Virtual Design + You
Let's get real for a minute: we never fully went back to the way things were before 2020.
We all learned how to work, meet, shop, and even see our doctors from our laptops. While I'm the first person to say that not everything should happen through a screen, we've also discovered that some things are just... easier this way.
As much as I love an in-person meeting, I've come to appreciate the virtual side of my job. It gives my clients more flexibility, and frankly, most people don't want to spend half their day driving to a meeting when the same conversation can happen in 45 focused minutes from their kitchen table.
Many of the homeowners and designers I work with have demanding schedules. They're balancing careers, kids, projects, deadlines, and about seventeen other things. Taking two hours out of the day for a design meeting isn't always realistic. Hopping on a video call? That's much more manageable.
The short answer: you still get me.
You still have direct access to your designer. You still receive material selections, specifications, and guidance. You still get a thoughtful, customized design solution. The difference is that you're able to review everything on your own timeline and from wherever you happen to be.
One of the biggest benefits is that virtual design allows you to work with OT+H no matter where you're located. Whether you're down the street or across the country, geography doesn't have to dictate who you hire for your project. Design doesn’t care about zip codes.
Virtual design is especially great for renovations and refreshes that need solid design direction without the scope of full-service project management. You bring your builder or contractor to the table, and OT+H delivers the vision, selections, and plan to make it all come together.
Think of it as having a designer in your corner without having to coordinate everyone's calendars for an in-person meeting every time a tile decision needs to be made.
The end result is the same: the tile still gets picked, the vision still gets perfected. We just skip the commute.