<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title><![CDATA[Home Staging for Buffalo and WNY | The Home Staging Source - Articles]]></title><description><![CDATA[Home Staging for Buffalo and WNY | The Home Staging Source - Articles]]></description><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/</link><copyright>Copyright Home Staging for Buffalo and WNY | The Home Staging Source</copyright><generator>sNews</generator><item><title><![CDATA[When Trying to Sell a Home, Set the Stage For Success]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
    Adding artwork, furniture, rugs maximizes appeal    
(by By Dave Carpenter - 
ASSOCIATED PRESS)  
  
  Hiring a decorating and marketing specialist to help sell a house might sound like a frivolous cost to homeowners desperate to salvage every dollar in a fallen market.  

  A quality house at a fair price will sell itself, they figure. Paying a professional stager to rearrange or bring in new furniture, paint the walls neutral colors and hang different pictures surely couldn’t be worth a four-figure fee, the thinking goes.  

  Or could it?  

  Real estate professionals insist staging makes a big difference in how quickly a home sells, which can mean a higher sale price, and cite their own figures that show it.  

  Patrick McLaughlin had such a poor impression of a vacant house he visited at an open house on Long Island that he told his broker friend it would never sell — it felt cold and uninviting. Then he went back after a professional had staged it and ended up buying it.   

  “They had artwork, furniture, sofas, rugs. It added a great deal of warmth to the property,” says McLaughlin, himself a broker in Sag Harbor.  

  More sellers have been turning to staging to make their properties stand out in a market packed with competing houses.  

  Margaret Gehr, who stages homes in the Chicago suburbs through her business Re-Arrange It Interiors, and her staff staged a home for the Associated Press. She discussed the growing practice in an interview:  

  Q: What exactly is home staging?  

  A: It’s the act of preparing and showcasing a home for sale. Preparing involves cleaning, decluttering, updating and repairing, while showcasing is the process of arranging furniture, accessories, art and light. The real estate agent, the homeowner and the stager work together as a team and decide what needs to be done to present the home on the marketplace.  

  Staging is all marketing — that’s all it is. It’s a tool that’s no different than what someone might use to sell a box of cereal.  

  Q: Shouldn’t home shoppers be able to look at an unstaged house and visualize themselves there?  

  A: They should. But statistics from the National Association of Realtors show that only 10 percent of buyers can see past what is in front of them. It’s just natural for people to react to color, react to “stuff.”  

  Q: Why is staging considered more important now?  

  A: It’s crucial in this market because there are just so many options for buyers to choose from. You need to be different, you need to add extra value to your home. It used to be that if you were buying a home you might look at four or five homes before you made your decision. Now an average buyer might look at 35, 50 homes.  

  A: It’s crucial in this market because there are just so many options for buyers to choose from. You need to be different, you need to add extra value to your home. It used to be that if you were buying a home you might look at four or five homes before you made your decision. Now an average buyer might look at 35, 50 homes.  

  Q: How much does a consultation cost?  

  A: A comprehensive home staging consultation starts at $150 and goes up to about $350 nationwide. That consists of a walk through the property that will provide a homeowner with a to-do list — a detailed list of visual repairs, what they can do from fence to curb to get the most money and sell the fastest. We identify what should stay and what should go.  

  Q: What about the costs of staging itself?  

  A: For an occupied home, working with what the homeowners own in an average-sized house, it would start at about $750 and average maybe $1,000 to $1,500. With enhancement packages, where we supplement with furniture and trade some pieces out, that would start at about $1,500 and go up to about $2,500.  

  To fully furnish a vacant home would start at $2,500 and the average home would probably cost $3,000 to $4,000.  

  Q: What’s the difference between staging and decorating a home?  

  A: The biggest difference is that decorating is an extension of the things we love — our colors, our style, all our personality — whereas in staging we return the focus back to the property. We’re highlighting the features of the home, we’re complimenting the architecture of the home. We want the potential buyer to come in and notice the beautiful windows or the fireplaces, not necessarily whatever color or style of furniture might be in the home.  

  Q: Do you stage every room? A: No. It isn’t really necessary.  

  We usually just stage the rooms where the buying decisions are made, and typically that’s on the first floor. We go for a model home sort of look. So, a lot of lifestyle elements to help buyers see what it’s like to live in the house.  


  Published: May 2, 2010  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/when-trying-to-sell-a-home-set-the-stage-for-success/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/when-trying-to-sell-a-home-set-the-stage-for-success/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[Springville Home Stager Provides Assistance to Homeowners Preparing to Sell]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
    Springville Home Stager provides assistance to homeowners preparing to sell    
(by Jessie Owen - Springville Journal)  
  
  A rising trend in the real estate industry is home staging: preparing a home to be sold.  

  Ellen Krzemien of Springville, owner of The Home Staging Source, knows first hand what it takes to impress perspective home buyers.  

  “I’ve been staging the homes of my friends and family for as long as I can remember,” Krzemien said. Four years ago she decided to turn her passion into a business and took a three-week training course in Chicago with Barb Schwartz of Staged Homes, who, according to Krzemien, “owns the only registered trademark in the Staging industry.” Now having built her business up, Krzemien, an Accredited Staging Professional, services much of Western New York.  

  “Eight out of 10 people look online when they are preparing to buy a home,” Krzemien said. “You would be surprised what pictures you’ll see on the internet of homes for sale - dishes in the sink, laundry everywhere.” That is where Home Staging comes in.  

  “I always stress two things,” Krzemien says: “paint and packing.” She says it’s important to neutralize a home before selling it; she has homeowners take down personal pictures, tone down wild or busy paint and wallpaper and remove the personal taste of the decor. “The goal is to depersonalize and effectively make the house look like a model home,” she said. “You want it to appeal to every gender and age.”   

  Krzemien urges homeowners to put away the clutter before showing their home. “I tell them, you’ll have to pack sooner or later. Now we’re just killing two birds with one stone.” A buyer should be looking at the house and its features instead of at the seller’s belongings. “I cringe when I see a beautiful fireplace in a room and the furniture is all centered around the TV,” Krzemien said. In cases like this, she will have the homeowner rearrange the furniture to frame the fireplace as a focal point.  

  Whether she is staging an empty home or one that is still lived in, Krzemien will sometimes bring in pieces from her own inventory of home decor, including artwork, greenery, bedding, lighting and accent pieces, to accentuate the features of the house. “I also do a lot of reworking what they already own,” she said, reiterating that the goal is always to simplify, keeping clean lines with current colors and accessories that accentuate the home.  

  Many different packages are available on Krzemien’s Web site, ranging from simple consultations to full vacant home staging.  

  “When I am first called in to stage a house, I walk through with my camera like I’m a potential buyer,” Krzemien says. Then she goes back to her office and reviews the photos and prepares a report, if requested by the seller. Most occupied homes take just one to two days to be staged, especially if the homeowner helps with the work.  

