Guerilla Staging: 7 Hard-Core Tactics for Seller

Tara-Nicholle NelsonTrulia.com’s Real Estate Realist | Aug. 28, 2012, 11:56 AM 

If you’re about to put your home on the market, understand that you are about to engage in a war of sorts. Selling your home is a battle with other listings for the qualified buyers that are out there, a battle with everything else a buyer has to do for their time and attention and a battle with every other thing they could be spending their money on.  


A well-priced, impeccably-staged home is the A-number-one weapon you must wield to win this war. 

That said, it’s not at all unusual to experience the tugs of emotional attachment, resentment and even resistance when it’s time to stage your home. Staging puts your home, your things and your taste under the microscope and subjects them to critique – so it’s easy to get prickly at your agent’s or stager’s suggestion that the place might need more than a good spit-and-shine to get it ready for listing.

But let’s face facts: listing your home for sale is a war with very high stakes for your finances, your life plans and your emotions: the potential jubilation of selling your home, the ecstasy of selling it at top dollar, and the agony of not being able to get it sold. 

So, it’s time to buck up, put your emotional sensitivities aside and get hard core about home staging – here are 7 tactics for your battle plan.

1.  Conduct a recon mission.  The US Army Field Manual defines reconnaissance as “a mission to obtain information by visual observation or other detection methods, about the activities and resources of an enemy or potential enemy.” As a seller-to-be, your recon mission is simple: to scope out the competition. As soon as you start thinking about selling, you should be getting out to visit the other homes in your competitive bracket – the other homes that your home’s likely buyer will also likely see – during their Open Houses.  

That means you should attend the Open Houses of listings with similar beds, baths, square feet and price range to your own home, both in your neighborhood and in similar neighborhoods in your town.

If you do this for long enough, you’ll start to notice several things. If it’s been awhile since you’ve been in the market, you might be surprised at how pristine and attractively prepared the competition is, especially the non-short sale, non-foreclosure listings. You’ll start to see what homes look like that sell quickly and at (or above) the asking price, and what homes look like that lag on the market. You’ll also start to notice which listing agents and home staging companies tend to show the best-prepared properties: this is the beginning of your arsenal of information that will help you step up your home’s battle advantage.

2.  Create your plan of attack. To win this home-selling war, you must attend to the basics of home staging systematically, creating a comprehensive, written plan for everything from your home’s landscaping, the exterior and interior finish materials (paint, carpets, etc.) and every individual room of your home, including what you’ll do with your personal property and what furniture and decorative items will be used to stage the place. This plan, of course, must be created and carried out in the context of whether you plan to reside in the home while it is on the market, and in the context of your agent’s recommendations about how quickly you need to be able to have the place buyer-ready when you get a viewing request.

I strongly recommend that, at this stage, you involve some professionals in your battle preparations. Your agent should be engaged, and will be happy to have the chance to guide your property preparation decisions. Additionally, data has shown time and time again that homes prepared by professional stagers sell for more than their non-staged counterparts; consider enlisting one for your home. 

That said, if you can’t afford a full-blown stager, consider reaching out to the staging companies you learned about in step 1, above, to see if any of them offer consulting services for an hourly rate. (Your agent might also be able to recommend a good, local stager.) For a couple hundred dollars, you might be able to get the most powerful benefits of a stager – their smart, creative and experienced thinking about what you can and should do to show your home in its best light – and incorporate that into your staging plan.

3.  Deploy the stealth tactic of demolition.  Turns out, some of the most powerful staging techniques are simply removing, demolishing and otherwise getting rid of unsighly features, versus adding or strategically enhancing them.  This is especially critical to keep in mind if you are staging your home on a shoestring budget – rather than trying to figure out how you’ll come up with the cash to buy a bunch of new things, focus first on whether there’s anything you can remove that will enhance a buyer’s experience of your home.

For example, I have seen the entire look and feel of a property take a dramatic turn in the right direction when a number of window coverings were removed entirely.  Studies show that the light this allows in actually makes people (i.e., your target buyers) happier than they are in the same room, darkened by drapes or shades. [Note: before you do this, take note of what a buyer will see out the window!]

I’ve seen similarly stunning effects when old, dirty carpets were pulled up. Again, though, umderstand that there might be some risk of exposing something worse, depending on the property.  That said, in many cases, buyers see imperfect original hardwood floors as far preferable to bad carpet. You might even be amazed at how relatively inexpensive it is to replace a couple of bad floorboards, compared with the costs of replacing the entire wall-to-wall carpet. 

 4.  Pre-pack.  The call to de-clutter is the rallying cry of virtually every stager. By that, they mean to clear countertops, floors, table-tops and every other surface in the home of as much of the minutae of living as humanly possible. All that should remain is the occasional decorative or functional piece – a clock here, a vase of flowers there – and even these things only to the extent that they jive with the staging plan.

