Designers, Could Your Home Be Your Next Big Marketing Tool?

DevelopmentCould Your Home Be Your Next Big Moneymaker?The abode you’ve so lovingly devised for yourself and your family can also pay off as a marketing tool, designers say June 14, 2022house with money coming out of the roofDesigners have long used their own homes—or the homes of relatives—to get a leg up in their career. Here’s how to get started.Oleksandra Yagello / iStock

Any home worthy of the name has multiple duties to fulfill: as a shelter from the elements, a stage for the interactions of family life, and a refuge from the pressures of the wider world. When that home belongs to a designer, however, it may be pressed into even more specialized service. In addition to functioning as a residence, it can often become a crucial element in the advancement of its owner’s career—as a marketing tool and more.

Get a Foot in the Door With Your Nest

For fledgling firms that don’t yet have a lot of completed jobs to show, personal projects can be invaluable for catching the attention of editors and potential clients.

One case in point came up during a recent session of the AD PRO Global Design Talks called “Open Invitation—Designers’ Own Homes as Calling Cards”: Brigette Romanek’s bright, eclectic makeover of her family’s 1929 Mediterranean-style house in L.A.’s Laurel Canyon quite literally got her into the biz. “I’d done stuff for friends in a very casual way,” she recalls, but “I just thought it was this great creative outlet.” After the home appeared in the October 2016 issue of AD, however, Romanek says calls and emails from people looking to commission design services started rolling in. “From that I really began my career,” she says. “To get to do what I love and have a passion for and have it be my work—it’s changed the game for me. And my home being published was a huge component.”

Well-timed publication provided the first step in what turned out to be a similarly transformative journey for Boston-based designer Nina Farmer. After having assisted for studios in both New York and Boston, Farmer was just preparing to strike out on her own when a major national magazine ran a feature about her family’s newly renovated Beacon Hill residence. A second brownstone redo (for a family in the same neighborhood) followed, which likewise got national exposure, and then the requests to update older homes kept coming. “Without me really knowing that was the plan,” Farmer observes, she became something of a specialist in revitalizing period dwellings. “As I look back, it has been 80% of our projects.” Today, she has a book in progress with Rizzoli that will profile her historic work. “I’ve developed this real passion and love for old homes, and it started with my own. My house showed me that that was a path.”

Turn Your House Into a Marketing Tool

Your home’s promotional potential isn’t entirely dependent on getting published, of course (although it definitely doesn’t hurt.) Be proactive about leveraging the imaginative capital you’ve invested in your personal spaces.

Following her initial exposure in AD, Romanek continued scouting for chances to reach more viewers. Some magazines and websites are happy to share content that has already run elsewhere, and pushing a project out on Instagram and other social media is always an option. But Romanek also exploited the beauties of her home base as the photographic setting for a catalog of her lighting and furniture collection with Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams. (Other designers have had similar ideas, as AD PRO has covered previously.) “Anywhere someone can get their eyes on what you do is helpful, if it’s the right environment,” Romanek counsels.

A partnership with Sotheby’s proved instrumental in generating buzz for designer Tina Ramchandani, in New York. After being introduced by the founder of the art advisory service Sugarlift, she and Sotheby’s hatched a plan to show how happily Old Master art can inhabit contemporary spaces. Enlisting Fair and Crosby Street Studios as helpers, Ramchandani set up a series of photographic vignettes in various corners of her own apartment, which she thought would be ideal for the purpose: “It was a blank canvas, because I did superwhite walls, gray floors—we could turn it into whatever we wanted.” The resulting images were disseminated widely via the auction house’s sale catalog and associated marketing campaign.

…Or Turn It Into a Creative Laboratory

Miles Redd is one more professional who has gotten much helpful mileage out of his own digs, using them, as he says, to “experiment with things that I would be less inclined to try on a client—bigger risks, as it were.” Sometimes the gamble paid off and sometimes not. “My pink satin living room walls were a hit; my mirrored countertops looked great (and photographed well), but required a lot of Windex maintenance.”

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Your own home can provide a safe space for asking “How cool would it be if…?”—one where the commercial stakes aren’t so high. “You also learn what not to do,” Redd notes. “In my early years, I wasn’t always superpractical. Experience has taught me when that is important, and when you can ignore it.” Plus, when ideas pan out, the results become a proof of concept. The Formica-and-nickel kitchen in his office is only one of several schemes Redd has executed for himself. “If we suggested [them] to a client, they might not bite—but now we have living examples for them to see, and they are more trusting,” he says.

Perhaps the appeal—and therefore brand-building power—of designers’ own homes is simply a consequence of the artistic freedom their makers can enjoy when there’s no one else to please. “It’s always nice to see a designer’s own projects,” Farmer says, “because it really is what they’re thinking and what they’re drawn to, without the lens of all of the other stuff we get involved in when we do projects for other people.” Ramchandani agrees: “I think it’s easy for designers to use their own spaces because they’ve already built things they love. And ultimately all we want to do is have clients who love our aesthetic, right? Who appreciate what we bring to the table.”

So why not put together a home you adore, and give your career a boost at the same time?


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Originally posted on: https://www.architecturaldigest.com/story/could-your-home-be-your-next-big-moneymaker