PRESS

IN THE NEWS
BOLD Summit 2015 brought 150 principal designers from around the globe, including Canada, Germany, New Zealand, Cayman Islands, Chicago, New York, California and Connecticut to the Riviera Resort and Spa in Palm Springs for two-plus-days of high-quality lectures, panels and networking to re-energize their business models and build strategy.
Ocean Home Magazine
The Bold Summit is the only event that provides the specific strategies and contacts that luxury designers need. Emerge inspired and extremely clear on what to do to blast through the unique challenges you face right now as a luxury designer!
Vincent Wolf & Associates
One of the most powerful resources for business development and collaboration in the design industry.
The Robb Report
If you are looking for inspiration, want to network with other designers, and would like to take your business to the next level, then I encourage you to get out there and attend as many events as you can, especially one as valuable as the BOLD Summit.
Paloma Contreras, La Dolce Vita

BOLD in the News


WORKSHOP TESTIMONIALS

Coach to the Stars Julia Molloy Presents her BOLD: Business of Luxury Design, Half-Day Workshop

It was a bright Wednesday morning in early March, when Julia Molloy, presented her BOLD: Business of Luxury Design, half-day workshop, in Summit, sponsored by Sherwin-Williams and Michelangelo Designs.

If anyone was thinking they would be getting a canned presentation from this interior design business expert, they were very much mistaken. Julia began by asking what people were interested in learning about and pivoted when necessary.

At the core of her presentation was how to attract the luxury client and present a dream. She discussed the importance of knowing yourself and your company’s key characteristics and translating them into consistent branding at all levels. According to Julia, this isn’t just about your logo and website, but includes elements of paying attention to the intangibles as well as the tangible goods. Practice acknowledging project milestones with your clients. She also covered staffing and talked about the importance of having a Master Task List to keep everyone on track (Julia recommended Smartsheet).

The slide that got the most mobile phone captures from the audience was when she laid out how a typical work week should look. She stressed the all-important team meeting on Mondays with design and procurement each divided up throughout the week and Friday afternoons devoted to status updates, using bullet-points rather than paragraphs.

There were plenty of questions about fees and billables. Flat fee, hourly, or a version she calls a hybrid. “Your model needs to be right for you.” There was no loss of questions, answers and examples which brought most to stay an extra hour before applause and pictures.

It’s safe to say no one left the workshop unimpressed.