  More than 95 percent of homes staged by ASP stagers sell, on average, within 37 days. That’s opposed to homes that have not been staged, which ASP Home Staging says take about 212 days to sell.  

  Krzemien gets a lot of her business by word-of-mouth, but she said that she has visited many real estate offices in the area and also gets business from them. “I can be the bad guy,” she says. “I can go into a person’s house and tell them what about it doesn’t appeal to buyers.” But she stresses that she and the seller have the same goal: “To sell the house in the shortest amount of time for the most money possible.”  

  While homeowners can choose when to utilize a home stager, Krzemien prefers to be brought in before the home goes up for sale. “It’s hard to generate excitement about a house that’s been on the market for a while,” she says.  

  Krzemien stages businesses as well as houses and also does move-in staging, helping new buyers unpack and set up their new home.  

  Why should sellers bring in a professional Home Stager instead of doing the job themselves? Krzemien says that homeowners often find it difficult to detach themselves from their belongings and surroundings. “It is easier for someone to come in with a fresh eye,” she says. “We’re making the home become a product, to have it stand out from the competition.”  

  Krzemien can be contacted at 913-0626 or by e-mail at Ellen@thehomestagingsource.com. Visit her Web site at www.thehomestagingsource.com.  


  Published: April 1, 2010  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/springville-home-stager-provides-assistance-to-homeowners-preparing-to-sell/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/springville-home-stager-provides-assistance-to-homeowners-preparing-to-sell/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[Visual Nature of the Internet]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
    The Visual Nature of the Internet Has Home Owners More Attuned to Aesthetics    
(by Erica Christoffer - REALTOR Magazine)  
  Two professions greatly benefiting from the Internet’s ability to help connect people visually are interior designers and home stagers.  

  First, let’s clarify: Interior design and home staging are two very distinct industries. As Jennie Norris, president of the International Association of Home Staging Professionals, points out: “Staging is all about depersonalizing a house and decorating and interior design are about personalizing a house.”  

  When home stagers work with a seller, they are considering elements that appeal to a broad audience. “It’s not about the seller at all. It is about presenting a product to the market (the house) and ensuring it is appealing to the buyer,” says Norris.  

  Both trades use design theories to accomplish different goals. But they do share the common bond of visualizing what a home could be – something home owners have grown attuned to with online accessibility and the rise of reality television shows.  

  “The world, in some ways because of the Internet, has gotten smaller and smaller,” says staging expert Barb Schwartz. “People are very educated and will do their research. The public is pretty darn smart when it comes to selling their home."  

  Schwartz founded StagedHomes.com, the Staging University, and the International Association of Home Staging Professionals (IAHSP) and created the Accredited Staging Professional (ASP) designation. When she started out speaking to real estate professionals and teaching courses in the 1980s, it was the pre-Internet era, but her ideas garnered attention.  

  “When you have something that is of great value – with or without the Internet – word will spread,” Schwartz says.  

  Yet, because of the Internet’s visual tendencies, and because the Internet is often the first stop for home buyers, Schwartz suggests that home staging is needed and desired today more than ever.  

  Poor quality or dark images, and photos of empty rooms won’t cut it. As Schwartz says, home buyers will click on to the next home if something isn’t attractive.  

  “The Internet makes everything instantly accessible, including information on home staging,” says Norris. “A Web site or online portfolio is critical for our success as we are a visual business and being able to be found online with a basic internet search is the best way we can use the Internet.”  

  James Charles, an interior designer, founded DesignerAtHOME.com with accessibility and the savvy home owner in mind. “The Internet has changed our ideology and how we do commerce,” says Charles.  

  DesignerAtHOME.com is a bit of an anomaly in that it offers both professional redesign services as well as home staging options. The home owner provides room specification, such as photos, measurements, and style preferences. Then, designers create a customized color board depicting suggested ideas, including paints, fabrics, furniture, and room layout. Charles gives his final approval, and the package is sent to the home owner with step-by-step instructions and vendor recommendations.  

  “We’ve democratized the world of design,” Charles says.  

  Norris says the Internet has been a huge asset in bringing home staging into the mainstream.  

  “Sites such as Facebook, Twitter, blog sites and professional networking sites such as LinkedIn are wonderful forums where a home stager can share information about their business for free, and capture additional clientele and exposure,” she says.  

  But the Internet alone does not equal success, even for the visually-dependent fields.  

  “It might create interest and prompt the public to call, but it is our interpersonal skills and relationship development that convinces a person to hire us,” says Norris, who stresses that in the real estate business, human interactions are still key.  

  “People, in the end, will always remember the quality of a service,” says Schwartz.  

  Published: September 3, 2009  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/visual-nature-of-the-internet/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/visual-nature-of-the-internet/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[Staging High End]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
    Staging a high-end home for sale requires a different kind of makeover    
(by BY JAMES H. BURNETT III
JBURNETT@MIAMIHERALD.COM)  
  The crashing economy and crumbling real estate market have had an unexpected side effect: an emergence of the frugal rich who no longer buy just because, but demand to visualize themselves in a palace before they plunk down the cash.  

  For most people trying to sell their house, that visualization has always meant ``staging'' -- the strategic placement of a borrowed La-Z-Boy chair, the shifting of a floral arrangement, the hanging of that painting that has gathered dust in the garage for 10 years.  

  High-end staging, or ``hyper-staging,'' as some South Florida experts have taken to calling it, is another thing altogether.  

  We're talking custom-made light fixtures the size of a small car, hundreds of color-coded books placed in the home's library to stimulate a buyer's visual cortex, the removal of a kitchen wall, and the placement of a temporary wall in a bedroom, to name a few changes.  

  ``I would say that we've gotten two dozen requests for this hyper-staging over the past couple of years,'' said Giselle Loor of Hollywood-based B&G Design. ``The way it started was, homeowners and their sales agents began asking us for our opinion, `Why won't this house sell.' And after we studied the market and even social factors we figured out that it was about buyers in all income categories being cautious.''  

  Until recently, many high-end home buyers were not as discriminating as the average home buyer, says Barb Schwarz, founder of Staged Homes, a sort of staging university for home decorators and related professionals in California.  

  Rather than needing to ``see themselves in a home'' to be convinced, they simply needed to be convinced that the home -- the structure and the grounds -- and the surrounding community were high quality, she said./p> 

  The recession has made many of those buyers more cautious.  

  Alex Bruno, a Remax agent and historic-home and staging expert, agrees that the failing economy has made staging necessary for top-flight houses.  

  ``It's strange, but it's true,'' Bruno says. ``People with money to spare are not so carefree. I've found it with many of my listings over the past couple of years. And now, when I list a higher-priced house, I don't even wait to see if its size and beauty can sell it anymore. I just automatically stage it, unless it is already well-appointed.''  

