• Navigating Home Design Costs with Michael Sweebe | 124
    May 28 2026
    Fixing Budget Misalignment in Residential Projects.A conversation with Michael Sweebe on Build Cost Estimation. Host Jon Clayton interviews residential architect Michael Sweebe of Sweebe Architecture about the common problem of homeowners’ design goals outpacing their budgets and the lack of early tools to define scope and estimate costs. Mike shares how his childhood experience in an unsuitable apartment shaped his focus on homes as expressions of memory, identity, and aspiration, and how 20 years in commercial practice led him to residential work. He explains how a COVID-era, space-by-space cost spreadsheet helped him give live ballpark project costs, preventing clients from spending money on drawings they couldn’t afford to build. That approach evolved into Scopify, a free homeowner app (beta) that estimates “soup to nuts” build costs by U.S. postal code and delivers pre-qualified leads to architects, reducing unbillable qualification time.Today’s GuestMichael Sweebe is a practicing architect & the founder of Sweebe Architecture. Mike’s practice specialises in residential architecture & interior design – designing homes that bring families closer together. Mike is also the founder of Scopify – a new app helping homeowners to estimate & control their build costs from the outset & to connect them with the best service providers.—Episode Highlights00:00 Introduction01:01 Meet Michael Sweebe01:36 What We Will Cover02:08 A Childhood Home Mismatch03:00 Drawing Plans At Age Nine04:19 Finding Purpose Early05:41 From Uni To Real Practice06:40 Why Homeowners Matter More08:42 Residential Brand Mindset09:44 Residential Project Pitfalls10:23 No Tools For Early Costing12:16 Chicken and Egg Problem13:14 Building Without Architectural Guidance14:46 COVID Spreadsheet Solution15:47 Space By Space Estimating16:47 Why Homeowners Think In Rooms18:15 Live Pricing Saves Projects20:24 Stop Gatekeeping Cost Info21:51 Limits Of One To One Help22:29 Sales Funnel Sparks Scopify24:52 Scaling Impact Nationwide26:47 Scopify Beta Overview27:28 Homeowner Experience And Pricing28:12 Postal Code Cost Algorithm29:15 40 40 20 cost rule30:00 Qualified Leads For Architects30:54 Beta Results And Conversions34:05 Homeowners Know 85 Percent Of What They Want34:54 How To Try Scopify35:23 Key Takeaway36:16 Must Have Business Resource39:11 Where To Find Michael Sweebe—Key TakeawaysHelp homeowners understand costs before they hire anyone.If you work in architecture or home design, one of the biggest problems you will see is that homeowners have no idea what things cost. When they find out late in the process, it can kill the whole project. You can save everyone a lot of time and money by giving people a rough idea of costs right at the start — before they pay for drawings or sign any contracts.Think about spaces the way the people living in them do.When you are working with homeowners, remember that their home is about more than just building materials and square footage. It is about who they are, what they care about, and what kind of life they want to live. If you keep that in mind, you will do better work and build stronger relationships with your clients.Technology can help you reach more people and save time.If you are a small practice, you can only help so many clients on your own. But if you use the right tools — like an app that lets homeowners self-qualify before they even speak to you — you can spend your time with people who are actually ready to go ahead. That means less unpaid time in meetings that go nowhere, and more clients who are a good fit for your work.—Subscribe on YouTube (for upcoming video episodes!) 📺Send a Voicemail to the show (we listen to every message!) 📢Learn more about Scopify 🖥️Test the Scopify app 🖥️Learn more about Sweebe Architecture 🖥️Curious about podcasting? Click here to book a chat with Jon 🎧Follow or Connect with Jon on LinkedIn 🤝—👇 And if you enjoyed this episode…Please leave a 5-star review or rating wherever you listen to podcasts, and don’t forget to hit the subscribe button so you never miss an episode.
    Show More Show Less
    41 mins
  • Marketing & Lead Generation Tips For Small Businesses | 123
    May 7 2026

    Top Marketing & Lead Generation Episodes for Architecture Practices

    Jon Clayton introduces a roundup of Architecture Business Club episodes focused on improving marketing and lead generation for architecture practices beyond a website portfolio and occasional Instagram posts. Jon highlights the most popular marketing and lead generation episode to date, shares a “hidden gem,” and reveals one of his personal favourites.

