Inclusively is a job marketplace that matches candidates with disabilities to employers by the specific accommodations each workplace offers – pitching access to an overlooked 26% of the adult.
ENTRY ANGLES
Professional training programs designed for specific disability profiles (e.g., neurodivergent-friendly coding bootcamps) · Vertically specialized job marketplace platforms for specific disability communities with precise matching logic · Accessibility tooling for enterprise software to accommodate visual, auditory, and cognitive disabilities
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Understanding of disability-specific job category matching and training design, Marketplace platform development and community features, Enterprise software accessibility standards and implementation
Inclusively is a job marketplace for people with disabilities – but the framing it pitches to employers isn't charitable. It's a talent-sourcing argument: there's a large, underutilized labor pool that most companies aren't recruiting from, and Inclusively provides the infrastructure to access it.
The platform works on both sides. Employers – including Microsoft, Accenture, Salesforce, Charles Schwab, UnitedHealth Group, and Comcast – list the specific accommodations they offer: wheelchair-accessible office configurations, voice interfaces for blind employees, flexible scheduling for chronic illness management, and so on. They don't have to support every category; they indicate which accommodations they can provide. Candidates build profiles that list their skills alongside the accommodations they need. An AI matching layer compares the two and routes qualified candidates directly into the employer's ATS through pre-built integrations with major HR platforms.
There's a third participant type that most job platforms ignore: advocates. Coaches, vocational rehabilitation consultants, and employment specialists can connect with candidates on the platform and then actively assist with resume refinement, interview prep, and job matching – after the candidate consents. The revenue model isn't publicly detailed, but the most likely structure is employer-side fees per hire, with some portion flowing to advocates who helped place successful candidates.
The scale of the opportunity surprised most observers when Inclusively first surfaced it: 61 million Americans live with some form of disability. That's 26% of the adult population – the largest single demographic most hiring teams systematically overlook.
The company was founded in 2019 but only secured meaningful funding in late 2022. Two structural shifts explain the timing. The first is the labor shortage. Companies have spent years trying to solve a systemic talent deficit by poaching from each other or cycling through freelancers. Neither is a structural solution – they redistribute existing supply without expanding it. Inclusively represents a genuine new source: a large population of workers who, once hired, tend to retain well, because for them a stable opportunity isn't easily replaced. Two earlier reviews covered parallel plays on the same theme – Microverse, which trains African and Latin American developers for US tech jobs, and Code First Girls, which addressed the gender imbalance in engineering – but the disability employment market is larger than either.
The second shift is remote work normalization. For employees with mobility limitations, remote work eliminates both the commute problem and the office accessibility problem in one move. For employees managing mental health conditions, it removes much of the social friction of working in a neurotypical-optimized office environment. Remote work didn't create the disability employment market, but it made that market far more accessible to companies that weren't previously set up to serve it.
The market for disability-inclusive employment infrastructure is larger and more immediate than it looks – and it's still early enough that most of it is unbuilt.
Professional training programs designed around the specific job categories that match various disability profiles are undersupplied. Coding bootcamps are proliferating, but very few are designed with neurodivergent learners or people with physical limitations in mind. That's a narrow, specific niche with low competition and high demand.
Platforms modeled on Inclusively's marketplace structure are the obvious second layer – not just generalist job boards but vertically specialized platforms for specific disability communities, where matching logic can be more precise and community features more relevant.
The highest-leverage opportunity may be accessibility tooling for enterprise software. The more companies can accommodate employees with visual, auditory, or cognitive disabilities within their existing platforms, the larger the addressable candidate pool becomes. This is a B2B infrastructure play that accelerates every other part of the market – and the incumbents in enterprise software have historically underinvested in it. That gap is measurable, addressable, and starting to attract serious capital.