Rosie Putland.
Rosie (she/her) is a proudly Disabled Storyteller, advocate, public speaker, and consultant living in lutruwita/Tasmania. She’s the co-founder and principal accessibility consultant at Modality Co, a digital accessibility social enterprise.
Through training, consulting, and coaching, her work ensures businesses are empowered to make their digital products and services easy to use for everyone. Everything she does helps to feed back into the disability and accessibility communities in lutruwita/Tasmania, from financially supporting disability organisations to founding the Tasmanian Accessibility Community.
Rosie has consulted with organisations of all sizes, from the big four banks to small not-for-profits, on how to transform and evolve their digital strategies to ensure accessibility is always front of mind. She is known for her engaging training, talks, social media advocacy that inspires change, and her unwavering dedication to the accessibility and disability community.
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rosie-putland/
Instagram: @rosie.putland
TikTok: @rosie.putland
Latest contributions

In this episode we talk to journalist Matilda Boseley and author Olivia Muscat.
Is it getting easier to build and sustain a writing career if you’re disabled?
Crip Culture by Fiona Murphy, Rosie Putland
•Audio

In this episode we talk to Kay Kerr and Beau Windon.
What does a sensitivity reader actually do?
Crip Culure by Fiona Murphy, Rosie Putland
•Audio

In this episode we talk to author Kylie Maslen and poet Esther Ottaway.
What does accessibility actually look like in the publishing industry?
Crip Culture by Fiona Murphy, Rosie Putland
•Audio

In this episode we talk to author Micheline Lee and poet Andy Jackson.
Is it risky being an openly disabled author?
Crip Culture by Fiona Murphy, Rosie Putland
•Audio

Our guests are Laura Pettenuzzo and Dr Scott Avery.
Where are all the disabled authors?
Crip Culture Podcast by Fiona Murphy, Rosie Putland
•Audio

Rosie Putland shares her experience of community on social media.
Restricting social media causes ‘social harms’ for the disability community
Rosie Putland
Article