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  <title>Ep 225: Profit Isn't An Accident Series - The Markup Myth</title>
  <description>Why Cost Plus 30% Is Quietly Killing Your Profit In this episode of Profit Isn’t an Accident, Michelle Lynne tackles one of the most accepted pricing “standards” in the interior design industry: cost plus 30%. And here’s the truth most designers never hear: A 30% markup is not the same thing as a 30% profit margin. Michelle breaks down the real math behind procurement, markup vs. margin, and why so many talented design firms are unintentionally underpricing themselves into burnout. If you’ve ever felt busy but not profitable, this episode explains why. You’ll learn how to evaluate your procurement costs, rethink your pricing structure, and start building a business model that actually supports your firm long term. In This Episode, We Cover:   Why “cost plus 30%” became the industry norm   The difference between markup and profit margin   Why a 30% markup only creates a 23% margin   The hidden costs of procurement most designers ignore   How time, freight, damages, storage, and admin eat into profit   Why many design firms are unknowingly subsidizing procurement with design fees   What “minimum viable markup” means   Why Michelle recommends a minimum 75% markup   How vendor relationships can improve your margins   Why charging correctly improves the client experience   The emotional side of raising prices   How pricing acts as a filter for better-fit clients   Why profitability creates freedom, flexibility, and sustainability   Key Takeaways Procurement Is Not Free Every item you source requires labor, communication, coordination, tracking, problem-solving, and risk management. If your markup does not account for those operational costs, your firm absorbs them. Markup and Margin Are Not the Same A 30% markup does not equal a 30% profit margin. Example:   Wholesale Cost: $1,000   Selling Price at 30% Markup: $1,300   Actual Margin: 23%   That difference matters more than most designers realize. Design Firms Are Running Two Businesses You are both:   A service business (design expertise)   A retail business (product procurement and sales)   If your product pricing is too low, your design fees end up subsidizing your retail operations. Your Pricing Impacts Your Client Experience Underpricing creates stress, overwhelm, and operational strain. Profitability allows you to:   Hire support   Improve systems   Deliver a better client experience   Protect your energy and creativity   Michelle’s Recommended Pricing Structure Michelle recommends designers move away from cost plus 30% and instead consider:   Higher product markups (often 75% minimum)   Procurement management fees   Passing receiver/storage/delivery costs to clients   Stronger vendor relationships to improve buying power   Mentioned in This Episode   Private coaching through The Design Bakehouse   The Profit Mixer procurement and pricing tool   Interior Design Business Bakery coaching program   Connect with Michelle   The Design Bakehouse Website    Instagram @thedesignbakehouse   Subscribe &amp;amp;amp; Review If this episode helped shift the way you think about pricing and profitability, share it with another designer and leave a review wherever you listen to podcasts. &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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