
Are your prospective clients taking longer to sign contracts? Are projects stretching across years instead of months? Are clients questioning purchases, breaking projects into phases, or running your designs through AI before making decisions?
In this episode of Business Behind the Design, Michelle Lynne is joined by Ruth Ann Jansen, Melissa Lee, and Erika Bonnell for an honest conversation about the realities interior designers are facing right now.
The panel discusses how shifting client behavior, economic uncertainty, AI, and increased competition are changing the design industry—and the strategies successful firms are using to protect their time, maintain profitability, and continue delivering exceptional client experiences.
From contract clauses and project pause fees to vendor relationships, luxury client experiences, and the growing importance of human connection in an AI-driven world, this conversation offers practical insights for designers looking to navigate today's market with confidence.
In This Episode, We Discuss:
Why clients are taking longer to make decisions than ever before
The impact of AI on the interior design industry
How designers are protecting themselves from stalled projects
Contract clauses every firm should consider
Why your design fee must stand on its own—even if furnishings never happen
The risks of relying on furniture margins to make a project profitable
How to structure fees for long-term custom home projects
The growing appeal of procurement support and outsourcing
Why relationships still matter more than technology
How luxury firms are elevating the client experience
Building stronger relationships with vendors, builders, and trades
Why some firms are becoming more selective about the projects they accept
The future of AI and interior design
Key Takeaways
Designers across the industry are seeing clients spend more time researching, comparing options, and evaluating investments before committing. Economic uncertainty, increased competition, and access to AI tools are all contributing factors.
Several panelists share how they're implementing project pause clauses, restart fees, contract expiration dates, and payment milestones to prevent projects from lingering indefinitely.
One of the biggest mistakes newer designers make is reducing design fees in anticipation of earning profit through furnishings. The panel emphasizes the importance of pricing every service as a standalone offering.
While AI may influence how clients research designers and products, the group agrees that successful projects still depend on expertise, experience, vendor relationships, and human connection.