What Interior Designers Actually Value: Survey Insights That Could Change Your Marketing Strategy
What Interior Designers Actually Value: Survey Insights That Could Change Your Marketing Strategy  
Podcast: The Handcrafted Podcast: The Business of making things
Published On: Mon May 18 2026
Description: Join the Network: Article Here:  Paul breaks down findings from an interior designer industry survey and translates them into practical takeaways for furniture makers, woodworkers, and custom vendors. The episode focuses on where clients are willing to spend, what luxury buyers prioritize, and how makers can better position their businesses to work with interior designers and repeat clients. The biggest takeaway: many makers may be spending too much time marketing things clients don’t actually value—and not enough time emphasizing what drives buying decisions like quality, lead times, and service. Key Takeaways:Clients are willing to spend on furniture — you don’t need to sell the category.The challenge isn’t convincing people to buy furniture; it’s convincing them to buy from you. Marketing should focus on differentiation, trust, and why your company is the right fit. Quality matters more than sustainability.Survey respondents ranked quality of materials and finishes as a top priority, while sustainability ranked surprisingly low. Paul suggests makers may need to shift messaging toward craftsmanship, durability, and material quality rather than leading with eco-friendly positioning. Interior designers prefer vendors to come to them.Office visits significantly outperform virtual meetings. For makers doing cold outreach, bringing samples directly to designers’ offices may be more effective than asking for Zoom calls or showroom visits. Lead time transparency is one of the biggest competitive advantages.Designers care deeply about realistic production schedules and visibility into timelines. Better communication around lead times could be a stronger selling point than discounts or white-glove services. Trade discounts may matter less than expected.Designers appear to value reliability, responsiveness, and timeline clarity more than vendor discounts. Community creates leverage.Paul opens by sharing how both new members and his own business benefited from the Handcrafted Network—using the community for support, collaboration, and specialized expertise to complete projects. Closing Thought:The episode encourages makers to stop guessing what clients and designers value and instead use real data to refine marketing, improve service, and position their businesses around what buyers actually care about. Join the Network