    Episode Highlights

    00:00 Introduction

    01:32 Most Popular Marketing & Lead Generation Episode To Date

    02:42 The Right Way For Architecture Firms To Use LinkedIn

    03:53 A Hidden Gem From Our Marketing & Lead Generation Episodes

    05:05 How To Use Pinterest To Build Know, Like & Trust

    06:19 A Personal Favourite From Our Marketing & Lead Generation Episodes

    07:39 Strategic Marketing System For Small Firms

    09:47 Wrap Up

    Key Takeaways

    Show who you are, not just what you build

    On LinkedIn, you might think sharing photos of your finished projects is enough. But clients want to know you. They want to see your personality, understand how you work, and feel they can trust you. Try sharing why you love what you do or a little about your process — that personal touch can make a big difference.

    Pinterest can help you reach clients early

    Pinterest is not really a social media platform — it works more like a search engine. If you post helpful content there, people can find you while they are still deciding which architectural designer to hire. Over time, they get to know your work, trust your brand, and when they are ready, they come back to you.

    A lean marketing system can work for small firms

    You do not need a big team to market well. Start by getting clear on who your dream client is, create a simple core offer, and set up a way to bring in leads. Even a small "gateway offer" — like a paid strategy session — can help turn first conversations into paying work and grow your business step by step.

    Get to grips with LinkedIn in this popular podcast episode

    Learn how to leverage Pinterest in your architecture practice

    Build an effective marketing system for your micro-sized business

    Subscribe on YouTube (for upcoming video episodes!) 📺

    Send a Voicemail to the show (we listen to every message!) 📢

    Curious about podcasting? Click here to book a chat with Jon 🎧

    Follow or Connect with Jon on LinkedIn 🤝

    👇 And if you enjoyed this episode…

    Please leave a 5-star review or rating wherever you listen to podcasts, and don’t forget to hit the subscribe button so you never miss an episode.