  Bruno says his first sign that high-end home sales were no longer a given was when he listed the Young mansion, the 7,200-square-foot East Hollywood home built in 1925 by Hollywood city founder Joseph W. Young, in mid-2008.  

  ``That house came with so much history, so many stories. It's on three lots. And the structure itself is just beautiful,'' Bruno says. ``And at one time, someone who could afford to pay $2 million to $4 million for a home would have just snapped it up, because of its location. That didn't happen with this house.''  

  Indeed, the Young mansion hasn't had any decent offers until recently, Bruno says.  

  The difference?  

  ``In my mind, the difference came after we changed the look of the inside of the house to suit a new kind of high-end buyer,'' he says. ``Yes, I mean a more careful buyer. But I'm also talking a more modern buyer who will accept that a home is well-built and therefore spend less time questioning the structure and more time trying to see if it feels right. And if people are going to feel right in a house, it has to look like a place where they would live.''  

  The mansion got new window treatments, less stodgy living room furniture, and bed dressings that emphasized comfort over style.  

  ``It is true that hyper-staging often involves more expensive changes,'' Bruno says, ``but not always. Sometimes it is the simple things you have to convince a high-end homeowner that he needs to do.  

  ``But even if the price of the staging items isn't substantially higher, it still tends to cost more than traditional staging because you're doing more. Suddenly, two sets of drapes and an area rug aren't enough. You're outfitting five or six bedrooms, four or five bathrooms, a pool house, and so on.''  

  According to Debra DiMare, host of In a Fix, a home remodeling show on The Learning Channel, ``hyper-staging involves not just furniture and art. If necessary, you alter the landscape of the house itself. This is a huge trend right now. Often you'll find the architectural changes are temporary.''  

  When Loor and her partner Brett Sugerman were called in to stage Bruce Weiner's empty 7,500-square-foot mansion on Indian Creek Island, near Miami Beach, much of what they did involved architectural changes.  

  ``We literally moved walls,'' Sugerman says. A wall separating the kitchen from the living room was removed as part of the hyper-staging. Sugerman and Loor also turned a walk-in wine closet into a bar, complete with stools and countertop.  

  A fireplace in another sitting room that jutted out from a bland yellow wall was resurfaced in hand-carved marble.  

  And a library/home office, with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves that in past years would have impressed on their own, featured several hundred new books purchased by B&G.  

  ``Notice they're color-coded,'' Loor said of the books. ``You think it's not a big deal. But again, our research shows that the variety of colors has a psychological impact and gives an impression to the viewer that the books all serve a categorical purpose. It makes the library look well-used and important.''  

  Weiner, president of condominium builder Turnberry Associates, put the $15 million home up for sale two years ago. When the house had not sold a year later, he called in B&G. Within the past few weeks, Weiner has finally begun getting offers.  

  Weiner admits he ``didn't get it'' at first, but insists there is a clear before and after with his Indian Creek home.  

  ``I've worked with B&G to have homes decorated,'' Weiner says. ``But I've never really had to do anything to a house to sell it. Frankly, I was skeptical of the whole notion. But I have to say that I didn't even get a nibble for more than a year. When I heard about this intense form of staging, I threw my hands up and told them to go for it. Since they've completed their re-working of my house I've gotten several offers -- not `the' offer I'm looking for. But they're getting better!''  

  Schwarz, of Staged Homes, says she has been urging high-end homeowners to ``lose the pride'' over the past year or two ``so that they can keep up.''  

  ``The problem,'' Schwarz says, ``is that many of them got spoiled. It's sort of like the prom queen who thinks she's the better person because she's the prettier person. You must have substance, too. And I've been telling these types of clients that substance means giving prospective buyers something to look at, the same as middle-class families have been doing for years.''  

  Schwarz advises clients in high-end homes to study their potential buyers and stage accordingly.  

  ``There is no one-size fits all,'' she says. ``You may find a trend of home buyers in your area who are looking for a million-dollar home and want that home to feel old, and artistic, museum-like. Or you may find that your wealthy buyers are younger, more energetic, and more carefree. If it's the latter, you stage with bright, colorful art, oversized furniture, pieces that won't cause your guests to worry they'll break 'em.''  

  Even in today's market, staged homes tend to sell almost 150 days sooner than non-staged homes, Schwarz says.  

  ``The bottom line is if you have the kind of money that you can afford a mansion or a McMansion, then you can afford to alter its look to make the next person coming along feel at home,'' she says.  

  Published: 7/26/09  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/staging-high-end/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/staging-high-end/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[Home Staging Can Aid in Boosting Sales]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
    Home staging can aid in boosting sales    
(By Michael Levensohn)  
  As a newly single mom of "three under 3," Beth Reay worried about
getting her home ready to sell. "I feel like I'm constantly being pulled in three directions," Reay said. Reay turned to a home stager for help.  

  She hired Christine Spitale of Sunflower Staging at the urging of her aunt. The aunt's home in Nyack had been on the market for a year, but sold quickly after Spitale staged it.  

  Spitale toured Reay's Washingtonville ranch and wrote up a 10-page report full of recommendations, from paint colors and cleaning products to a reminder to put toilet seats down before showings.  

  Reay began working through the list. She had plenty of help. Her father flew in for a week and renovated the bathrooms. Her brother and sister painted.  

  "We're trying to do everything without spending too much money," Spitale explained. "It didn't cost them that much, except a lot of hard work and aggravation."  

  Home staging is, at bottom, the opposite of decorating, said Barb Schwarz, who developed the practice in the 1970s.  

  "Decorating is personalizing the space. Staging is depersonalizing," said Schwarz, CEO of the International Association of Home Staging Professionals and author of several books.  

  Staging services can cost anywhere from a couple of hundred to a couple of thousand dollars. The process typically focuses on removing clutter, introducing neutral colors and creating a setting that will entice buyers.  

  "Buyers are not stupid, and even if they don't think about it consciously, they're going to be drawn to the house where the scene is set," Schwarz said.  

  The practice is most vital during a down market, when sellers must make their homes stand out from a crowded field that includes foreclosures and short sales.  

  Studies by Schwarz's organization and other trade groups suggest that staged homes typically sell in less than half as much time as their unstaged counterparts.  

  "Two things sell a house. One thing is price, and the other is staging," Schwarz said. "You've got to be staged, or you're going to sit."  

  Hundreds of decisions go into the staging of a home. One of the most basic is this: What does a family do with all of its stuff?  

  Some sellers rent a storage unit and say goodbye to their knickknacks for six months. A seller who is moving out before selling might do the opposite, and rent furniture and accessories so that the home doesn't appear empty, and the seller desperate.  

  Beth Reay's staging was simplified by the fact that she and the kids would be moving out before putting the home on the market, but would be staying with family.  

  They were able to take personal belongings with them, but leave behind furniture and a few items that fit into the staging.  

