Elevated with Brandy Lawson

The Cabinets Are In. Now the Client Wants Crown to the Ceiling

Brandy Lawson Season 8 Episode 11

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The cabinets are in. Two days, clean crew, timeline held. The finished kitchen looks genuinely, really good.

You're standing in the doorway when the client walks in.

They go quiet. They look around. And then they turn to you with an expression you weren't expecting.

"Where's the crown? I thought these went all the way to the ceiling."

You pull out the contract. Line seven: Standard Crown. Their signature, right there, same day they chose the door style and the finish.

But what they're looking at isn't a contract. It's the kitchen they imagined for six months. And in that kitchen — the one that lived in their head through fourteen weeks of delivery wait — the cabinets went to the ceiling.

Your client isn't being difficult. They're experiencing the imagination gap. Clients sign documents, but they buy visions. The six-inch reveal above the crown didn't register on the day they signed. They saw the kitchen. Not the spec sheet.

A contract the client signed without fully absorbing a detail is the beginning of a conflict — not the end of one. And the cost of that conflict is almost always yours.

In this episode, we walk through the audio-visual lock: the three-minute recorded walkthrough that closes the gap between imagination and reality before installation day.

What you'll hear:

  • Why the contract protects you legally but doesn't protect you from the imagination gap
  • How narrating the 3D rendering on record replaces "I thought" with "I confirmed"
  • The exact moment to hit record during a design presentation — and what to say

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The cabinets are in. Installation took two days. The crew was clean, the timeline held, and the finished kitchen looks truly, really, genuinely good. You're standing in the doorway when the client walks in. They go quiet. They look around the room, and then they turn to you, and the expression on their face is not what you were expecting. Where's the crown? You feel something in your chest. I thought these went all the way to the ceiling. You pull out the contract, it says standard crown. It's right there on line seven, the same line they signed on the same day they chose the door style and the finish: standard crown. You, you have your... their signature. But what they're looking at right now isn't the contract. It's the kitchen they imagined for six months. And in that kitchen, the one that lived in their head while they waited 14 weeks for delivery, the cabinets went to the ceiling. Welcome to the Elevated podcast. I'm your host, Brandy Lawson. This is the visual contract. Back in the kitchen, your client's not being difficult. They're experiencing the imagination gap. Clients sign documents. They buy visions. Between the day they chose standard crown and the day the cabinets went in, they looked at one thing when they thought about this kitchen: the rendering, the beautiful, accurate rendering you showed them on a laptop screen in a quiet showroom on a day when they were excited and hopeful. In that moment, the six-inch reveal above the crown didn't register. They saw the kitchen, not the spec sheet. The contract is your legal protection, but a contract the client signed with a detail they didn't notice or maybe didn't understand is the beginning of a conflict, not the end of one, and the cost of that conflict is almost always yours. The fix is the audio-visual lock. The moment you present the 3D rendering, you record your screen and your voice, not secretly, openly. You say, "I'm going to record this walkthrough so you have it for reference." And then as you move through the design, you narrate every significant detail out loud. You can see here we have a six-inch reveal above the crown. If you wanted the cabinets to go ceiling height, that would be a different spec and a different price point. Does this feel right for the space? They say yes. You record the yes. You send them the video. It's three minutes. They watch it when it arrives and maybe again before installation week, and now there's a record not just of what they signed, but of what they saw and heard and confirmed in real time with the real design in front of them. When the cabinets go in and they walk through the door, they've already seen this kitchen. The gap between imagination and reality closes before it can become a dispute. The recording doesn't replace the contract. It makes the contract tangible. If you've ever had a client stand in the finished kitchen and see something different than what you built, the AI note-taking guide gives you the system to prevent it. It walks you through how to document the presentation, not just the paperwork, so your clients and their expectations arrive at installation day on the same page as the cabinets they see. Get it at CabinetNotes.com. Next week, the sales meeting was great. The client loved everything, and then you spent 20 minutes in the back office summarizing it for your team. Two weeks later, the order came in. Wrong. We'll talk about why and how to stop being the one thing standing between your team and the truth. Hit subscribe.