    Show More Show Less
    11 mins
  • Solopreneur's Guide To Business Mastery with Kathy Ennis | 122
    Apr 23 2026
    Host Jon Clayton welcomes Kathy Ennis of Little Piggy Ltd to Architecture Business Club to discuss why many solopreneurs and micro business owners struggle and what drives success. Kathy explains that talented people often rely on passion and “window dressing” marketing without learning core business skills, especially planning and cashflow forecasting. She outlines her five “Ps”: people (start with psychographics and choose who you want to buy from you), product (for services, productise offers into clear packages and entry levels), price (set targets based on business costs, salary, tax and profit, then align pricing with customer and offer), promotion (balance brand and sales marketing; go beyond social media with networking, lead magnets and email), and productivity (allocate time to run the business, build systems, and outsource).—Today’s GuestKathy Ennis is the founder of LittlePiggy and an award-winning Business Mentor who specialises in working with Solopreneurs, Freelancers and Side-Hustlers to build businesses that actually work and bring them the success they deserve.After 20 years in the corporate world, Kathy launched her own business in 2000 at 40, knowing nothing about business. It didn't all go to plan – redundancy, a financial crisis, and even pension fraud tested her resolve – but she learned, adapted and built something sustainable. Those hard-won lessons became the foundation of everything she now teaches.With over 26 years of running her own businesses, Kathy knows that talent and passion aren't enough. You need the business fundamentals. That's why she developed her 5Ps framework – People, Products, Price, Promotion and Productivity. It's a practical, proven approach that takes clients from assumptions and guesswork to clear strategy and consistent profit.Kathy works one-to-one with business owners and delivers training through organisations including Enterprise Nation and Visionnaires, where she tutors and coaches on start-up and business growth programmes. She previously tutored on the York St John University MBA programme and runs the Women Talk Business programme for the Business and IP Centre Norfolk. She's also a regular public speaker and workshop facilitator.What sets Kathy apart is her straight-talking, no-fluff approach. She doesn't coach people on their feelings about business, she teaches them what they don't know. Because running a business is a skillset, and it's one you can learn.—Episode Highlights00:00 Introduction00:49 Meet Kathy Ennis02:15 Why Solopreneurs Start03:49 Passion vs Profit Gap04:22 Planning Builds Profit05:21 Architecture Iceberg Analogy07:15 Unsexy Business Basics08:54 Five Ps Framework10:30 Know Your People11:01 Psychographics Over Demographics12:28 Choose Who Buys13:47 Productising Services19:40 Packages To Upsell & Downsell25:35 The Golden Triangle Of Pricing26:28 Turnover Not Salary27:42 Tiered Offers Math28:45 Supermarket Pricing Analogy29:36 Spreadsheet Stress Test30:17 Packages Versus Capacity31:16 Avoid Salary Replacement Trap33:26 Unemotional Numbers Mindset34:47 Reevaluate Offer And Audience35:21 Brand Versus Marketing36:10 Beyond Social Media37:52 Lead Magnets And Email39:49 Productivity For Solopreneurs41:33 Outsource To Build A Team44:14 Final Takeaways And Wrap —Key TakeawaysRunning a business is a skill you can learnJust because you are great at what you do does not mean you automatically know how to run a business. Kathy points out that most solopreneurs are brilliant at their craft but do not understand the basics of business. The good news is that business skills can be learned. Once you start learning things like pricing, planning, and knowing your customers, you put yourself on much firmer ground.Know your numbers before you set your pricesDo not just think about what you want to take home as a salary. You need to work out how much it costs to run your business, pay yourself, cover tax, and have a little left over to reinvest. Once you know that total number, you can work backwards to figure out your prices and how many clients you need. Using a simple spreadsheet to do this takes the emotion out of it and helps you make clear, sensible decisions.Plan your marketing and do not rely on social media aloneMany small business owners rely too heavily on posting on Instagram or LinkedIn and hope that their work will speak for itself. Kathy says you need a proper marketing strategy that includes email, face-to-face networking, and things that bring people to you, like a free resource or a short introductory chat. The more people know you and what you do, the more likely they are to refer others to you.—Subscribe on YouTube (for upcoming video episodes!) 📺Send a Voicemail to the show (we listen to every message!) 📢Connect with Kathy Ennis on LinkedIn 🤝Visit Kathy’s website 🖥️Curious about podcasting? Click here to book a chat with Jon 🎧Follow or Connect with Jon on LinkedIn 🤝—👇 And if ...