  In two months on the market, the home has received about a dozen showings, and the response to the staging has been overwhelmingly positive, said listing agent Debra Piccolomo of Keller Williams Hudson Valley Realty.  

  Reay received one offer so far, but wasn't able to reach an agreement.  

  mlevensohn@th-record.com  

  Published: July 13, 2009  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/home-staging-can-aid-in-boosting-sales/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/home-staging-can-aid-in-boosting-sales/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[Staged to Sell]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
    Staging Homes for Maximum Sales Potential    
(by Marcus A. Wally - Wisconsin Real Estate Magazine)  
  Today, REALTORS® are tasked with so much more than showing properties and negotiating contracts. We are responsible for every detail in order to ultimately close on a property. From awareness of market conditions to our ability to help our sellers face reality about market values, a REALTORS®’ job is seldom done!  

  More than ever we are responsible for insuring that all the pieces of the real estate puzzle fit together perfectly. And for some, natural talents in decorating, color choices, furniture placement, discarding of items, etc., are part of their value package.  

  What we do know is today, more than ever, buyers rely on the Internet to view our listings prior to making an appointment to physically see the home. Insuring that a property stands out is critical. These buyers use the Internet to narrow their choices, so creativity combined with a few accessories, a little reorganization, and ruthless paring can make a property stand out in today’s slower markets. The subject of staging comes to mind.  

  Even in a fast-paced market, staging can pay off. A number of surveys have proven that staging can increase a sales price by several thousand dollars. Cleaning and decluttering can add several thousand dollars to the final price as well. Like the offering of a home warranty, staged homes sell for more than non-staged homes. And the good news is that staging does not have to cost a fortune. The comparably low cost of staging can net big rewards.  

  So what is “staging” anyway? Staging is increasing the perceived value of a home by “showcasing” the space to allow potential homebuyers to mentally move in. Staging is a subtle art that involves creativity and some muscle. The point of focus is to emphasize the property and not the owner’s personal items.  

  When a property is “staged” all clutter is removed. In order for a property to sell quickly and for top dollar, an environment of neutrality should be the focus. De-personalizing is the key here. And creating a space that is harmonious and spacious is the objective. The buyers must be able to picture themselves living in the home, and that is difficult to do when family photos, grand art collections, and other personal effects capture their attention.  

  Think of staging like detailing a car. A smart auto seller would pay to have the car immaculately cleaned and polished prior to selling it. This adds value to the car and that is exactly what staging does for a property. In fact, the investment in staging can prove to be substantially less than the first price reduction.  

  We’ve all heard that first impressions are lasting impressions, so it is our responsibility to insure that our listings are the ones remembered. Perhaps a fresh coat of paint is needed on a weather-beaten front door. Go ahead and remove all those old nails that have been used to hang the holiday wreaths.  

  The driveway and sidewalks should be pressure washed to remove grime, stains and debris. Insure that trees are pruned, fresh mulch/straw is placed in flowerbeds and that the home is inviting. Odors from pets, cooking, strong scented candles, etc., should also be eliminated.  

  On the inside, one of the most important things you can do is to start removing all items that are not absolutely necessary for daily life while the home is for sale. What I like to share with my sellers is that “since you are planning on moving anyway, you might as well start boxing things up.” If needed, I may recommend that my sellers go ahead and rent a storage unit and take these excessive items off site. Creating spacious living areas is our goal.  

  For vacant homes, simple furnishings and accessories create a homier environment. Sometimes it is difficult for buyers to imagine their furniture in vacant spaces. Hence, the reason builders today use fully furnished models to sell their products. Be careful here if you are considering renting furniture as monthly rental fees can be expensive. Perhaps purchasing and then reselling might be a good alternative. Yard sales, or even donating and receiving a charitable tax deduction are options.  

  As top-notch REALTORS®, we should have our sellers fix any visible problems that might be a red flag for potential buyers. Suggest that our sellers consider re-painting public rooms that garner a lot of a buyer’s attention (kitchen, dining room and living room). When showing the homes, we must turn on every light in the house and tune all radios in the home to the same classical music station. A helpful hint is to ask the owner to refrain from smoking inside the home and from doing any cooking that would leave a smell.  

  So how does one go about choosing a stager? Like our business, a solid referral is your best choice. Find someone who has recently worked with a stager and question them about their experience. Then interview the stager yourself. Ask lots of questions to determine how he or she works and what the cost is. Just as we have a listing presentation, top-notch stagers will have a formal presentation to share.  

  The Internet is also a good resource for doing homework prior to making a selection. Explore www.stagedhomes.com, which is the Web site for Accredited Staging Professionals (ASP), where a regional list is available for consulting. There is also an International Association of Home Staging Professionals (IAHSP.com), which also provides stagers by region. Like REALTORS®, ASPs maintain a code of ethics and should have sound business practices and proper insurance. A continuing education program also offers ASPs the opportunity to increase their knowledge by earning different levels of accreditation, such as an ASP Master.  

  The stager should pass your interview, just as our buyers and sellers interview us for our jobs. Steer clear of part-timers or those practicing staging as a hobby. Find out if the stager works alone or has a team. Ask for references so that you can do a thorough background check. Find out if the stager has his or her own inventory or will be renting furniture. Stagers who own their own stock of furniture and accessories should offer you a tighter quote.  

  Don’t overlook personalities. You will be working with these stagers during various parts of the transaction, so a good working relationship benefits both parties. Don’t just make a decision based on money because stagers have different styles, work ethics and temperaments.  

  Lastly, since we function today in a global environment, we must keep in mind that staging can also involve feng shui. Feng shui is the ancient Chinese practice of placement and arrangement of space to achieve harmony with the environment. Feng shui literally translates as “wind-water.”  

  The practice of this art involves a number of things, including the placement of furniture. Feng shui is also defined as the belief in prosperity, harmony and peace. The way a bed is placed in a room, the arrangement and use of mirrors, the direction a property faces, the numerical street address – all could all be either welcoming or not … could be consider lucky or unlucky … could be desirable or undesirable. Many buyers today consult a feng shui expert when buying a home, so keeping this in mind can add value to the staging process for your listing.  

  With all this in mind when staging your next listing we say … break a leg!  

  Marcus A. Wally, MBA, GRI, CIPS, AHWD, RSPS, TRC, is an active Florida REALTOR® in St. Augustine, Florida – “OUR NATION’S OLDEST CITY.” Marcus is the founder and broker of NEW WORLD REALTY, which manages coaching and facilitation of education classes around the world. He has an MBA from the University of North Florida in Jacksonville. Marcus entered the real estate profession in 1991. He is a NAR faculty member for the Certified International Property Specialist (CIPS) program, and is a member of the AT HOME WITH DIVERSITY faculty. Marcus can be reached at 904-669-1081 or by e-mail at mwally@cbwwcorp.com.  

