Show notes
What happens when a lighting designer with four decades of experience sits down and reveals the uncomfortable truth about what creative professionals get wrong about money—and why that misunderstanding quietly undermines everything else they're trying to build?In this episode of LytePOD, host Sam Koerbel sits down with Charles Stone, Past President of the International Association of Lighting Designers (IALD), for a rare, unfiltered conversation about the business of design—the part nobody teaches in school, the part most designers avoid until it's too late, and the part that determines whether a practice thrives or quietly fades away. Money. Getting Paid. He walks through the uncomfortable truths: why young designers don't read contracts, why scope creep happens when no one defines what's actually included, why monitors pay for themselves in six months, and why the client who says "we'll pay you next time" is asking you to do them a favor you can't accept yet. 💡 Key topics explored:• Why designers don't think about money when they're focused on making it beautiful—and why that's the root of the problem• The phrase "for the good of the project" and why it's a virus that spreads from clients into design offices• Why young designers must read contracts—and how that simple act changes everything about how they work• The difference between work product and what clients are actually buying: magic, the wow moment, the thing they couldn't get without you• Why scope creep is more dangerous than perfectionism—and how to protect yourself without killing the design• The importance of identifying risk early: in design decisions, personnel, liability, and client relationships• Why monitors pay for themselves in six months—and what that teaches you about investing in your business• How to rationalize the design process without losing creativity—and why showing a client three options means all three must workWhether you're a young designer wondering how to balance creativity and commerce, a firm leader trying to build something sustainable, or anyone curious about what it really takes to run a design practice that lasts—this conversation offers a rare, honest look at the business wisdom that separates thriving practices from struggling ones.Listen now to discover why great design isn't enough—you have to understand money, risk, and the courage to protect what you've built.❤️ Big appreciation for the partners who support this work and trust the vision. They believe in thoughtful conversations, strong community, and letting designers' voices lead. Grateful to build this together.1️⃣ Mark Lighting - https://watch.lytei.com/mark2️⃣ Kelvix - https://watch.lytei.com/Kelvix3️⃣ LEDflex - https://watch.lytei.com/LEDFLEX4️⃣ Diode LED - https://watch.lytei.com/diode5️⃣ Targetti USA - https://bit.ly/targettiusaChapters