    Show More Show Less
    51 mins
  • Get More People To See Your Content (Repurpose It!) with Annette Mashi | 121
    Apr 9 2026
    Host Jon Clayton interviews Annette Mashi on Architecture Business Club about repurposing existing website content—case studies, portfolios, photos, and blog posts—so more people see it across platforms and are driven back to the website. Annette explains a top-down process: start with a large piece (e.g., an energy-efficiency case study), turn it into a blog, then break it into topic-specific newsletters and short LinkedIn posts that link back to the blog. They discuss finding content ideas in everyday client conversations and frequently asked questions, using AI tools like ChatGPT as a starting point while editing for voice and avoiding generic language, and why LinkedIn builds awareness, email newsletters nurture leads over long sales cycles, and blogs provide depth and a content library. Annette emphasises client-focused benefits over “we” messaging and highlights the value of a supportive professional network.—Today’s GuestAnnette Mashi creates magic with words. She gives visibility to female architects, interior designers, and women in the construction industry. She positions them as experts, demonstrates the value they provide, and helps them stand out from their competition so they attract clients they love and win their dream projects.—Episode Highlights00:00 Introduction00:43 Introducing Annette Mashi01:13 Why Repurpose Content02:05 Multi Platform Sharing02:30 Driving Website Traffic03:14 Channels To Use03:31 Top Down Process03:57 Case Study Example04:22 Turning A Case Study Into A Blog04:45 Turning A Blog Into A Newsletter05:02 LinkedIn Snippets05:27 Main Course Analogy05:56 No Reinventing Wheel06:14 Repurpose Podcasts Too06:52 Guest Appearance Content07:09 Ask For Transcripts07:49 Finding Content Ideas08:27 Marketing Team Analogy10:48 Client Questions Content12:30 Social Proof Framing13:05 AI Repurposing Pitfalls14:21 Use AI As Tool17:19 ChatGPT Tells18:18 Content Ecosystem Package19:49 Awareness Building Content20:11 Nurturing Content20:44 Why You Need To Nurture Leads21:44 Email Newsletter Opportunity22:15 How Often To Send Your Email Newsletter24:13 Flow Analogy25:12 Results From Just Eight Blogs Per Year25:39 Building A Content Library26:42 Long Term Benefits From Content28:09 Linking Content Together29:46 Putting It Into Practice30:55 Getting Started With Content Repurposing32:11 Sharing Your Process32:31 Content Marketing Book Recommendations33:28 Benefits Vs Features34:29 A Simple Exercise: We Vs You35:26 The Resource Annette Mashi Can't Live Without37:15 Closing And Connect—Key TakeawaysYou already have more content than you thinkYou don't need to start from scratch. Look at what you've already got — a case study, a project photo, a blog post. You can take one big piece of content and break it into smaller pieces for LinkedIn, your newsletter, and your website. It's like getting more meals from one big cook-up. Stop letting good work sit there unseen.You need to share your content in more than one placePutting something on your website and hoping people will find it doesn't work. You need to share it across different places — social media, email, your blog. Each place does a different job. LinkedIn helps new people find you. Your email list keeps people warm over time. Your blog shows them how you think and what you can do. Together, they bring people closer to hiring you.You should email your list at least once a monthMost designers — around 85% — don't send regular emails. That means if you do, you're already ahead of the crowd. People often take a year or more before they're ready to hire an architect. Sending a monthly email keeps you in their minds. Even if they don't read every word, they see your name and remember you're there. That matters a lot when they're finally ready to get started.—Subscribe on YouTube (for upcoming video episodes!) 📺Send a Voicemail to the show (we listen to every message!) 📢Connect with Annette Mashi on LinkedIn 🤝Visit Annette Mashi’s Website 🖥️Curious about podcasting? Click here to book a chat with Jon 🎧Follow or Connect with Jon on LinkedIn 🤝—👇 And if you enjoyed this episode…Please leave a 5-star review or rating wherever you listen to podcasts, and don’t forget to hit the subscribe button so you never miss an episode.