  Published: 7/27/2007  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/staged-to-sell/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/staged-to-sell/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[Pros Make a House Look Like Home To Lure Buyers]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
(by Karen Goldberg Goff  - The Washington Times)  
  Caroline Carter has stacks and stacks of plates that will never hold food, beds that won't be slept in and books that no one is going to read.  

  All these accouterments are necessary to sell a house these days. Ms. Carter is president of Done in a Day Inc. home staging. In the current economy of sagging businesses and dragging home sales, home stagers like Ms. Carter are doing a booming business.  

  Stagers are different from interior decorators, who specialize in making your home suit your tastes. A home stager neutralizes and accessorizes a home for sale to appeal to everyone's taste. Stagers give home sellers tips on which personal items to put away, what to fix and how to make their lived-in home look as it would if, well, no one lived there.  

  If the relationship works out, it could mean the difference between selling your house and having it linger on the market. The National Association of Realtors says a staged home will sell 50 percent faster than one that is not staged. Home staging can run anywhere from a couple hundred dollars for a consultation that will give you ideas you can do yourself up to many thousands for a room-by-room design plan with furniture and accessories.  

  If you already have moved to a new home, stagers can bring in furniture, art, throw pillows - whatever the space needs to look less empty and more defined. They can bring definition to undefined spaces, too - making a nook say "office" with a desk and bookshelves or a breakfast room have meaning with a table and coffee canisters.  

  "The way you live in a house and the way you market it are two different things," says Barbara Schwarz, founder of the International Association of Home Staging Professionals.  

  "These days, to get top dollar, you have to put away and rearrange," she says. "In a hot market, you would have 10 houses for sale and they all would sell. In a slower market, you may have 100 houses for sale and only 10 will sell. The ninety that don't probably weren't staged."  

  Granted, it is unlikely that anyone searching for a home chooses one because of the fluffy towels or an interesting ottoman. There are intangible factors, though, that catch a potential buyer's eye and heart. If Ms. Carter thinks faux ebony candlesticks will do the trick, she will go to her 6,000-square-foot warehouse of stuff to find them.  

  "Staging is both physical and psychological," says Ms. Carter, who says her sales have doubled every year since she started her company four years ago.  

  When Ms. Schwarz started the IAHSP, which offers Accredited Staging Professional training and certification, in 2000, she was the only member. Membership has increased to about 2,500, she says. That doesn't include any number of Realtors and stagers who are not members of the association.  

  Also boosting the profession are a number of television shows on the topic. HGTV's "Designed to Sell" and "The Stagers" have pulled phrases such as "curb appeal" and "room's focal point" into the vernacular.  

  Dorothy LaChapelle had staging shows in mind when she called Preferred Staging LLC before putting her Herndon rambler on the market over the summer.  

  "My house was empty," she says. "I know that houses sell better with furniture. People like to see what rooms will look like."  

  Monica Murphy of Preferred Staging, based in Potomac Falls, Va., brought in furniture, artwork, even soft throw blankets for the sofa, which really made a difference, Ms. LaChapelle says. Her house went to settlement two weeks ago.  

  "I do think staging made a difference," she says.  

  Ms. Murphy says most people don't really "see" a room unless there is something in it.  

  "They need something there to measure it for them," she says, referring to the dining room set or reading lamp that can give that definition. "They just see a big, vacant room. Staging creates a welcome environment."  

  Both Ms. Murphy and Ms. Carter say staging is not just for the glut of McMansions for sale. They have staged one-bedroom apartments as well as elegant estates.  

  In fact, staging sometimes makes the difference in the lower-priced properties, Ms. Murphy says. A prospective home buyer looking at 20 boxy and nearly identical condominiums may remember yours because of the retro drapes or the objets d'art the stager added.  

  Ms. Carter says she tries to envision who might be looking at the property before she makes a design plan. A two-bedroom condo in Clarendon could be on the list of 30-year-old newlyweds; they might see themselves with mod chairs and a glass-topped table.  

  Move-up buyers with children looking at a Colonial in Rockville might go for more traditional decor with an emphasis on family space - she even has children's books to fill up the shelves in the fourth bedroom.  

  Sometimes projects call for way more than Ms. Carter's library of 2,000 throw pillows can handle. Done in a Day was asked to stage a house in Northwest Washington where Richard and Pat Nixon lived before the White House. The eight-bedroom home, priced at $4.9 million, sat on the market for nine months last year before it was staged.  

  "The owners had kept Pat Nixon's original cabinets and pink bathrooms," Ms. Carter says.  After $41,000 worth of staging (and nearly as much spent on renovations), the Tudor-style home - with decor that looked toward the future for a young family rather than back to the Eisenhower era - was under contract within a month.  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/pros-make-a-house-look-like-home-to-lure-buyers/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/pros-make-a-house-look-like-home-to-lure-buyers/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[The Home Stage Cheat Sheet]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
    6 Easy Ways to Make Your Property More Appealing to Buyers    
(by Luke Mullins - US News and World Report)  
  Faced with a massive glut of unsold homes, many would-be sellers are struggling to make their properties stand out in today's downtrodden real estate market. But while the economic head winds are beyond property owners' control, author Barb Schwarz says they can dramatically improve their chances of making a sale by devoting attention to an often-overlooked corner of real estate marketing: home staging.  

  Schwarz, the CEO of StagedHomes.com, was a pioneer in home staging back in the early 1970s and has used the techniques to sell properties ever since. "The goal [of home staging] is for the buyer to mentally move in," Schwarz says. "If they cannot mentally feel and see themselves living here, you've lost them." Schwarz offers six simple tips to help home sellers better position themselves in a sluggish market.  

    Get them inside.   The first thing a prospective buyer notices about a home is not the living room but the front yard. "A lot of people think staging is the inside only," Schwarz says. "[But] we've got to stage the outside to get them inside." So cut the grass, trim the hedges, rake those leaves, sweep the sidewalks, and power-wash the driveway. And make sure you don't have too many potted plants scattered around the property. "Nothing dead," Schwarz says. "You'd be amazed how many people have dead plants in their yards."  

    Pretend you're camping.   Schwarz says a cluttered room will appear too small to buyers. "Clutter eats equity," she says. Schwarz tells homeowners to go through each room of the house and divide their belongings into two piles: "keep" and "give up." Items in the "keep" pile will be used to stage the room, while those in the "give up" pile should be stored elsewhere. "Pretend you are camping," she says. "When you go camping, you are not taking all those books, right?"  

  The decluttered rooms may appear bare to the seller, but the buyer won't think so. "We are not selling your things.... We are selling the space," Schwarz says. "And buyers cannot visualize when there is too much [stuff] in the room." Decluttering a home's outdoor spaces is important, too, she says.  

