’re also limited by the size and layout of our brewery – we’re not in a position, for example, to install a ground floor loo, which limits how disabled-friendly we can be (for now – but not necessarily for ever).

Another thing we’ll need to work through is balancing the different core areas against each other. There may be times when making a decision that benefits one underrepresented group means that another group is relatively disadvantaged or there is a delay to their inclusion – we’ll need to work through that as we go, but I think being conscious of the issue gets us a long way towards addressing it.

How will we stay accountable?

We’re planning to be transparent about this whole process. We’ve committed to reporting at least annually, but I’m going to add a page to this website with details of our inclusion strategy, which I’ll update as we make progress. I’ll also be reporting on the things that haven’t worked so well and looking into ways that we can measure the impact of the inclusion steps we take, so that we can report in a holistic way once a year.

How can you help?

Talk to us! If you have ideas or suggestions for things we could explore, please let us know using our Contact form or via social media. We’ll also solicit feedback after we’ve implemented something, to help us work out whether it’s had a positive inclusion impact.

We’re in this for the long haul – we can’t promise that everything we do will be perfect straight away, and we’re bound to make some mistakes along the way – but we believe that the brewing industry and the beer-drinking community can and will be more inclusive and we want to be a part of that change.

Posted by Bethany in Beerblefish HQ News, Brewed for Good