    Show More Show Less
    39 mins
  • What is Succession Planning & Why Does It Matter with Kevin Crawford | 120
    Mar 26 2026
    Jon Clayton hosts Architecture Business Club with guest Kevin Crawford, an architecture practice leader with 20+ years’ experience who implemented a succession plan at Crawford Architecture via a transition to employee ownership. They define succession planning as future-proofing the business, protecting legacy, and ensuring continuity if the owner retires, can’t work, or dies, noting many practices delay it until it becomes urgent. Kevin shares how waiting until his father was around 70 created pressure and highlights why planning matters for owners, families, staff career paths, valuation, and avoiding rushed sales to the wrong buyer. They discuss that succession planning applies to all firms, including sole practitioners, and stress the need to take time away from day-to-day work, use structured planning (including ideas from the book “Traction”), clarify roles, communicate a shared vision, and maintain discipline.Today’s GuestKevin Crawford is an architecture practice leader with over 20 years of experience running and growing a practice, before putting a succession plan in place through a transition to employee ownership. Today, he’s the founder of Designing Success and co-founder of ASC and Pilotis, where he helps architecture practice leaders design better businesses — gaining more clarity, time and freedom, while strengthening the person behind the practice.—Episode Highlights00:00 Introduction00:46 Meet Kevin Crawford01:20 Why This Topic Now01:40 Defining Succession Planning02:15 Planning For Inevitability02:49 Family Firm Backstory03:58 New Ventures Plan From Day One04:33 Ostrich To Eagle Mindset05:18 Forced Change And Complexity05:39 Most Firms Delay This06:23 Reactive Industry Trap06:52 Hamster Wheel Workaholism07:27 Two Year Transition Journey08:03 Balancing Three Stakeholders08:29 Protecting The Legacy08:48 Choosing Employee Ownership09:36 Others Still Ignore It10:18 Why Succession Matters10:42 Time With Family Motivation12:34 Shared Vision And Culture Shift13:53 Risks Of Leaving It Late15:28 Is Succession Planning Relevant To Small Firms16:33 Buying Time To Plan20:25 Consequences Of Ignoring It22:36 Collaboration Over Competition24:24 Where To Start Today24:49 Frameworks And Reflection26:21 Discipline And Weekly Structure27:41 Key Takeaways29:26 Employee Ownership Realities30:31 Must Have Business Resource30:51 Project Management Game Changer32:02 Connect With Kevin—Key TakeawaysDon't put it off — start thinking about succession planning now.It's easy to say "I'll deal with it later," but Kevin learned the hard way that waiting too long makes everything harder. His dad was 70 before they started planning, and by then it was stressful for the whole family. Even if you're not ready to act right now, you should at least start thinking about what happens to your business when you're no longer running it.You need to make time to work on your business, not just in it.Kevin used to think working longer hours was the answer. He'd start at 4am and work until midnight. But that didn't help him plan for the future — it just kept him stuck on the hamster wheel. The real change came when he stepped away from the day-to-day and gave himself proper time to think. You need to block out time in your week to focus on the bigger picture, even if it's just a couple of hours on a Friday.Succession planning matters no matter how big or small your practice is.You might think this only applies to large firms, but Kevin says it's just as important for sole practitioners. If your business depends entirely on you, what happens if you can't work? Who looks after your projects and your clients? Having a plan in place protects you, your team, and the legacy you've built — whether you're a one-person studio or a team of twenty.—Subscribe on YouTube (for upcoming video episodes!) 📺Send a Voicemail to the show (we listen to every message!) 📢Connect with Kevin Crawford on LinkedIn 🤝Curious about podcasting? Click here to book a chat with Jon 🎧Follow or Connect with Jon on LinkedIn 🤝—👇 And if you enjoyed this episode…Please leave a 5-star review or rating wherever you listen to podcasts, and don’t forget to hit the subscribe button so you never miss an episode.
    Show More Show Less
    34 mins
  • Navigating Our 100+ Episodes: A Guide to Discovering Hidden Gems | 119
    Mar 12 2026