    Balance hard and soft surfaces.   When staging a particular room, it's essential to have a good balance of hard surfaces, such as a coffee-table top, and soft surfaces, like a carpet, Schwarz says. For example, a room with a cushy, 7-foot-long sofa, a love seat, and four La-Z-Boy recliners has too many soft surfaces and not enough hard surfaces. "The room is sinking," she says. "It's all too heavy." Instead, consider getting rid of the La-Z-Boys and the love seat, replacing them with two wingback chairs. "If you have hardwood floors but no rugs, it's too hard," Schwarz says. "So you want to add a rug."  

    Work in ones or threes.   Schwarz recommends arranging items on top of hard surfaces in ones or threes.  

  You would place three items—say, a lamp, a plant, and a book—on top of a larger hard surface, like an end table. "You take away the plant and the book, it's too bare," she says. "[But if] you put 10 things on it, it's overdone." The three items should be closely grouped together in a triangle shape. "I draw a triangle for my clients," Schwarz says. "I say, 'Here is the end table—let's superimpose a triangle on top of it.' " For hard surfaces with less area, however, a single item will do.  

    Decide from the doorway.   Since would-be buyers will get their first impression of each room from the doorway, homeowners should use that perspective to judge their staging work. "Do your work, go back to the doorway. Do some more, go back to the doorway," Schwarz says. That way, you'll be better able to ensure that each room appeals to buyers.  

    Make your place "Q-Tip clean."   A properly staged home should be immaculate—"Q-Tip clean," as Schwarz puts it. "I mean Q-Tips getting dead flies out of your windowsill [and] going around the bottom of your toilet on the floor," she says. The purpose of ensuring the house is spotless is more than simply making it presentable. If a home is unkempt, a buyer will wonder what other, less visible problems may come with the property, Schwarz says. "They'll say, 'Gosh, if they live like this, what don't they take care of that I can't see?'"  
]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/the-home-stage-cheat-sheet/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/the-home-stage-cheat-sheet/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[Housing: Stage Your Home For A Bigger Sale]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
    Make Your Home Less Personal to Attract Buyers    
(by ABC Good Morning America)  
  In many parts of the country, the red-hot housing market is cooling off. So, if you're looking to sell your house, some experts believe "staging" is more important than ever. The idea behind staging is to spruce up your house to make it look less like home, and more like what a prospective buyer wants to see.  

  "Staging is not decorating," said Barb Schwartz, founder of Associated Staging Professionals and author of "Home Staging: The Winning Way to Sell Your House for More Money." "Decorating is personalizing. Staging is de-personalizing."  

  In the hope of getting the most money for their modest two-story, three-bedroom home in Watertown, a middle-class Boston suburb, Melissa and Will Skinner have decided to hire Thomas Holmes-LaFever and Kate Stenson-Lunt, who own a staging business in the Boston area called "Nuances." The Skinners have owned their home for just over three years and have put it on the market for $474,000.  

  The Nuances team has big plans for the Skinner home. They want to take away the area rug in the living room in order to showcase the hardwood floors. They plan to remove the personal photos from the fireplace and add some topiaries. The home office is crammed with books and clutter, and the bed needs to be made hotel-style.  

  "Would I have cleaned up the house before a potential buyer came in? Yes," said Melissa Skinner. "But would I have paid the same attention to detail and overall sort of 'wow factor?' No."  

  The staging is considered so valuable that the Skinners' realtor pays the $250 evaluation fee for every home they sell. The owners then decide if they want to pay the full fee, which typically runs between $500 and $3,000. But, the investment can be worth it, said Anita Shishmanian, a real estate agent for Century 21.  

  "They seem to get a bit of a payback on it," Shishmanian said. "For probably every $100 they spend, they make, appreciate $1,000."  

  The Skinners decide to go for the full treatment, so they check into a hotel for the night to let Nuances do their thing.  

  The following day, the Skinners are very pleased with the results. The guest bedroom no longer looks like a playroom. And with the treadmill gone and fewer books jamming the shelves, the office actually looks like an office. Meanwhile, the master bedroom looks like it belongs in a luxury hotel.  

  "It makes such an incredible difference," Melissa Skinner said. "I mean, I honestly didn't expect it to be this much of a difference. It's shocking."  

  The home now has the "wow factor," and that, Holmes-LaFever says, is the key to staging.  

  "When you buy a home it is emotional. It's not 'we don't want the … oh, I guess we could live here.' We want them to open the door and go," he said, sucking in his breath to demonstrate the excitement, "'I've got to live here. This is mine.'"  

  After all, you only have seconds to grab the buyer, Holmes-LaFever said.  

  "You have to grab them when they open the door," he said.  
]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/housing-stage-your-home-for-a-bigger-sale/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/housing-stage-your-home-for-a-bigger-sale/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[Sell Your Home with Décor Tweak]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
  By Coeli Carr    (New York Post - January 14, 2007) -- Ron and Jane Palmer put their four-bedroom home in Manalapan, N.J., on the market last June and there it stayed for three months with little traffic and no offers.  

  But then they decided to hire a new real estate agent who cut the asking price by about 1% from its original $475,000 and suggested they hire a "home stager" to set the house apart from others like it on the market.  

  "Within two weeks of our home staging we had several offers," said Ron Palmer. "It's now in contract."  

  Home staging, well established on the West Coast, is fast becoming the go-to-strategy for homeowners here on the East Coast who feel their homes are not getting the offers they should.  

  Home staging involves creating a space that will appeal to the broadest array of potential buyers. It's more about de-cluttering, cleaning and showcasing a property rather than decorating, which is a more personal statement.  

  The Palmers turned to Mariagrace Welsh, a home stager and owner of Home Stage Home in Lincroft, N.J.  

  During their consultation, Welsh told the couple to get rid of the carpets that concealed splendid hardwood floors, use paint to give the different parts of the home greater continuity, reposition some of the furniture and replace an aging kitchen floor with linoleum tiles.  

   "Everything she said made sense," said Palmer, who estimated it cost him about $2,000 to make the changes, excluding the cost of Welsh's consultation fee of $250. The house is under contract for $447,000.  

  "You become part of the house and can't see it any other way," said Jane Palmer, who realized buyers today want a more modern minimal look than her homey antiques-filled house showed. "Young people don't want a home to remind them of their parents' home."  

  Welsh says what often stuns clients are the dramatic results she gets from using items the sellers already own and how quickly the transformation can be made.  

  Welsh, an accredited staging professional, obtained her credentials through a formal course of study through StagedHomes.com.  

  Barb Schwarz, the company's founder and chief executive, and also author of "Home Staging: The Winning Way to Sell Your House for More Money" (Wiley, 2006), said that in 2006 up to 25 percent of homes that were sold were the result of home stagings.  

