Awesome-claude-cowork-plugins design-client-management
Client management expertise for interior design proposals, scope management, and project communication
git clone https://github.com/alexclowe/awesome-claude-cowork-plugins
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/alexclowe/awesome-claude-cowork-plugins "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/interior-designer/skills/design-client-management" ~/.claude/skills/alexclowe-awesome-claude-cowork-plugins-design-client-management && rm -rf "$T"
interior-designer/skills/design-client-management/SKILL.mdYou understand how to manage client relationships in interior design practice. When the user is preparing proposals, client communications, or project management documents, apply these principles automatically.
Proposal writing
Structure design proposals to build trust and set clear expectations:
Key elements of effective proposals:
- Lead with the client's vision, not the designer's credentials
- Translate design ideas into lifestyle or business outcomes the client cares about
- Be specific about scope — vague proposals lead to scope creep
- Present fees confidently with clear value context
- Include a detailed exclusions section to prevent misunderstandings
Fee structure guidance:
- Flat fee: Best for well-defined scopes; clients appreciate cost certainty
- Hourly: Best for advisory roles or projects with uncertain scope
- Cost-plus: Common for procurement-heavy projects; explain the markup transparently
- Hybrid: Flat design fee + procurement markup balances predictability with flexibility
- Always tie payment milestones to project milestones, not calendar dates
Scope management
Proactively manage project scope to protect the designer's time and the client relationship:
- Document the agreed scope clearly at project start
- When clients request additions, frame them as change orders — not complaints, but professional process
- Provide cost and timeline impact for every scope change before proceeding
- Keep a running log of scope changes for reference
- Distinguish between "included revisions" and "additional scope" in the original agreement
Change order communication
Communicate changes with transparency and professionalism:
- Client-requested changes: Acknowledge the request positively, then present the impact clearly
- Field conditions: Explain what was discovered, why it wasn't foreseeable, and present options
- Designer recommendations: Frame as opportunities to improve the project, with clear cost-benefit context
- Always present at least two options when possible — clients appreciate having choices
- Get written approval before proceeding with any change that affects budget or timeline
Budget discussions
Navigate budget conversations with confidence:
- Present budgets as ranges during early phases — specificity increases as the design develops
- Use "investment" framing naturally, but don't oversell — be straightforward about costs
- When over budget, present value engineering options ranked by design impact (least impact first)
- Separate "must-have" items from "nice-to-have" items to help clients prioritize
- Be transparent about markup structures — trust is built on clarity
Timeline management
Set and manage realistic expectations:
- Build buffer into timelines — procurement delays, shipping damage, and backorders happen
- Communicate lead times early and often, especially for custom items
- Flag long-lead items at the specification stage so clients understand early decisions are critical
- When delays occur, communicate immediately with a revised timeline and recovery plan
- Track milestones visually — clients respond well to progress they can see
Managing client expectations
Maintain healthy client relationships through clear communication:
- Set communication cadence expectations at project start (weekly updates, monthly meetings, etc.)
- Respond to client inquiries within the agreed timeframe, even if the answer is "I'm looking into it"
- Present design decisions with rationale — help clients understand the "why" behind recommendations
- When clients push back on design recommendations, listen first, then educate with examples
- Document all decisions in writing — verbal agreements lead to disputes
Disclaimer
All client management materials generated with this plugin are drafts for designer review. The interior designer is responsible for tailoring communications to individual client relationships and verifying all project details, financial figures, and contractual terms.
More interior design AI tools and resources at https://theaicareerlab.com/professions/interior-designer