You've found a designer whose work you love. Their Instagram feed is full of stunning kitchen renovations, beautiful colour schemes, and magazine-worthy spaces. So you hire them. Six months later, the project is behind schedule, your budget has doubled, and you're barely hearing from them. The portfolio was beautiful, but the designer couldn't manage a timeline or return a call.
This is the biggest mistake homeowners make when hiring an interior designer: choosing based on style alone, without evaluating process, communication, and project management capability. A beautiful portfolio means nothing if the designer can't deliver on time, on budget, and with clear communication.
Why Style Alone Isn't Enough
An interior designer's job isn't just to make your home beautiful—it's to manage your project from brief to reveal. That means coordinating contractors, sourcing materials, managing budgets, attending site visits, solving problems as they arise, and keeping you informed throughout.
A designer can create a stunning mood board, but if they can't manage a timeline or hold contractors accountable, that beautiful vision will never make it to your walls. Or it will, but three months late and £10,000 over budget.
The hard truth? Many designers are excellent at design but poor at project management. They get excited about the creative work and neglect the administrative side. That's where your stress comes from.
The difference between a designer and a design manager: A designer makes beautiful spaces. A design manager makes beautiful spaces on time and on budget. You need both.
What to Check Beyond the Portfolio
1. Communication Speed and Style
Before you commit, observe how quickly and clearly the designer communicates. During your initial consultations, did they respond to emails within 24 hours? Were their explanations clear and free of jargon? Did they ask thoughtful questions about your needs, or did they push their own aesthetic?
If a designer takes a week to reply to a simple question during the sales phase, imagine how slow they'll be during a stressful renovation. Communication is the foundation of a successful project. You should feel heard and informed at every stage.
2. Project Management Process
Ask the designer: "Walk me through your process from start to finish." Do they have a system? Can they explain it clearly? Do they use project management tools? How many site visits do they do per week? How do they track the budget?
A designer who fumbles this question or gives a vague answer is a red flag. Professional designers have a documented process. They know how many hours various phases take. They can tell you exactly when milestones happen and how they communicate with contractors.
Ask specifically:
- How often will I hear from you during the project?
- How will you manage contractors and coordinate timings?
- What happens if the project goes over budget?
- How will you track progress and keep me updated?
- Who do contractors report to—you or me?
3. Client References
Never hire a designer without checking references. Ask for at least three recent clients whose projects were similar in scope to yours. When you call them, ask specific questions:
- Did the project finish on time?
- Did it come in on budget?
- How often did you hear from the designer?
- What happened when things went wrong? How did the designer handle it?
- Would you hire them again?
- What surprised you, good or bad?
Pay attention to what clients say about communication and problem-solving. Those matter more than whether the final design looked good. You already know their portfolio looks good.
4. Contract Clarity
A good designer provides a clear contract that specifies:
- The exact scope of work (which rooms, what's included)
- The total fee and payment schedule
- Timeline and key milestones
- Number of design revision rounds included
- What happens if scope changes or the project runs over
- Cancellation terms
If a designer is vague about contract terms or seems reluctant to put things in writing, that's a bad sign. A professional designer wants clarity as much as you do. Clear contracts prevent misunderstandings that lead to disputes.
5. What Happens When Things Go Wrong
Ask directly: "Tell me about a project that faced unexpected challenges. How did you handle it?" Listen for problem-solving skills, accountability, and a willingness to communicate openly. A good answer sounds like: "We discovered a structural issue during the build. I immediately flagged it with the structural engineer, assessed the cost impact, presented options to the homeowner, and we solved it together." A bad answer sounds like: "We had some issues, but we worked it out," with no detail.
The 3-Meeting Test Before Committing
Before signing a contract, insist on at least three meetings with your chosen designer:
Meeting 1: Initial Consultation
Brief them on your project, budget, timeline, and style preferences. Observe: Do they listen more than they talk? Do they ask good questions? Do they understand your vision?
Meeting 2: Proposal and Process Review
They present a detailed proposal with timeline, deliverables, and fee. They walk you through their project management process. You review the contract together. Observe: Is everything clear? Do you feel confident in their process?
Meeting 3: Reference Check and Final Questions
You've checked references. Now you meet again to discuss what you learned and ask any remaining questions. This might be a phone call. The purpose is to clarify concerns and confirm you're ready to commit. Observe: Do they take your concerns seriously? Are they transparent about any potential risks?
If you don't feel ready to commit after three meetings, keep looking. Hiring an interior designer is a significant decision. You should feel confident and excited, not pressured or doubtful.
Red Flags to Walk Away
No matter how beautiful their portfolio:
- Slow communication: If they take more than 48 hours to reply, imagine how slow they'll be during crunch time.
- Vague on process: If they can't explain how they manage projects, they probably don't manage them well.
- References decline to speak: This is a huge red flag. A good designer's clients are happy to recommend them.
- No written contract: If they want to work on a handshake, walk away.
- Pressure to decide quickly: "I have another client interested" or "My schedule is filling up" are sales tactics, not reasons to rush into a commitment.
- Dismissive of your input: If they push their aesthetic over your preferences, they're not designing for you—they're designing for themselves.
- No budget management plan: If they can't explain how they track costs and stay within budget, costs will spiral.
The Right Designer for You
The right designer is the one who combines three things: strong design skills, clear communication, and solid project management. Their portfolio proves the first. References and conversation prove the second and third.
At Interior Select, we know that design is only half the job. The other half is managing the project professionally, communicating clearly, and delivering on time and on budget. That's why we've built a project management process into every project from day one. And that's why we're transparent about how we work and what you can expect.
Your home is too important to entrust to someone based on Instagram photos alone. Take the time to vet properly. The best interior designer isn't the one with the most beautiful portfolio—it's the one who can deliver beauty on time, on budget, and with clear communication every step of the way.