Ep 218: The Client Red Flags Costing Designers Thousands (And How to Catch Them Early)
Designed for the Creative Mind™
Release Date: 03/23/2026
Designed for the Creative Mind™
Why Cost Plus 30% Is Quietly Killing Your Profit In this episode of Profit Isn’t an Accident, Michelle Lynne tackles one of the most accepted pricing “standards” in the interior design industry: cost plus 30%. And here’s the truth most designers never hear: A 30% markup is not the same thing as a 30% profit margin. Michelle breaks down the real math behind procurement, markup vs. margin, and why so many talented design firms are unintentionally underpricing themselves into burnout. If you’ve ever felt busy but not profitable, this episode explains why. You’ll learn how to evaluate...
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Most interior designers think they have a revenue problem… when they actually have a tracking problem. In this kickoff episode of the Profit Isn’t an Accident mini-series, Michelle Lynne pulls back the curtain on what’s really happening inside your projects financially—and why “busy” doesn’t always mean “profitable.” If you’ve ever wrapped a project and hoped you made money (instead of knowing), this episode will hit home. Michelle shares a behind-the-scenes story from her own business that reveals how small, overlooked gaps in procurement tracking can quietly drain...
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Furnishings should be one of the most profitable parts of your interior design business—but for many designers, it feels like the exact opposite. In this episode, Michelle pulls back the curtain on what’s really happening behind the scenes with furniture and procurement. From underpriced markups to disorganized systems and hidden time drains, she breaks down why your margins might look fine on paper… but still leave you feeling overwhelmed and underpaid. If procurement feels like it’s running you instead of supporting your business, this conversation will help you rethink your pricing,...
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What if the reason your inquiries aren’t turning into clients has nothing to do with your talent… and everything to do with what happens in between? In this episode, Michelle Lynne breaks down the exact gap most interior designers don’t realize they have: the missing sales process between inquiry and signature. Through real stories from her own business, she shares how “being easy to work with” was actually costing her clients, confidence, and contracts. From over-delivering on discovery calls to second-guessing every follow-up, Michelle walks you through what it really looks like...
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The Client Red Flags Costing Designers Thousands (And How to Catch Them Early)Designed for the Creative Mind Podcast You can have incredible talent, a full calendar, and stunning projects—and still feel like your business is harder than it should be. In this episode of Design for the Creative Mind, we’re diving into one of the most overlooked reasons interior designers struggle with profitability and burnout: saying yes to the wrong clients. Because the truth is, not every client is an opportunity. Some are a liability. And the real problem? Most designers don’t realize it until...
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Why Busy Designers Still Struggle With Profitability Designed for the Creative Mind Podcast Interior design is one of the few professions where it’s incredibly easy to build a business that looks successful on the outside but quietly struggles behind the scenes. Beautiful projects. High-end homes. A full calendar. And yet the numbers still feel tighter than they should. In this episode, Michelle Lynne pulls back the curtain on a common issue she sees when auditing interior design firms: businesses that have grown busy but were never intentionally structured to be profitable. If you’ve...
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Episode Description Most interior designers assume they need more clients, more marketing, or higher design fees to increase their income. But often the real issue is something much simpler. Their process. In this episode, Michelle Lynne breaks down where interior design firms quietly lose money through unstructured discovery, unlimited revisions, procurement administration, underpriced phases, and furniture margins that are far too small. These “small” decisions can easily add up to $30,000–$50,000 or more in lost revenue each year. The good news is that fixing these leaks doesn’t...
info_outlineThe Client Red Flags Costing Designers Thousands (And How to Catch Them Early)
Designed for the Creative Mind Podcast
You can have incredible talent, a full calendar, and stunning projects—and still feel like your business is harder than it should be.
In this episode of Design for the Creative Mind, we’re diving into one of the most overlooked reasons interior designers struggle with profitability and burnout: saying yes to the wrong clients.
Because the truth is, not every client is an opportunity. Some are a liability.
And the real problem? Most designers don’t realize it until they’re already deep into the project.
Michelle shares real client stories and hard-earned lessons from her own firm to help you recognize red flags earlier, protect your time and energy, and build a design business that actually works for you—not against you.
What You’ll Learn in This Episode
- Why being a talented designer doesn’t automatically make you a profitable business owner
- The hidden costs of the “wrong” client (that don’t show up on an invoice)
- How early-stage client decisions impact your entire project—and your capacity
- The difference between trusting your gut vs. relying on a structured sales process
- Why your client selection process is just as important as your pricing or marketing
Key Takeaways
1. Not every client is the right client
Early in your business, every project feels like a win. But as you grow, discernment becomes critical. Some clients will cost you more in time, energy, and stress than they’re worth financially.
2. Misalignment shows up early—if you know where to look
From budget disconnects to decision-making habits, your sales process should help you identify red flags before the contract is signed.
3. Budget vs. vision misalignment is not a sourcing problem—it’s a clarity problem
Trying to “make it work” for a client with champagne taste and a beer budget only creates friction, revisions, and distrust later.
4. Decision paralysis slows everything down
A client who struggles to make decisions early in the process will continue that pattern throughout the project—impacting timelines, team capacity, and overall momentum.
5. Procurement needs clear boundaries
When clients are involved in sourcing and purchasing, it creates confusion, delays, and lack of accountability—ultimately affecting your ability to deliver results.
6. Boundaries must be process-driven, not personality-driven
Being “always available” doesn’t make you a better designer—it creates unsustainable expectations. Clear communication standards should be built into your process.
7. Process creates predictability
When you rely on emotion, your business feels inconsistent. When you rely on process, your business becomes stable, scalable, and easier to manage.
Red Flags to Watch for During Your Sales Process
- Clients whose budget doesn’t align with their expectations
- Indecisiveness or hesitation in early conversations
- Resistance to your guidance or expertise
- Desire to self-source or “price check” everything
- Early boundary testing (frequent texts, off-hours communication, etc.)
Action Steps
- Review your current sales process—do you actually have one?
- Identify where you can better screen for client fit before signing
- Define clear boundaries around communication and procurement
- Pay attention to early behaviors—they rarely change later
- Start treating client selection as a core business skill
Resources Mentioned
Design Revenue Audit
A diagnostic deep dive into the financial structure of your design firm, including pricing, procurement, and operational profitability.
90-Day Advisory
Private strategic advisory focused on restructuring the revenue side of your design business.
VIP Intensive
A focused strategy session designed to map out the most efficient path toward a more profitable firm.
Learn more at:
TheDesignBakehouse.com
What’s Next
In the next episode, we’re continuing the conversation on profitability by breaking down why so many interior designers are underpricing their services—and how to start correcting it.