    Jon Clayton marks Architecture Business Club’s 100+ episodes (nearing 120) and explains how new listeners can quickly find relevant content using newly added episode categories on architecturebusinessclub.com. He lists key themes including business strategy and growth, marketing and lead generation, personal brand, sales and pricing, systems and automations, mindset and wellbeing, career journeys, content/PR/podcasting, industry events, community, and team collaboration. Spotlighting the Business Strategy and Growth category, he highlights the most downloaded episode. He also recommends a lesser-known “hidden gem”, and shares his personal favourite.

    Episode Highlights

    00:00 Why This Episode Exists

    00:50 The Back Catalogue Problem

    01:41 New Website Categories

    02:03 All Episode Themes Overview

    02:58 Why Categorising Matters

    04:00 Business Strategy & Growth Episodes

    04:16 Most Popular Business Strategy & Growth Episode

    06:28 Hidden Gem in Business Strategy & Growth

    08:50 Personal Favourite Of Mine

    11:59 Wrap Up

    Key Takeaways

    You can break big goals into smaller parts

    Instead of planning your whole year at once, divide it into 90-day chunks. This makes it easier to see where you're going and change direction if you need to. It's like planning a road trip in stages rather than trying to map out everything at once.

    You will make mistakes, and that's okay

    When you run a business, you'll mess things up sometimes. You might waste money or make poor choices. The important thing is to learn from what went wrong and move forward. Don't be too hard on yourself about it.

    You need to create urgency to get people to buy

    If your service is available all the time, people will think they can buy it later and they'll forget about it. You should use special launches or limited-time offers to give people a reason to act now instead of putting it off.

    Subscribe on YouTube (for upcoming video episodes!) 📺

    Send a Voicemail to the show (we listen to every message!) 📢

    Curious about podcasting? Click here to book a chat with Jon 🎧

    Follow or Connect with Jon on LinkedIn 🤝

    👇 And if you enjoyed this episode…

    Please leave a 5-star review or rating wherever you listen to podcasts, and don’t forget to hit the subscribe button so you never miss an episode.

