THE DESIGN KEY SERIES

The Brief

The professional method for turning a first client conversation into the brief that governs the whole project.

What You'll Learn

  • 18 target
    Get the real brief in the first conversation

    Run the opening client meeting with a structure that turns vague enthusiasm into concrete requirements.

  • 18 target
    Turn "make it feel calm" into something buildable

    Translate emotional, aspirational language into specific spatial, material and functional requirements.

  • 18 target
    Never confuse a nice-to-have with a non-negotiable

    Separate constraints, preferences and non-negotiables, and document each so they can't blur later.

  • 18 target
    Hand over a brief that looks studio-made

    Write a brief with the structure, tone and authority of a professional studio deliverable.

  • 18 target
    End the "but I thought we agreed" argument

    Use the brief as the project's decision-making authority, and steer it back when scope drifts.

  • 18 target
    Never be blindsided by the late arrival

    Surface hidden decision-makers and sign-off authority before an absent stakeholder unravels months of work.

Four starting points — one method.

Who is this course for

Working designers

Put a repeatable method under the instinct you already have, and sharpen the process you use every day.

Aspiring designers

Build real professional skills from the ground up. No degree, no prior experience needed.

Project owners

Understand the process well enough to brief sharply, judge the work, and manage the people delivering it.

Homeowners

Approach your own space the way a professional would, and stop guessing on decisions that cost real money.

No credentials required. No experience assumed. Just a commitment to learn how design actually works — because the method is the same for all of you.

How to get the most from this course

Four steps to turn watching into doing.

1

Set up to work, not just watch

Have pen and paper beside you. This is a course you do, not one you passively watch — the method only sticks when you work it by hand.

Have pen and paper beside you. This is a course you do, not one you passively watch — the method only sticks when you work it by hand.

2

Take one module at a time

Each module is a complete idea. Work through one per sitting, finish its exercise before moving on, and let it settle rather than racing to the end.

Each module is a complete idea. Work through one per sitting, finish its exercise before moving on, and let it settle rather than racing to the end.

3

Apply it to a real space as you go

Use your own home, a past project, or an imagined brief. Run each method on something real so it becomes a skill, not just notes.

Use your own home, a past project, or an imagined brief. Run each method on something real so it becomes a skill, not just notes.

4

Expect about a week, at your pace

Most people complete a course in around a week at a relaxed module-a-day rhythm — faster if you push, slower if you savour it. There's no clock; lifetime access means you set the speed.

Most people complete a course in around a week at a relaxed module-a-day rhythm — faster if you push, slower if you savour it. There's no clock; lifetime access means you set the speed.

See the actual work

Not slides. Not tips. These are real pages from inside the courses — the kind of professional documentation The Design Key teaches you to produce.

01

The Brief

Every project begins by defining what it actually is. The Brief teaches the four-dimension framework that stops a project breaking down before it's finished — documented the way a working studio does it.

02

The Moodboard

The difference between a professional moodboard and a Pinterest board, made explicit. You learn to build a strategic visual document that directs a project — not a folder of images you happen to like.

03

The Lighting

Light designed as a system, not chosen as a fixture. The Lighting teaches you to read how daylight enters a room hour by hour, and to plan an artificial scheme that works with it instead of fighting it.

04

The Kitchen

Where the method meets millimetres. The Kitchen takes you into real fabrication-level decisions — joint placement, material limits, service coordination — the technical depth that separates a finished room from a styled one.

FAQ

What is "The Design Key"?

The Design Key is a series of professional methodology courses from Craft'n Build, each covering one core discipline of interior design — the Brief, the Mood Board, the Floor Plan, Lighting, the Kitchen, and more. It teaches how working designers actually think, plan and execute, through the same rigorous framework used in real practice. It's about method, not aesthetics or inspiration.

Who is this for?

Anyone who wants to learn professional interior design method, whatever their starting point — working designers, students and career-changers, homeowners approaching their own space properly, and project owners who need to brief and judge the work. No credentials or prior experience required. The method is the same for everyone.

What do I get, and how do I access it?

Everything is online and yours the moment you buy — instant access, no waiting, nothing shipped. You watch the course in your browser on any device and download the accompanying course material to keep. Access doesn't expire.

Is the course video, text, or both?

Both. Each course combines video lessons with a downloadable written guide and practical exercises, so you can watch, read, and work through the method by hand — which is how it's designed to be learned.

Do I need any experience or special software?

No. The courses assume no prior experience and no expensive software — just a willingness to work through the method. Where a tool is useful, the course shows you accessible options. The method matters more than the software.

How long do I have to complete a course?

As long as you like — access is for life, with no deadline. Most people work through a course in about a week at a relaxed module-a-day pace, faster if they push. You set the speed and can return to the material whenever you need it.

