Since creating the “to be continued” blog, I’ve been closing each post with the words “dwell in possibilities.” I must confess that I borrowed this phrase from the great poet, Emily Dickinson. I saw her quote and realized that it summed up what I am doing as a professional home stager and interior designer.

I am most grateful to Ms. Dickinson for her insightful and inspiring phrase.

Regardless of the size or price range of a house, my objective is to find the possibilities in that house. I am looking for those unique features of that house and finding possible ways to accentuate them for the potential buyer. I am analyzing those unusual spaces that buyers find difficult to understand upon first glance and finding possible functional uses for those spaces.

In the end, my mission is to help the potential buyer see how they could dwell in the possibilities of this house!


Friday, June 3, 2011

FOR REALTORS ONLY - Giving Away the Store

I have been asked on more than one occasion whether I am “giving away the store” by sharing too much about home staging in this blog.  It is true that I share quite a bit of information about home staging in my regular blog posts. 

As you know, the mission of “to be continued” is to educate and inform proactive Realtors and savvy sellers.  I am not sure how I can meet that mission by being miserly with the information and experiences that I share about staging. 

My hope is that if you follow “to be continued” on a regular basis, you will learn a great deal about staging.  You will appreciate the challenges and value of home staging.  You will be more discerning when deciding to work with a professional home stager.  You will be armed with facts, figures and anecdotes about what a big difference professional home staging makes in selling a home.

I am not really concerned that I am putting myself out of business by sharing information, ideas and experiences with this blog.  The reality is that home staging is more art than science; more craft than procedure manual.

I perfected my craft (and actually feel that I am continuing to learn my craft every day) through a combination of training, study and on-the-job learning.  Of the three, the most valuable was the on-the-job work.  Each of my more than 175 home staging engagements taught me valuable lessons and helped distinguish my work from that of other home stagers. 

With home staging, you take the principles, practices and approaches and then you adapt, create and innovate based on the strengths and weaknesses of each home.  Home staging is more jazz improvisation and less symphonic note reading – and I say the same thing about the work of my Realtor partners.  Technology can make our work easier but machines will never replace the Realtor or the professional home stager!

It is one thing to understand the principles of room flow and furniture placement and quite another to make those staging concepts work in a real house with real clients under a real deadline (and still make money in the process). 

I do hope that “to be continued” inspires some readers to consider home staging as a profession.  I really hope that it inspires Realtors to use professional home staging in the portfolio of services offered to their sellers.  If nothing else, “to be continued” shows you the possibilities of home staging.


Dwell in possibilities


Cindy

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

“BEST STAGED PLANS”

As you know, I eat, sleep and breath home staging and interior design.  I guess that’s not enough.  I will now have to be entertained by what sounds like a good book.

The buzz in the home staging world is a new book by Claire Cook called “Best Staged Plans”. 

RESA (Real Estate Staging Association) posted “Home Staging Hits Amazing New Novel, Order Today!”

According to the Amazon.com review:

As a professional home stager, Sandy Sullivan is an expert at transforming cluttered rooms into attractive houses ready for sale. If only reinventing her life were as easy as choosing the perfect paint color. She's eager to put her family's suburban Boston home on the market, to downsize, and to simplify her own life. But she must first deal with her foot-dragging husband and her grown son, who has moved back home after college to inhabit the basement "bat cave."

After reading them the riot act, Sandy takes a job staging a boutique hotel in Atlanta recently acquired by her best friend's boyfriend. The good news is that she can spend time with her recently married daughter, Shannon, in Atlanta. The bad news is that Shannon finds herself heading to Boston for job training, leaving Sandy and her southern son-in-law, Chance, as reluctant roommates. If that's not complicated enough, Sandy begins to suspect that her best friend's boyfriend may be seeing another woman on the side.

Filled with characters who are fresh and original, yet recognizable enough to live in your neighborhood--plus plenty of great tips and tricks for fixing up houses, and lives--this is a wise and witty story of letting go and moving on. Best Staged Plans is Claire Cook at her most humorous and heartfelt.”

I just placed my order.  Stay tuned for my book review!


Dwell in possibilities


Cindy

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

The “Put It on the Market” Myth

On occasion, certain Realtors (not usually the successful Realtors I describe in “to be continued) will advise their home selling clients to just put the house on the market and then if it doesn’t sell in a month or two, stage the house.  I call this the “Put It on the Market” Myth.

My assumption is that if the seller balks at the cost of professional home staging, then the Realtor offers this wait-and-see advice.  Or, possibly, the Realtor is skeptical about the value of home staging. 

Either way, this advice always baffles me. 

Why suggest that a home seller lose the advantage of impressing every potential buyer?  The maxim that you are never given a second chance to make a good first impression truly applies to the real estate process.  If you want to make this house stand out from the competition, why are you waiting to make that happen?  How many missed opportunities have walked in and turned around never to return?  How many Realtors have seen this house and will be hard to convince to bring their buyers back again?

As every Realtor knows, there is an initial flurry of activity when a house first goes on the market.  This flurry includes Realtor tours, open houses, and advertising.  If this house does not show well during the initial flurry of activity, it is quite likely it will not get shown again.

While I recognize that the cost of home staging can appear to be significant to some sellers, my strong belief is that it is more of an investment to be returned when the house sells quicker and for a good price. 

My guess is that these “Put It on the Market” Realtors do not understand or do not really believe in the value of professional home staging. 

My hope is that those Realtors find ways like “to be continued” to learn more and become believers in the value of home staging.  My plan is to keep proving the value of home staging so that it becomes “the standard” for home sales in our area as it is “the standard” in areas like Atlanta, Minneapolis, Chicago, Dallas and New York City. 

Every day I demonstrate the possibilities of professional home staging.  It can make a huge difference and usually does.


Dwell in possibilities


Cindy