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Miro | Interior Design Presentation Template
Miro | Interior Design Presentation Template
Miro | Interior Design Presentation Template
Miro | Interior Design Presentation Template
Miro | Interior Design Presentation Template
Miro | Interior Design Presentation Template

Miro | Interior Design Presentation Template

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Standardise your client meetings with this modular 3-part Design Presentation System featuring 60+ unique layouts and our proprietary library of fabric swatch and finish mockups. Available for Canva, Adobe InDesign, and PowerPoint, this framework organises your workflow into three distinct phases: Project Brief, Concept Development, and Design Development. Includes pre-written text to guide your presentations. By securing approval on strategy and mood before you invest hours in technical detailing, you bridge the gap between your vision and their understanding—reducing costly revisions.

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More About This Template

    • Frequent revisions are rarely about design skill; they usually indicate a breakdown in communication. Clients often struggle to interpret 2D plans or articulate what they want until they see a photorealistic image, leading to late-stage changes that disrupt your workflow.

      This system mitigates that risk by breaking the presentation into three logical stages. You align on the constraints (Brief), agree on the visual direction (Concept), and only then deliver the detailed solution (Development).

      What this does for your studio:

      • Bridges the Visualisation Gap: By separating the emotional "Concept" from the technical "Development," you allow clients to connect with the feeling of the space before getting distracted by the logistics .
      • Protects Your Boundaries: The rigour of the "Project Brief" stage locks in the budget and deliverables upfront, protecting you from the awkward "I thought this was included" conversation later in the project.
      • Anchors the Aesthetic: By locking in the "Design Direction" and "Material Palette" in the Concept phase, you prevent the client from re-opening the style conversation later when you need sign-off on the technical plans.

    Frequent revisions are rarely about design skill; they usually indicate a breakdown in communication. Clients often struggle to interpret 2D plans or articulate what they want until they see a photorealistic image, leading to late-stage changes that disrupt your workflow.

    This system mitigates that risk by breaking the presentation into three logical stages. You align on the constraints (Brief), agree on the visual direction (Concept), and only then deliver the detailed solution (Development).

    What this does for your studio:

    • Bridges the Visualisation Gap: By separating the emotional "Concept" from the technical "Development," you allow clients to connect with the feeling of the space before getting distracted by the logistics .
    • Protects Your Boundaries: The rigour of the "Project Brief" stage locks in the budget and deliverables upfront, protecting you from the awkward "I thought this was included" conversation later in the project.
    • Anchors the Aesthetic: By locking in the "Design Direction" and "Material Palette" in the Concept phase, you prevent the client from re-opening the style conversation later when you need sign-off on the technical plans.

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