Why High-Value Clients Search by Project Type, Not Studio Name
Most future clients do not type your studio name into Google. They search by the project in their head, and that is where you need to be found.

A homeowner in a new lake house has a kitchen that fights her every morning. She does not know your name. She does not know any designer's name. She opens her phone and types "kitchen and bath renovation designer near me," then later "whole-home remodel for a custom lakefront build." She is ready to spend, ready to commit, and she is describing the project in her head, not searching for a studio she has never heard of. That gap, between how clients search and how most studios present themselves, is where great work quietly loses out to full-service interior design visibility.
Your name is an asset only after someone knows you. Before that, the project type is the door. If your site, your Google presence, and the way AI tools read your studio are all organized around your brand instead of the work people are actually searching for, you become invisible at the exact moment a serious client is deciding who to call.
Name searches come last, not first
There is a predictable order to how high-value clients find a designer. They start broad and problem-shaped: "luxury whole-home renovation," "new construction interior designer," "coastal home furnishing and styling." Only after they have seen a few studios, compared them, and felt a pull toward one do they search a name directly. By then the decision is mostly made.
Most studios optimize for the last step and ignore the first. The homepage leads with the studio name and a hero image, the navigation reads "Portfolio, About, Contact," and nothing on the site speaks the language of the search that brought someone in. The work is stunning. The entry point is missing.
You cannot win a name search from someone who does not know your name yet. You win the project search, and the name search takes care of itself.
What a project-type search really tells you
When someone searches by project, they are handing you their intent on a plate. "Kitchen and bath remodel" is a different client, budget, and timeline than "design-build new construction" or "furnishing and styling for a finished home." Each phrase signals where they are and what they need next.
Studios that organize around these searches give Google and AI tools a clear map of who they serve. Studios that hide everything inside one undifferentiated portfolio force the search engine to guess, and guessing usually favors the clearer competitor who spelled it out. This is also why a beautiful site can still underperform: visual polish does not tell a machine what you do.
- "Kitchen renovation designer" signals a focused, often time-pressured project
- "Whole-home remodel" signals scope, trust, and a longer relationship
- "New construction interior design" signals early-stage, design-build coordination
- "Luxury residential designer" signals budget and a search for taste, not price
Service pages are how you answer the search
A portfolio shows what you have done. A service page tells a searcher, and an AI assistant, what you do and for whom. These are not the same thing. When a client searches "mountain home renovation designer," a dedicated page that names that work, describes your process, and shows relevant projects is the answer to their question. A grid of unlabeled photos is not.
This is the core of building service pages instead of relying on a portfolio alone. Each project type you genuinely serve deserves its own page, written in the language clients use, structured so AI tools can read and recommend it. From complete structuring to visibility, the goal is that every real search has a real destination on your site. You can see how this maps to the studio's broader strategy through our SEO, AIO, and GEO foundation.
Project descriptions do the convincing AI cannot invent
Photos move people. They do not, on their own, tell a search engine that the lakefront kitchen was a full gut renovation with custom cabinetry and a structural reconfiguration. Words do that. When you write project descriptions that name the work clearly, you give both the searcher and the AI assistant the context to understand and recommend you.
This is why portfolio pages need more than pretty images. A caption that says "Kitchen, 2024" tells no one anything. A description that names the project type, the scope, the location, and the outcome turns a photo into a result that can actually be found, compared, and trusted before a client ever fills out a form.
Project searches and location searches work together
Almost no high-value search is project-only. It is project plus place: "kitchen renovation designer in Dallas-Fort Worth," "new construction interior design on the Gulf Coast," "luxury remodel near me." The studios that show up have given Google both pieces, clearly and consistently.
That means pairing your service structure with strong near-me optimization and location pages that do not sound generic. A clean Google Business Profile ties the project type to the place you serve, so when someone searches the exact combination running through their mind, your studio is the natural answer rather than a lucky accident.
Make your studio easier to find
When the right clients search, clarity is what brings them to you. Let us look at the structure behind how you are found.
Make your studio easier to find