While this makes sense, logically speaking, it can be difficult to wrap your head around exactly what this means when it comes time to execute. “Surely we should leave the model plane collection,” one seller might think. “Of course, we should make an exception for the classic ukelele,” another might insist.  Add to a dozen model planes even one mini Hawaiian guitar, then compound that with a few tissue boxes, candles, bottles of hand soap and inkpens, and you’ve got yourself a recipe for visual clutter, aka junk, in the eye of the beholder/buyer.

Some sellers find it easier to wrap their heads around the concept of simply pre-packing, versus decluttering. If you win this battle upon which you’re about to embark, you’ll be moving anyway, so taking the pre-packing approach harnesses the power of momentum toward the end of putting everything but the items you actually need to live your daily life in boxes and putting those boxes in storage or – neatly – in the garage, so they’re ready to go when your home sells. 

5.  Wash, rinse and repeat.  The sort of cleaning you need to execute before you list your home is not like any cleaning you might ever have done before. It is not like ‘friends are coming for dinner’ cleaning, where the bedrooms don’t count. It’s it not like ‘white-gloved mother-in-law is on her way cleaning,’ where you can enlist the kids to run interference and distract her with the power of their cuteness. It even trumps ‘cleaning lady is coming’ cleaning, because you want her to feel needed, so can’t leave the place pristine before she comes – that would look like you were trying too hard!

The cleaning you give your home before showing it to buyers must be uber-thorough, covering every surface – even the nooks and crannies you’ve forgotten existed – and it must be from the outside in.  The best-staged, best-selling homes tend to have garages, basements, side yards, sheds and dog runs that are just as immaculate as their kitchens, bathrooms and master bedrooms. 

Start early, give yourself ample time and  and if you have the bandwidth – consider investing a few hundred bucks to hire a cleaning crew to polish every lighting fixture and dust every baseboard and ceiling fan blade. Like your agent and stager, they can see (and clean) things you can’t, due to your familiarity with your home.

6.  Fixate on trims and details.  It’s tempting, when staging, to do the big jobs – painting the walls, polishing the floors, moving and removing furniture – and to run out of steam and cash before the little details get handled. But winning this war demands that you:

  • be aware that this temptation may come,
  • detect it if it does and
  • resist it at all costs.

 

One pattern you might note on your recon mission is that the homes that show as the most pristine, the most polished, are often the ones which were prepared with the most attention to detail. On the outside of the house, this involves making sure details like mailboxes, window shutters, eaves and even shrubbery are meticulously painted, trimmed and even replaced. Adding attractive flowers, door kickplates and knockers and house numbers are some inexpensive ways to add visual detail and a polished, cared-for look to an otherwise plain property.  Inside, window trims, door casings, moldings and baseboards have the same effect, as does ensuring that drawers and doors operate smoothly and that walls are scuff mark-free.

In this way, some of the least expensive home staging projects can carry the most powerful buyer-impressing payload.

7.  Be brutally honest with yourself.  When you think you’re done preparing your home, think again. It’s not overkill to go out on a Sunday afternoon, walk through a few Open Houses, get back in the car and drive up to your house, walking through it exactly the way a buyer would.  Ask yourself: What can you edit?  What looks like clutter? What is distracting? What stops a buyer from seeing the possibilities for their own family here?  

If all else fails, take your agent with you – arm him with a packet of post-it notes and give him free rein to stick one on anything he thinks should be removed before showing the home. Then get that stuff out of there!

Agents:  What are your hard-core staging tactics? 

Sellers: What’s the biggest challenge you’ve run into in the course of getting your home ready for sale?

Buyers:  What are the things you’re seeing, staging-wise, that are very effective in making a home desirable to you?

Read more: http://www.trulia.com/blog/taranelson/2012/08/guerilla_staging_7_hard_core_tactics_for_sellers#ixzz25GBLXnwQ

Canada Is Walking Right Into A Subprime Mortgage Crisis

It is almost four years after the global financial meltdown of 2008 and many parts of world are still trying to recover. Given the impact of the crisis, which rocked financial markets across the globe, it is shocking to many that Canada seems to be following many of the same lending trends as we saw in the United States in 2006. These trends were at the core of the subprime mortgage crisis, which led to the global recession of 2008.

In the year and a half leading up to the crash housing prices rapidly increased in the United States, with a corresponding increase in subprime lending. We are now seeing the same trends in Canada. When analyzing the Canadian housing market, housing prices increased almost 100% since 2000, with the average home in Canada costing roughly $348,000. This is almost double our U.S. counterparts.

Big banks have become stricter with lending policies, and have upped the stakes for those looking for mortgage financing. This has created a huge market for sub-prime lenders in the marketplace that didn’t exist before because more and more people who would have been approved five years ago are now being turned away. There is now a huge shift in the lending marketplace. Once small, Canada`s subprime mortgage industry is now booming. More and more Canadians with highly questionable credit are highly benefiting from the available financing.

