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Staging a Home for Sale – 10 Easy Ideas You CAN
Use By: MICHAEL TRUST
Staging a home for sale means just that…setting the stage so that
your home may sell faster and often times closer to the listing
price than if it were not staged.
Staging allows the home to be presented as a canvas and allow the
buyer to paint a picture for them; visualizing what the space will
look like if they moved in with their items. But that does not mean
showing an empty home; rather staging accentuates spaces within the
home by creating vignettes, which enhance positive space while
downplaying negative areas within the house.
You could hire a professional stager for about $400 for a
consultation and then shell out another $100 per hour for the stager
to do the packing and the redecorating, OR you can do it yourself,
keep the savings and put it into staging the home if you
do-it-yourself.
In order to create the staging scene,
understand that for the next 30-90 days, while the house is for
sale, you will need to have removed personal items, collections and
clutter, (and keep them ‘gone’ until you have a signed contract).
Your home may lose its personal style and warmth, but that will be
one of the small sacrifices you will need to make to maximize profit
from the sale of your house.
Staging will require some planning as you
will pack away items, which you may have kept handy just for the
sake of a convenience (i.e., refrigerator door space used as a
bulletin board for ‘to-do lists,’ coupons, family photos and
calendars, etc.) or items which may have been left plugged
(indefinitely) into electrical outlets for convenience, such a
shavers and hair dryers in the bathroom; all of which add clutter to
the home.
If you stage your home for sale on your
own, here are 10 easy tips to remember:
1) Make a list of all the spaces, choose
one room at a time and tackle each individually. You will be
overwhelmed if you choose to do ‘the whole house’ in one afternoon.
Start with the bathroom(s) and the kitchen and then move to the
common rooms and finally the bedrooms. Basements, hallways and
attics are last. Check off each room on your list as you go helping
to make you feel as if you have made some accomplishment. Understand
that packing up clutter is ‘work’ and it is time-consuming (that is
why there is a $100 an hour price tag on the hiring a professional),
but remember always that the savings outweighs the hard work. By all
means, ask family members to pitch-in. Even children can pack away
their toys and older children can clean a dirty shower. Plug in the
Ipod or put on a CD to help the time pass a little more pleasantly.
2) Evaluate the colors of each room
individually. Pastel colors do not sell well. Baby blue and princess
pink are often gender-inspired colors, which are a huge turn-off for
potential buyers. Even if the buyers have children and will use the
baby blue room for their own baby, they may or may not like that
particular shade or, in fact may wish to use yellow or green, often
considered colors, which can traditionally be used for both boys and
girls. Play it safe and simply paint over the pastels with a neutral
color like beige or off-white. Any wallpaper should be removed or
painted over if possible.
3) Go to your neighborhood grocery store
and ask them for empty boxes from produce as these usually have side
cut-outs for easy grabbing. Start storing empty boxes in a place for
easy access a few weeks before you begin to stage. You will need the
boxes and having them handy will keep the packing momentum moving
along.
4) As you go from room to room, remove
family pictures from the walls and replace them with used art from a
thrift store or simply purchase framed prints from a local dollar
store. Pack away all collections including children’s Hot Wheels,
baseball cap collections and any other really personal collections
you and your family may be fond of. You may leave out neutral items
for decorating such as pricey crystal, Lladro, colorful depression
glassware to fill in those spaces left behind when the spoon
collections, baseball card collections and Formula 1 car collections
come off the fireplace mantle and shelves. This may be ‘painful’ but
consider that in 30-90 days you will be able to unpack these items
in your new home and enjoy them again.
5) Consider at this point whether you
will need to rent storage space or whether a neighbor or a friend
will allow you to store these items in their home as filled boxes
will accumulate quickly. A new storage idea has streamlined storage
space in recent years, whereas you rent a container or a pod and
store the items in this portable space for as long as you need to.
If you should rent this container space, do not store the entire
container on your own property. Ask a friend or a neighbor if you
can store it there or ask the container company if you can store at
their own facility. You do not want to make your home look like a
warehouse. Also, do not consider storing any packed items in a spare
bedroom or in the basement of your own home as you would simply be
de-cluttering one room and cluttering another. All rooms should be
clear of storage boxes, afterall you are selling a home and not a
storage space.
