Breaking Down the Infamous Letter of Agreement for Interior Designers

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Breaking Down the Infamous Letter of Agreement for Interior Designers

The Letter of Agreement you present to your clients might be the most important document you as an interior designer will create for your business. The Letter of Agreement stipulates exactly what you both, designer and client, will be responsible for during the course of the project. It also states the timeline and the budget. It addresses your design and project management process, your pricing structure, your standard of ethics, and clearly outlines the contract violations that can lead to the cancellation of the project.

When you first meet with a client, the spirit of the meeting is typically brimming with excitement and positivity. Building a friendly rapport with your clients is important to the success of your relationship; that said, once you have an initial consultation with your client and decide to work together, the next step of crafting a Letter of Agreement is a little more serious. Once you draft it, take the time to walk the client through it, point by point. In doing so you will be protecting yourself legally, and your client will respect you for having a standard way of doing business.

The following is a checklist of everything your Letter of Agreement should include, as well as notes on who else you should consult with to make sure your liability is covered. Remember, there is nothing unfriendly about having your clients sign a legal contract. If your attitude is friendly and professional, signing a Letter of Agreement should not be a negative experience. In fact, it should provide them with the same peace of mind it does for you.

When To Sign a Letter of Agreement

Note that a client may present you with the contract, instead of you being the one to present them with it. This is typical in commercial jobs, where the client is experienced and has a standard contract they present to their designers. This is completely above board, just be sure your legal person or team goes over it with a fine tooth comb; be prepared to negotiate points that you do not agree to.

What Goes Into a Letter of Agreement

Protect Yourself, In Writing

The Letter of Agreement between you and your client is the most important document you will sign during the course of a project; it should be fully executed before the project even begins. Starting off on solid legal footing will give confidence to everyone involved and will get your project started off on the right foot.

If you are a new designer seeking legal resources to get started before you can afford to hire a lawyer, ASID has a lot of great resources and legal templates (they are not free). Ultimately, however, you will need the help of a trusted lawyer and operations experts to give your business the protection it needs to succeed for decades to come.

Margot LaScala

Margot LaScala

Margot is a writer and interior designer based in the NYC area. She is passionate about keeping up with the latest architecture and design news to not only stay informed, but inspired.