  Five years ago, it was less than 10 percent, she said.  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/sell-your-home-with-dcor-tweak/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/sell-your-home-with-dcor-tweak/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[Selling A House in a Buyers' Market]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
    Ray Martin Suggests Strategies Offered By Real Estate Pros    
(by CBS NEWS - the early show)  
    It certainly isn't easy, but there are definitely steps you can take to make it easier, and Early Show money maven Ray Martin spells them out in this column.    

  As the supply of homes for sale continues to grow throughout the U.S., hopes that the spring and summer selling season will see a rebound are dwindling. Many experts have declared that any meaningful rebound might begin next year. Home prices continue to decline in many areas, fueled by tight lending standards and a rising supply of houses on the market. It' been a long time since home sellers have faced these conditions -- in fact, many homeowners looking to sell are in uncharted waters.  

    Face the New Reality -- It's a Buyers' Market     

  Homeowners who want to sell have a choice: sell in the current market, or wait until later, when market conditions improve. Of course, the latter assumes they can wait. But if you are determined to sell, you need to forget about the real estate market of just a few years ago and face the new reality in many real regions -- it's a buyers' market, and you will be competing with a growing supply of motivated sellers to get buyers interested in your house.  

  Real estate professionals say that, when trying to sell your home in a buyers' market, the two most important factors, after location, are price and condition. I'll add flexibility. Buyers know real estate prices ran up far too much during the last several years of the real estate boom, and just because you may have paid too much for your home doesn't mean buyers think they should have to pay to bail you out. With this in mind, here are some of the strategies experienced realtors typically advise to help sell a house in a buyers' market:  

    Price It Right:   Real estate pros say the key to selling a house is to “price it right.” Set the price at what you can get, not what you think it's worth. The fact of a sellers market is that it doesn't matter what you or your realtor think your house is worth -- the only thing that matters is what a buyer is willing to pay. You don't want to over-price your house, because buyers ignore it and your listing will lose its freshness and appeal, not to mention the uncompensated effort of keeping the home spotless during the showings. Also, the “original listing price” and “current asking price” are on your home's Multiple Listing Service (MLS) listing; if you do not show some decline from the original offering price, some buyers will see it as a sign you have unreasonable expectations of what you can fetch for your home. Sellers fear pricing too low and leaving money on the table, but there is little danger of this. If a home is priced too low, far below the competition, you should receive multiple offers that will drive up the price to fair market value.  

    Research Local Market:   The best way to know if your home is priced fairly relative to comparable houses for sale is to compare your asking price to a comprehensive market analysis. This is the first step before you list your house. Get the listings of the houses in your area, and the price range. Look at the listing for every comparable home that is or was listed in your neighborhood over the past six months. Compare similar properties, make adjustments for locations, age, upgrades and lot sizes. and come up with a range of values. Also, get a list of the recent sales prices and the original listing prices of comparable houses in the area. You can track this down on web sites such as www.zillow.com , www.realtor.com, and/or ask a local realtor to do it for you.  
]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/selling-a-house-in-a-buyers-market/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/selling-a-house-in-a-buyers-market/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[Spring Into Home-Selling Action]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
  By Debra Alban    (CNN) -- Spring is the perfect time to sell a home. Families who want to move before the school year begins often look for new homes in the spring, and sellers jump at the chance to list their houses as soon as winter ends.  

  The outlook for the 2007 real estate market is mixed.  

  The National Association of Realtors expects sales of existing homes to remain essentially flat, declining a slight 0.6 percent from 6.48 million in 2006 to 6.44 million in 2007. New home sales are expected to fall about 10.4 percent, from 1.06 million in 2006 to 950,000 this year.  

  In January, when the Federal Reserve voted to keep interest rates steady, it cited "tentative signs of stabilization" in the housing market.  

  However, Merrill Lynch issued a statement suggesting that the market hasn't fully stabilized and could face another downturn.  

  "Now that oil prices and mortgage rates have stopped falling, we will be back lamenting the downturn in the housing market and its spreading effects on the economy in the second quarter," Merrill Lynch economist David Rosenberg wrote. "This story is far from over."  

  Even the Realtors association's chief economist, David Lereah, said unusual weather and subprime lending problems are "skewing home sales and clouding the picture."  

  "Lending problems in our nation's subprime marketplace are building, which could inhibit future housing activity and further dampen our forecast," Lereah said in a recent statement. "Even so, these problems are likely to be contained and not spill over into the prime mortgage market."  

  Whatever the forecast, houses are seldom able to sell themselves.  

  If sellers want to make top dollar, they need to take an honest, hard look at their home, leave unrealistic expectations behind and get it ready for sale. If they don't, they risk having their house on the market for many months with little buyer interest.  

  In Hawaii, for instance, unsuccessful sellers ignored rats nesting in their oven while their home was on the market, as Roger Hazard, home design expert for A&E television's "Sell This House," discovered. And while Hazard and his team had no problem helping a certified witch sell her home, they did have a problem with the dozens of brooms she kept around her house that had buyers stumbling.  

  To successfully market their homes, sellers need to "let go of the strings of attachment," said Barb Schwarz, CEO of Stagedhomes.com and author of "Home Staging: The Winning Way to Sell Your House for More Money." Otherwise, sellers think, "This is my home, I don't want to change anything," she said.  

    Curb appeal and Q-tips    

  Before buyers even open the door, they judge a home's exterior.  

  Sellers should get an outsider's perspective of the home by standing across the street, Schwarz said. They should ask, "How much of my house can I see? Is it overgrown? Is there a gutter hanging down? Is there a shutter coming down?"  

  A streamlined appearance with evenly cut grass and pressure-washed walks is key, she said. She urges sellers to give the front door a fresh coat of paint and add plants to either side.  

  Inside, cleaning may seem like an obvious and simple way to make a home look its best, but buyers often focus on blemishes homeowners overlook.  

  Schwarz recommends "Q-tip cleaning." A cotton swab wiped on forgotten surfaces, such as around toilets, faucets and light switches, can reveal dirt a homeowner may have missed.  

    Say goodbye to clutter    

  Homeowners often personalize their rooms with "things that make [them] feel good, but ... at the same time, camouflage the house," Hazard said.  

  Successful depersonalizing and clutter control means taking away 25 to 40 percent of the furnishings. This way, people can see what they're buying, Hazard said.  

  He also suggests removing any personal items on display that are smaller than a breadbox.  

  Consolidate clutter control and packing time by boxing items for the next home before putting the house on the market, Hazard said. Sellers can rent a storage unit for their packed belongings or use a room in the current house -- a space of secondary importance to the buyer, such as a child's room. Just be sure that the room stays neat, he added.  

    Highlight the positives    

  Staging, or merchandising, the home lets buyers see the best it has to offer.  

  When it comes to staging rooms for open houses, showcase them as they were originally intended, Schwarz said. If owners converted a dining room into an office, they should show it as a dining room.  

  "Buyers only know what they see, not what it's going to be," Schwarz said.  

  It's all about highlighting the positives and downplaying the negatives, Hazard said.  

