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In this episode of Turnkey Design Talk, I unpack what I call “The IKEA Problem” in interior design — the dangerous gap between delivering a concept and delivering a completed space.
Many designers operate in a design-only or hybrid service model. The concept is created. The drawings are issued. Selections are specified. And then the client manages the build, procurement, and installation.
On paper, it sounds efficient and flexible.
In practice, it often leads to blurred responsibility, drifting timelines, unpaid advisory work, compromised results — and a gradual erosion of professional authority.
Using the analogy of IKEA flat-pack furniture, I break down five specific mistakes designers make once the design phase ends:
If you’ve ever delivered drawings and quietly watched a project drift…
If you’re still answering site questions long after your design fee has been paid…
If you’re not consistently photographing finished work under your leadership…
This episode is for you.
Because authority isn’t built on dropping off design and wishing the client your best...
It’s built on finished spaces.
If this episode raised questions for you, or you’re feeling stuck in your solo design business, you don’t have to figure it out on your own.
I offer a 30-minute clarity session where we can talk through where you’re at, what’s getting in the way, and whether I can help.
Email me at [email protected]
By Adam ScougallIn this episode of Turnkey Design Talk, I unpack what I call “The IKEA Problem” in interior design — the dangerous gap between delivering a concept and delivering a completed space.
Many designers operate in a design-only or hybrid service model. The concept is created. The drawings are issued. Selections are specified. And then the client manages the build, procurement, and installation.
On paper, it sounds efficient and flexible.
In practice, it often leads to blurred responsibility, drifting timelines, unpaid advisory work, compromised results — and a gradual erosion of professional authority.
Using the analogy of IKEA flat-pack furniture, I break down five specific mistakes designers make once the design phase ends:
If you’ve ever delivered drawings and quietly watched a project drift…
If you’re still answering site questions long after your design fee has been paid…
If you’re not consistently photographing finished work under your leadership…
This episode is for you.
Because authority isn’t built on dropping off design and wishing the client your best...
It’s built on finished spaces.
If this episode raised questions for you, or you’re feeling stuck in your solo design business, you don’t have to figure it out on your own.
I offer a 30-minute clarity session where we can talk through where you’re at, what’s getting in the way, and whether I can help.
Email me at [email protected]