6) Clean, clean, clean….particularly
bathrooms and kitchens. No home will sell especially well with grit,
mold, dirty tiles and floors. For as much as you will stage each
room, the buyers’ eyes will focus on the dirt and not on the hard
work you put into staging. People remember dirt and grime and it
would only remind them how much more work they would have to do when
they moved in themselves. If you need to re-grout a dirty tub, then
you will need to make that effort.
7) Buyers make a determination of a home
within 20 seconds of walking through the front door. Make that
experience memorable within that short period of time. If you have
an entryway, set up a table, with flowers, a small attractive bowl
of expensive mints and add some potpourri somewhere in the area.
Scented candles offer a nice smell when you first walk in, so I use
them often. I often purchase scented candles at the dollar store or
the day after a holiday when the retailers slash holiday item
prices. An expensive red Christmas candle can be picked up for half
price the day after the holiday season and no one would know it was
a holiday candle. The same for Halloween…often orange, black, yellow
and green scented candles go on sale after this event, so I stock up
at that time and use those candles throughout the year.
If you have an entryway, open all the
doors off the entry to make the space appear larger and brighter.
8) Go from room-to-room and pack- up
clutter. Leave a small basket under the counter or in a closet with
items you will need to use while you are still living there. The
only items on a bathroom counter should be a small bouquet of
flowers, a bar of clean decorative soap in a clean soap dish and a
clean hand towel. Toothbrushes, toothpaste, shaving cream,
medications and hair products should all be packed away under the
counters or in places, which are not noticeable.
9) Go to the supermarket and purchase an
inexpensive bouquet of either daisies or carnations. You get many
more flowers to work with in these arrangements than you would if
you opted to spend money on roses or more expensive flowers. Arrange
the flowers in whiskey snifters, small vases, or, if you do not have
either take a better drinking glass from your kitchen, tie a small
ribbon around the base and fill that with water and a few daisies.
Use these arrangements randomly around the home but be sure to place
at least one in each room. Change flowers as needed but the daisies
and carnations seem to last a long time even if you forget to add
more water! Dying flowers MUST be thrown out immediately; they make
bad impression to visitors to your home.
10) Move out the bulky furniture and
create little seating venues in your home with small tables and
chairs. For example, you normally have a large sectional in your TV
room with a cocktail table and two side tables…however, you may also
have a large window facing the backyard that is blocked by the
sectional. Remove pieces of the sectional to make the space appear
larger. Place the cocktail table and one end table near the
sectional. Find two chairs, which do not always have to match and
place the other end table in front of the window with the 2nd end
table in between the chairs. Add your bouquet of flowers, a small
lamp and you have another seating area in the room. Pull your
curtains away from the window, tie back with decorative rope or
ribbon and let the light shine in the room. Add a bowl of lemons (I
also like to use colored peppers) to the cocktail table for added
color. Find two pillows that DO match and place them on the chairs
in front of the window to tie the room together. If you do not have
matching pillows, take two unmatching pillows and wrap matching
pillow cases around the pills and knot in the center with a piece of
ribbon. This is an easy formula to pull together a room which works
in every bedroom and common area in the home.
If you do not have a window to showcase,
you may use a blank wall and situate the furniture as indicated
above, adding two or three framed prints between the chairs and
slightly overlapping the seating space to bring the eye toward the
seating venue.
For more staging ideas, please click here
for Part II of this series Staging a Home for Sale – 10 More
Ideas You CAN Use - Part II
Michael Trust http://www.michaeltrustrealty.com/ is a native Angeleno. Born, raised, and educated in Los
Angeles, and a homeowner himself, Michael is familiar with the
challenges of buying, selling and owning real estate in the Greater
Los Angeles area.
His background is unusual in Realtor®
circles. With a baccalaureate degree from California State
University, Long Beach, and a Master’s Degree in Management from the
University of Southern California (USC), and 15 years of corporate
management experience in Fortune 500 type organizations, including
responsibility for projects of up to $1 billion, he can help you
look at your real estate transaction from a broader business
perspective. Michael handles both residential and commercial
properties.
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