  "We use color to highlight and to distract," he said. "If we have orange dated shag carpet, we'll try to pick a [paint] color that neutralizes it a little bit or tones it down."  

  Use white, creams and taupes to make rooms seem as large as possible, Schwarz said.  

  Using white sheets as drapes gives rooms a fresh and clean look, and hanging them close to the ceiling will make rooms appear taller, Hazard said.  

    Neutralizing nasty odors    

  Pet owners and smokers may have gotten used to the smell of their homes, but buyers haven't.  

  Simple sprays won't undo years of damage, so it may be necessary to remove or replace carpet where pets have had accidents, Hazard said. Because nicotine sticks to surfaces, he usually primes and paints walls to get rid of the cigarette smell.  

  Hazard also recommends misting scented water on linens before ironing, using cleaning products with a lemon scent and wiping all surfaces before an open house. Even the scent of bleach is better than the scent of pets, he said.  

  During your open house, keep barking dogs or other distracting animals out of the house, Hazard said, or buyers will have a hard time focusing on the home.  

  While effective home staging may not necessarily add dollars to the asking price, it can sell houses more quickly, said Pat Vredevoogd Combs, president of the National Association of Realtors.  

  Also, the faster a home gets off the market, the more money goes in the seller's pocket.  

  "Longevity on the market means one thing: reduction in price," Schwarz said.  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/spring-into-homeselling-action/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/spring-into-homeselling-action/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[The Benefits of Home Staging]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
    Hiring someone to prepare your home so it makes a good impression on buyers can pay off.    
(by Pat Merz Esswein)  
  The spring home-sales season is almost upon us, and it’s time for sellers to prepare the merchandise. You probably know that your property needs to be as clean, clutter-free and in as good repair as possible, inside and out. But you can further distinguish your home from the competition by having your home staged -- or window-dressed -- for sale.  

  Professional stagers can see your house as buyers will, and they’ll set the scene so that buyers can imagine living there. SEE OUR SLIDE SHOW for examples. They’re likely to simplify or streamline the furniture in a room for better traffic flow and to enhance its spaciousness. They may neutralize a too-personal color scheme or add touches of color or accessories where needed. In vacant homes that feel cold and lack visual landmarks, stagers often bring in rental furniture and create “vignettes,” say, a seating area in front of the fireplace.  

    Barb Schwarz  , president of   StagedHomes.com   and founder of   The International Association of Home Staging Professionals  , says that staging helps exhausted buyers “mentally move in” and feel that when they move in for real, they’ll be able to kick back for awhile and relax.  

  You can hire a stager by the hour or the room. Schwarz says homeowners typically pay from $200 to $3,000 depending on the level of service required. But the pay-off -- in time saved and higher sales price -- can be nice. In 2006, StagedHomes.com looked at the sales history of 200 properties staged by its members. Homes listed for sale prior to staging sat on the market for an average of four and a half months and sold within just over a week afterward. Homes listed for sale after staging sold within 32 to 42 days. In either case, the homes sold for an average of $26,000 more than expected.  

  The accompanying slide show features before-and-after photographs of nine staged rooms that represent various staging problems and solutions. All of the projects were submitted by Accredited Staging Professionals, trained in Schwarz’s method. To find an ASP in your area, visit the Web site of the International Association of Home Staging Professionals and click on “Our Members.”  

  For more staging tips and strategies, see Schwarz’s book (with Mary Seehafer Sears),   Home Staging: The Winning Way to Sell Your House for More Money   ($19.95; Wiley). If you’re not ready to sell but you wish your home looked that good, see the chapter on “Staging to Live.”  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/the-benefits-of-home-staging/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/the-benefits-of-home-staging/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[VIDEO: Home Staging on Fox]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
  
          
  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/video-home-staging-on-fox/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/video-home-staging-on-fox/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[VIDEO: Home Staging on CBS]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
  
          
  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/video-home-staging-on-cbs/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/video-home-staging-on-cbs/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[VIDEO: Home Staging on 20/20]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
  
          
  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/video-home-staging-on-2020/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/video-home-staging-on-2020/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[VIDEO: Home Staging on The Today Show]]></title><description><![CDATA[    
  
          
  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/video-home-staging-on-the-today-show/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/news/video-home-staging-on-the-today-show/</guid></item><item><title><![CDATA[Welcome to The Home Staging Source]]></title><description><![CDATA[  Serving Buffalo and Western New York  

  Your house is probably your largest asset. Selling it can be one of the most important decisions in your life. Do you want to ensure your house sells fast and for top dollar? Then consider “Home Staging” or preparing a home for sale.  

  When you list a house for sale it becomes a product. Just like other commodities for sale, it has pros and cons and... competition. To gain an edge on the competition and sell quickly your house needs to stand out, look better and be priced right!  

    Staging a property is a smart investment!  It sends the message of a well cared-for home. By creating a series of first impressions, and highlighting your home‘s features, the buyer is motivated to linger, connects emotionally and is able to visualize moving in-not on!  The buyer needs to feel she is AT HOME, not in YOUR home.  
 
  The ultimate goal in Home Staging is to place the home in the best “showcase” condition, so it sells at the best possible price in the shortest possible time. The feeling to convey is de-personalized and de-cluttered, so the potential buyer can see the house and its features, not the current homeowners’ “stuff.” They see the best view of each room, the best traffic pattern through the home and the best curb appeal. Real estate agents will tell you there are times when a potential buyer will not even get out of the car just because of the impression made by the outside.  

    Looking at your house through the eyes of a buyer is the first step in objectivity. The marketplace will determine the price range your house is in and by Staging your home YOU are determining where your house falls in that range. The most critical timeframe for selling your property is the first 30 days. The first two weeks generate a flurry of activity, curiosity and interest are piqued, and brokers &amp; agents tour. Price, location, and condition are three of the most important ingredients for a successful sale. All of these must be in balance or the property will take longer to sell and the dollar amount will be less. If your home is less than ready to sell and you don’t see the need to “prepare it for sale” don’t be disappointed when an offer comes in at less than you hoped for.  

    Staging works! Homes that are staged have been proven to sell faster in slow markets and/or for more money in a hot market. When you sell you home your going to have to move. When you move you’re going to have to pack, so we’re just going to pack up some of your things early. I’ll show you room by room, inside and out, what to do, what to pack, what to move and what to add. An Accredited Staging Professional™ trained and experienced in preparing homes for sale, provides an objective opinion and has the best interest of the homeowner in mind, wanting to have the home showcase at its best.  
    I look forward to serving your home staging needs in and around Buffalo, NY. Please take some time to navigate through my website and feel free to contact me if you have any questions.  ]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://thehomestagingsource.com/home/welcome-to-the-home-staging-source/</link><guid>http://thehomestagingsource.com/home/welcome-to-the-home-staging-source/</guid></item></channel></rss>