People ask me all the time why I don't just renovate all kitchens — why limit myself to lake house kitchens when I could take any job that comes. It's a fair question, and the answer is the heart of how I built my business. The narrow focus that sounds limiting is actually my superpower. Here's the case for specialising in lake house kitchens alone, and why I'd never go back to doing everything.
The Demand Was Right There
The practical reason came first: I live in a town where, it feels, everyone has a lake house, and nearly every one has a kitchen that needs work. The demand for exactly this specialty was sitting right in front of me. Niching down only works where there's enough demand for the niche, and a town full of lake houses provides it in spades. So specialising wasn't a gamble — it was reading the market I was actually in and serving the need that was already there.
A Lake Kitchen Is Its Own Craft
The deeper reason is that a lake house kitchen genuinely is its own thing. It has to feed a crowd off the boat, survive wet swimsuits and sandy feet, sit empty through a damp winter, open and close with the seasons, connect to outdoor entertaining, and make the most of the view. Designing for all of that is a real, distinct craft — different enough from an everyday town kitchen to justify dedicating myself to it. The specialty is genuine, not invented, and that's what makes the focus worthwhile.
Depth Beats Breadth
By doing only lake kitchens, I've gone deep in a way a generalist never could. I've solved the same lake-specific problems many times over, learned exactly what works and what to avoid, and built expertise that's concentrated entirely on this one type of project. Depth beats breadth here — a true expert in lake kitchens delivers better results than someone competent at all kitchens. The narrow focus has made me far better at this one thing than I'd ever be spread across everything.
I Became the Go-To
Specialising made me the lake house kitchen person in my area, rather than one of many general renovators. When someone's lake kitchen needs work, my name is the one that comes up, because I'm the specialist. That reputation as the go-to expert in a niche is worth more than a broader, more anonymous business. Being known for one thing, and being genuinely the best at it locally, is a position a generalist can never occupy. The focus built me a reputation the breadth never would have.
Clients Get a Real Expert
The focus serves my clients as much as me. They get someone who understands their exact situation deeply, has solved their precise problems before, knows the lake-specific pitfalls, and delivers a result truly suited to a lake house. That concentrated experience shows in the quality and in the avoidable mistakes that simply don't happen. A client hiring a lake kitchen specialist gets the benefit of all the lake kitchens I've done before theirs. That's the real value of specialisation, and clients feel it.
The Freedom of One Thing
There's also a personal freedom in doing one thing well that doing everything adequately never gives you. I'm not constantly learning new project types from scratch or spreading myself thin — I'm refining a craft I know deeply, getting a little better each time. That focus is satisfying in a way that bouncing between every kind of job never was. Mastering one thing, rather than juggling many, has made the work itself more rewarding. The narrow path turned out to be the freer one.
Even the Details Get Specialized
The focus lets me obsess over details a generalist would never have time for — like getting the pendant lighting over the island and the layered warm light exactly right for a lake kitchen's dusk glow. Specialising gave me room to develop signature details that set my kitchens apart. When you do one thing, you can perfect the small things within it that a busy generalist must skip. Those specialized details are part of what clients come to me for, and they only exist because of the focus.
Why the Narrow Path Wins
Real demand, a genuine craft, deep expertise, go-to reputation, better results for clients, personal freedom, and room to perfect the details — that's why I only do lake house kitchens. The narrow focus that sounds like a limit is the thing that makes my work, my business, and my clients' kitchens better than a general practice ever could. I found my one thing, in the right place, and committed to it fully. Doing one thing brilliantly beats doing everything adequately, and I wouldn't trade the focus for anything.
Lighting in this kitchen: pendant lighting over the island and warm wall sconces
My friend Wade at The Foster Cabin only does cabins, and we both swear by the focus — there's a freedom in doing one thing well that doing everything adequately never gives you.