    Show More Show Less
    14 mins
  • How To Avoid Structural Issues In Home Extensions with Sam Dean | 118
    Feb 26 2026
    Architecture Business Club host Jon Clayton interviews structural engineer Sam Dean of Porthouse Dean about common structural design pitfalls in home extensions and how to avoid spiraling costs. They discuss ground conditions as a major uncertainty (especially clay), the influence of nearby large trees and desiccation, and the use of low-cost desktop geological reports based on British Geological Survey borehole data to flag risk. They cover ceiling downstands and why beam position is often a cost-and-aesthetics decision between homeowner, architect, and builder, with installation complexity increasing when first-floor joists run into the beam. Sam explains cantilever “rules of thumb” and how corner bifold-door cantilevers can drive up steel and foundation demands, sometimes requiring columns and large foundations due to uplift forces. They address adding an extra storey and the case for trial holes. They also highlight risks of building onto existing, undocumented steelwork from previous extensions, which can force intrusive investigation or replacement when later loft conversions are planned. Sam explains how the architectural design can affect structural costs and outlines what to expect from a good structural engineering service. They touch on AI-generated architectural information, Sam’s launch of an AI review service, and he shares the software tool his business can’t work without.Today’s GuestSam Dean. He started out as a materials scientist and structural engineer, spent a year in the nuclear industry, then teamed up with his friend Chris Porthouse to start PorthouseDean structural engineering. Sam then got hooked on building business systems and automations - to cut out the boring stuff and let his team do better work. When he’s not solving process problems – he’s cycling to work, playing and watching football, or baking crusty bread and homemade pizzas.—Episode Highlights00:00 Introduction00:39 Introducing Sam Dean01:38 Managing Risk with Groundworks03:08 The Clay Problem04:08 Trees Near Extensions: The Hidden Foundation Cost Driver04:30 When Is a Site Investigation Worth It? Practical Triggers05:10 Low-Cost Desktop Geology Reports: A Smart Early Warning05:49 Designers Missing Key Site Info (Like Trees)06:59 Case Study: The 20m Oak That Shows Up Too Late07:55 Using Maps + Clay Likelihood to Spot Risk Early08:48 Removed Trees Still Matter: Clay Desiccation Explained10:32 Ceiling Downstands vs Flush Beams: Set Expectations Early11:33 “Where Do I Put the Beam?” Why Engineers Don’t Always Decide12:13 Joist Direction Changes Everything (and Can Add Thousands)13:01 Goalpost Frames & Rear Wall Openings: What’s Cost-Neutral?14:00 Builder vs Client vs Architect: Who’s Steering the Decision?14:37 Protecting the Homeowner: Budget Trade-Offs in Plain English15:36 When Architects Aren’t On Site: How Design Intent Gets Lost18:06 Roles, Responsibility & the Principal Designer Confusion19:38 Why Small Projects Are So Cost-Driven (and Getting Worse)21:07 Cantilevers 101: The Rule of Thumb That Saves Your Budget23:12 Corner Bifolds + Floating Roofs: The Cantilever Trap25:23 Engineering Workarounds: Columns, Anchors & Uplift Forces27:34 Adding a Storey: Foundation Reality Checks29:32 Building on Existing Steelwork: The Missing Calculations Problem33:37 Prevention Playbook: Trial Holes, Checks, and Lightweight Options36:46 Quick Wins to Avoid Spiraling Costs (Wind Posts, Pillars, Layout)41:45 What Great Structural Engineering Service Looks Like46:49 The Rise of AI48:55 The One Piece of Software Sam Can't Live Without50:18 Final Thoughts—Key TakeawaysCheck the Ground Early to Avoid Big SurprisesLearn what's under the ground before you start building. Clay soil can be a big problem. If there are large trees near your building site (especially within 20 metres), they can make the situation worse. The tree roots dry out the clay, which means you might need to dig much deeper foundations. This can cost thousands extra. Even if you remove a tree, the clay takes about three years to go back to normal. You can get a cheap report to check if clay is likely on your site or dig trial holes, which can help you plan ahead.Think About Where Beams Go Before You BuildHelp your client decide if they want the steel beam to show below the ceiling or to hide it inside the ceiling. If you hide it and the floor joists run into the beam, the builder may need to cut the joists and fix them to the side of the beam. This may cost more money. You should talk about this early with your client and builder. It's a trade-off between how it looks and how much it’ll cost.Plan Cantilevers Carefully to Keep Costs DownA cantilever is when part of your building sticks out without support underneath. There's a simple rule of thumb: if you want one metre sticking out, you need two metres anchored back inside the building. If you don't follow this rule, you might need heavier, more expensive beams. Corner bifold doors...
    Show More Show Less
    52 mins
  • Building Confidence Through Mentorship with Joshua Ayettey | 117
    Feb 12 2026
    In this episode of Architecture Business Club, Jon Clayton introduces Joshua Ayettey, a chartered architect and founder of JADC Studio and Scattered Hub, a mentorship community for aspiring architects. Joshua discusses his personal struggles through architectural training, leading to his passion for mentoring and creating Scattered Hub. The group focuses on providing support, confidence boosts, and guidance to new graduates navigating the architectural field. The conversation covers the group's organic growth, its impact on members, and Joshua's inspiration and future aspirations for Scattered Hub. This episode also highlights practical advice for building community groups and the importance of tackling failures positively.Today’s GuestJoshua Ayettey is a chartered architect and creative problem solver who is passionate about improving the way people live through good design and mentoring the next generation of problem solving designers. He’s also the founder of JADC Studio and Scattered Hub.—Episode Highlights00:00 Introduction00:31 Our Guest: Joshua Ayettey01:07 Joshua's Background and Scattered Hub01:45 Organic Growth of Scattered Hub02:02 Mentoring Journey and Early Struggles03:09 Helping Others and Building Confidence04:54 Founding JADC Studio05:45 Formalising Scattered Hub06:08 Personal Struggles and Mental Health07:37 Failures as Catalysts for Growth08:27 Jon's Struggles That Led To This Show09:20 Setting Up the Group and Formal Arrangements10:13 Creating a Peer-to-Peer Platform11:38 Expanding Beyond Architecture13:01 Community and Collaboration14:12 Wins and Success Stories14:22 Building Confidence and Self-Esteem17:16 Personal Motivation and Influences20:09 Future Vision for Scattered Hub20:49 Collaborative Projects and Ecosystem24:17 Encouragement to Test Ideas26:14 Final Thoughts and Takeaways27:25 Encouraging Young People in Architecture28:56 Resource Recommendations and Learning29:40 AI and Future of Architecture31:39 Connecting with Joshua Online—Key TakeawaysDon't Be Afraid to FailYou can learn a lot from your failures, even if you can't see it at the time. Joshua failed his final year and had to repeat it. He also failed his part three exam the first time. But these failures taught him important lessons that helped him later. When you fail, it doesn't mean you should give up. It means you're learning something that will help you in the future.Help Others Along Your JourneyWhen you're struggling with something, you can still help other people who are facing similar problems. Joshua struggled during his training, but he still helped other students with their work. By helping others, you build confidence in yourself and create a positive effect that spreads to more people. You don't need to wait until you're perfect to start helping others.Surround Yourself with the Right PeopleWhen you're going through tough times, you need people around you who can support you and remind you of your strengths. Joshua almost quit everything, but people around him helped him see that he was being too hard on himself. Find people who reflect where you want to be and who can help you see things clearly when you're struggling.—Subscribe on YouTube (for upcoming video episodes!) 📺Send a Voicemail to the show (we listen to every message!) 📢Connect with Joshua Ayettey on LinkedIn 🤝Learn more about Joshua Ayettey’s practice 🖥️Curious about podcasting? Click here to book a chat with Jon 🎧Follow or Connect with Jon on LinkedIn 🤝—👇 And if you enjoyed this episode…Please leave a 5-star review or rating wherever you listen to podcasts, and don’t forget to hit the subscribe button so you never miss an episode.
    Show More Show Less
    34 mins