Do I get a certificate?

Yes. Complete any course and you earn a Certificate for that discipline. Complete all twelve and pass the final synthesis exam — which tests your ability to solve real problems across several disciplines at once — and you earn the Design Key Diploma, a credential that reflects mastery of the whole method, not just course completion.

What is "The Master Programme"?

The Master Programme is the full path: all twelve courses together, leading to the Design Key Diploma. You don't commit up front — every single course you take counts toward it. Start with one; the whole programme stays open to you.

Can I just buy one course, or do I have to take the whole series?

Start with a single course — most people do. There's no obligation to take more, but everything you complete counts toward the Master Programme and the Diploma, so a single course is also a first step if you decide to go further.

Do you offer a refund?

Yes — if a course isn't right for you, contact us and we'll make it right.

Didn’t find your answer?

Don't hestitate to contact us

THE DESIGN KEY

About the Programme

Start with one course

Learn a complete discipline — the Brief, the Mood Board, a room — and earn its Certificate. One course is a real skill on its own.

Build toward the whole

Every course you complete counts toward the Master Programme. You're never starting over — always adding to the same path.

Earn the Diploma

Complete all twelve and pass the synthesis exam to earn the Design Key Diploma — proof you can integrate the whole method, not just finish the courses.

The Design Key — Master Programme

1 of 12 courses toward the Master Programme. Every course counts.

Every single course counts towards the full Master Programme.

Description

Short description

A complete course on the brief as a professional discipline. From the first client contact through to a documented, signed, and living project brief — covering the intake conversation, the translation of emotional language into concrete requirements, the separation of constraints from preferences from non-negotiables, and the use of the brief as the project's governing authority from start to finish.

Full description

Every interior design project starts with a brief, whether it is written or not. The unwritten brief — assembled from half-remembered conversations, hopeful assumptions, and a client's enthusiastic but vague intentions — is where most of the friction, scope creep, revision cycles, and uncomfortable budget conversations begin. By the time those problems surface in the middle of a project, the cost of fixing them is already much higher than the cost of preventing them.

The professional brief is something different. It is a structured document built from a deliberate intake process, written in a way that protects both the designer and the client, and used as a live decision-making authority from first contact through final sign-off. It eliminates the blank-page feeling at the start of a project, because once the brief exists, that is where the work begins. And it gives the client their first signal that they are working with someone who has a process — a signal that compounds through every subsequent stage of the project relationship.

This course teaches the brief as a discipline in its own right. It is the foundational entry point to The Design Key series — the methodology that feeds every other course in the curriculum. The same brief that you produce by the end of this course becomes the starting point for the floor plan, the color scheme, the moodboard, and the renovation methodology taught in the kitchen and bathroom courses. Master the brief, and you have changed the way every subsequent project begins.

You will learn how to run a client intake conversation that produces useful information rather than enthusiastic abstraction — when to listen, when to push, when to probe, when to stop. You will learn the structured questionnaire that guides the conversation without making it feel like a form-filling exercise, and the pre-meeting preparation that turns the first conversation from a chat into a professional exchange. You will learn how to recognize when a client is performing rather than disclosing, and how to close the meeting with a clear next step rather than an open-ended promise.

You will learn the translation discipline — how to take a client's vocabulary of cozy, fresh, calm, statement, and timeless, and turn it into the specific, measurable, defensible requirements that the rest of the project will be built on. You will learn the three-part discipline that sits at the heart of every professional brief: the separation of constraints from preferences from non-negotiables. Confusing one for another is the fastest way a project breaks; documenting them so they cannot be confused later is the methodological signature of a professional brief.

You will learn the writing of the brief itself — the structure, the tone, the level of detail, the sign-off process — and you will take away a complete reusable brief template that adapts to residential, commercial, and renovation projects. You will learn how to identify the hidden stakeholders who are not in the intake meeting but who will influence the project, and how to map decision authorities so that the absent partner who arrives in month three of the project finds a document that has already accommodated their position.

Most importantly, you will learn how to keep the brief alive. The course's central differentiator is the module on the living brief — how to use the brief as the decision-making authority of the project throughout, how to handle the moments when it begins to break down, and how to recover a project that has drifted from its foundation. This is the module that separates practitioners who use the brief as paperwork from practitioners who use it as a profession.

The course closes with two complete worked project briefs — one residential, one commercial — and the full professional toolkit: the intake questionnaire, the constraint and preference matrix, the brief template, the brief health-check, and the change-control protocol. Each tool is ready for immediate use on your next real client project. By the end of the course, you will not just know how to write a brief — you will have the methodology, the toolkit, and the professional position that makes the brief a permanent part of your practice.

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