In this insightful episode of Podcasts by Dr. Kirk Adams, Dr. Adams welcomes Sucheta Narang, founder of Accessible World and creator of Access Trader, an accessible, screen-reader-compatible trading assistant, into a wide-ranging conversation about independence, inclusion, and financial empowerment. Born blind in a traditional North Indian family, Sucheta describes learning early that “waiting for a fix” wasn’t an option, then charts a path through mainstream education, international disability work in India and the UK, and corporate roles where she embedded accessibility at scale, including work with Wipro, Google (Chrome team), and Adobe.
Leave a CommentMonth: February 2026
▶️ Interview: Blind Self-Funded Billionaire Sean Callagy Gives Back at World’s Largest Toy Drive Serial entrepreneur Sean Callagy is giving back in a monumental way…
Leave a CommentIn this candid episode of Podcasts by Dr. Kirk Adams, Dr. Adams sits down with accessibility entrepreneur Mike Calvo, co-founder of Pneuma Solutions, for a wide-ranging conversation that blends personal journey with big-picture systems change. Calvo shares how he navigated vision loss, a nontraditional education and work path, and early tech experimentation to become a longtime “for us, by us” builder in the blindness tech ecosystem, connecting the dots from early assistive tech days to his groundbreaking work at Serotek (including pioneering web-based access tools) and ultimately to launching Pneuma.
Leave a CommentHere, ISDI announces the launch of its 2026 NW Diversity Learning Series, beginning with a March 11 workshop titled “Navigating Conflicting Mindsets: Engaging Skillfully in Dialogue Across Divides,” which focuses on fostering inclusion, safety, belonging, and healthy workplace relationships amid uncertainty and differing viewpoints. The interactive session, led by dialogue and conflict resolution expert Dr. David Campt, will guide participants in building constructive dialogue skills, emphasizing connection before persuasion, exploring the values and experiences behind disagreements, recognizing trade-offs in deeply held beliefs, and using personal storytelling to transform confrontational exchanges into reflective conversations. The workshop invites attendees to co-create a meaningful dialogue space and offers multiple registration options, including sponsor, subscriber, and single-session access, with sliding scale pricing and accessibility accommodations available upon request.
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Podcasts By Dr. Kirk Adams: Interview with Mark Miller, Founder, CEO, Inclusion Impact Accessibility
In this mission-driven episode of Podcasts by Dr. Kirk Adams, Dr. Kirk Adams sits down with Mark Miller, Founder and CEO of Inclusion Impact Accessibility, for a wide-ranging conversation on what it takes to move accessibility from a one-time “fix” to a durable organizational capability. Mark shares his 13-year path into digital accessibility, from a technology career to learning the craft under early industry pioneers, before helping build the field through work on accessibility maturity models and large-scale consulting, then returning to a “boutique” approach with his own firm so he can meet clients where they are and build pragmatic, customized roadmaps.
Leave a CommentHere, Dr. Kirk Adams argues that “meritocracy” has become a weaponized buzzword, and that most organizations don’t truly have a meritocracy problem or a DEI problem first, they have a definition and measurement problem. He contends that real meritocracy isn’t a slogan, it’s the cumulative result of clear standards and consistent systems that tie hiring, promotions, pay, and access to opportunity to observable skills and effort. From his employment-focused lens, he emphasizes that when workplaces are inconsistent, or when tools and processes (including accessibility) create avoidable friction, organizations don’t get meritocracy; they get hidden performance losses through disengagement, lower productivity, and attrition.
Leave a CommentIn this thought-provoking episode of Podcasts by Dr. Kirk Adams, Dr. Adams sits down with author, speaker, and boundary expert Sheryl Green for a wide-ranging and deeply human conversation about why boundaries matter, and why so many of us struggle to set them. Green shares her personal journey from forensic psychology and years of animal rescue work to a moment of burnout that became a turning point in her life. That experience led her to study, teach, and ultimately write about boundaries as a practical, compassionate tool for protecting our time, energy, relationships, and sense of self. Together, they unpack concepts like “yes-vomiting,” people-pleasing, and the hidden costs of failing to say no, especially when it comes to emotional and time boundaries.
Leave a CommentIn this thought-provoking episode of Podcasts by Dr. Kirk Adams, Kirk sits down with Professor Samuel J. Levine, law professor at Touro Law Center, Director of the Jewish Law Institute, and founder of Touro’s Disability Rights and Inclusion Project, to explore why advancing disability inclusion requires more than “laws on the books.” Levine shares how his work blends legal analysis with broader cultural and human elements, compassion, storytelling, religion, the arts, and lived experience, because, as he and Kirk discuss, you can’t “legislate compassion.” Levine also describes the personal and scholarly path that led him to write Was Yosef on the Spectrum, viewing the biblical Joseph story through the lens of autism, and explains how community connections and shared purpose have helped the conference grow organically through relationships and advocacy.
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