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  <title>Ep 223: Profit Isn't An Accident Series - You're Billing. So Why Aren't You Profitable?</title>
  <description>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 thousands from your bottom line. This isn’t about working harder or booking more projects. It’s about building systems that give you clarity, confidence, and control over your profit. &amp;amp;nbsp; What You’ll Learn   Why revenue isn’t the problem (and why more projects won’t fix profitability)   The critical difference between having your books done vs. actually knowing your numbers   Where profit is really won or lost (hint: it’s not at the project level)   The biggest hidden profit leaks in interior design firms:    Reselects and revisions that never get rebilled   Freight and receiving costs that quietly get absorbed   Vendor payment timing mistakes   “Shadow items” that never make it into your financials    Why spreadsheets eventually break down as your firm grows   How fragmented systems create errors, double entry, and lost profit   The power of real-time procurement tracking (vs. after-the-fact reconciliation)   The mindset shift from “designer who runs a business” → “business owner who designs”   &amp;amp;nbsp; Key Takeaways   Profit isn’t something you feel—it’s something you track.   If your margins are leaking, more volume just creates a bigger leak.   The real problem isn’t mindset—it’s systems and visibility.   Item-level tracking is the only way to truly understand profitability.   Clarity in your numbers creates confidence in your decisions—and more freedom in your creative work.   &amp;amp;nbsp; A Story You Won’t Forget Michelle shares a pivotal moment from her “chaos era,” when two team members gave conflicting answers about the same project’s financials. That disconnect revealed a deeper issue: 👉 Multiple systems 👉 No single source of truth 👉 Money slipping through the cracks That moment led to a complete overhaul of her procurement and tracking systems—and ultimately changed how she runs her business. &amp;amp;nbsp; Action Steps If you do nothing else, do this: 1. Audit Your Last Project   Can you clearly see your margin line by line?   Not just total profit—but furniture, freight, custom, etc.   2. Map Your Current System   Where does procurement live?   Is it connected to billing?   Are you entering data in multiple places?   3. Identify the Gap   If you can’t easily answer these questions, that’s your opportunity.   &amp;amp;nbsp; Mindset Shift “Clarity on the business side creates space on the creative side.” You don’t need to become an accountant. But you do need to be the person who insists on knowing what’s happening financially in your business. &amp;amp;nbsp; Resource Mentioned Michelle introduces The Profit Mixer—an all-in-one system designed specifically for interior designers to manage:   Procurement   Project management   Proposals &amp;amp;amp; purchase orders   Financial tracking &amp;amp;amp; reporting   Including her proprietary 16-step project process to protect profit at every stage. Learn more: thedesignbakehouse.com/profit-mixer &amp;amp;nbsp; What’s Next Next episode: The Markup Myth — Why “cost + 30%” isn’t a real pricing strategy (and what to do instead) &amp;amp;nbsp; Share the Episode Know a designer who’s busy but not seeing the profit they expected? Send this episode their way—it might be the shift they’ve been needing. &amp;amp;nbsp; </description>
  <author_name>Designed for the Creative Mind™</author_name>
  <author_url>https://thedesignbakehouse.com/designed-for-the-creative-mind-pod</author_url>
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