The Canadian Government has been moving quite aggressively in attempts to cool down the Canadian housing market. As home prices are soaring there are fears that there is a bubble in the making. This is evident through the recent actions of Finance Minister Jim Flaherty who is now acting for a fourth time, reducing the maximum amortization period for government issued mortgages from 30 to 25 years. On top of this he is also lowering the amount of equity that can be borrowed against a property to 80% down from 85%.

More than $500B of Canada’s estimated $1.1T housing market are considered to be high-risk mortgages. Recently Ottawa began increasing its scrutiny of the CMHC for allowing this level of high-risk mortgages to rise to the level that it’s at now.

The Conservative Government has started putting stops to banks using mortgages insured by the CHMC as collateral on covered bonds. In addition new legislation will be implemented to ensure that corporations will have to give more consideration to the broader implications of their decisions. Essentially the CHMC is being told that, for every mortgage they insure, they will have to put consideration into the potential risk that mortgage put on the full Canadian economy.

The CMHC has dramatically expanded use of insurance by banks for covered bonds. These securities are made up of a package of mortgages, which is partly due to the steep rise in CMHC`s mortgage portfolio according to Jim Flaherty, Canada’s Finance Minister. CMHC has a legal limit of 600B for mortgage insurance which it is fast approaching. The $600B limit has already been raised twice since the end of 2007.

Another significant type of lending in Canada is Home Equity Lines of Credit (HELOCs). HELOCs are loans which are secured by the equity of a borrower’s home. These types of loans in Canada have increased almost 170% since 2001 (which is double the rate of increase on Canadian mortgages). In 2011 they accounted for approximately half of total Canadian consumer credit.

Read a complete analysis here 

Read more: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/JohnBrownesMarketCommentary/~3/eIXN5IVgEIY/canadian_real_estate_bubble_bubble_toil_trouble#ixzz24TenWJrw

For my “2 cents”, HIT is most definitely a positive asset

Hello Cindy and Jim!

 

Just a quick touch base – we’ve had regular activity at 2917 Calle Grande and the general consensus from the visitors who have been through the home since the HIT Caretaker arrived is that the home presents very well and that showings have been very easy to schedule.    Our experience with David Fite, the caretaker, has been extremely positive, he has always been very accommodating to any appointment or open house, and is always proactive and curious about anything he can do to help the house or grounds present in an even more favorable fashion.  On a side note, his maintenance of the property has also helped showability, as the backyard really needed TLC when he arrived.  The regular watering and attention has really given it a muchneeded lift, and it now really feels like the inviting and private haven it was intended to be.  In general, I’d like to share my opinion that the caretaker is definitely a “value add” to the home, and that it is a benefit to marketability, as it clearly helps the property “show” in a much more favorable light than it was vacant.

 

Jim, I have no business or personal  relationship with HIT, this is my first experience with HIT, and I have no vested interest in making them “look good”.  But I felt it important to share my viewpoint of whether or not the HIT caretaker situation was an advantage, a disadvantage or a wash because I sell a lot of homes and when I see something that is working (or not), it’s my preference to call it out.  For my “2 cents”, HIT is most definitely a positive asset to the KW effort to market your home.

 

I look forward to any observations you may have on this topic, or thoughts you have about ways we can improve the marketing and/or showability of your home.

 

Best regards,

Maria C

Webinar “The One Day Home Staging Training Course” with Barb Schwarz, The Creator of Home Staging®

‘Staging Above Done By Sue Proud, ASP, IAHSP, and Rebecca Henderson, ASP, ASPM, IAHSP’

Barb Schwarz

Why Should I Become an ASP Home Stager or ASP Home Stager ASP RE Agent

Barb Schwarz, is The Creator of Home Staging®, and the Home Staging Industry. Barb has built the Home Staging Industry since the first day she invented the concept. She is the visionary who invented Home Staging, an inventor, an author, an award winning speaker and the trainer who has over 40 years experience continuing right up to today. Barb will share her vast experience and knowledge with you. You will benefit from her teachings, experience, and motivational style in unlimited ways. Barb is the World’ leading Home Staging Instructor known throughout the World. Barb has taught over 20,000 hours of Home Staging concepts, ideas, techniques and no one else on earth has the depth of knowledge and experience that Barb can and will share with you.

Two things sell a house: one is price and the other is Home Staging! Yet most homes have not been Staged and therefore most RE Agents just keep dropping and dropping the price. Staging sets the scene in the home, it sets the ‘Stage®’ for the buyer to mentally move into.

More than ever Staging every home is crucial. It is a must in today’s market to get it sold. People today, more than ever, want and need to sell their homes, whether a traditional seller, an investor, a short sale seller, or a seller striving to prevent a foreclosure on their home. All sellers need to Stage® their homes. Statistics prove that Staged Homes sell faster and/or for more money than the competition in any market! Through the convenience and the magic of webinars Barb is giving a one day Home Staging Training Webinar that can help show you what to do and how to do it so you can Stage® any home.

Who should attend?

  • Stagers
  • Homeowners
  • Investors
  • Real Estate Agents
  • Real Estate Assistants
  • Organizers
  • Interior Designers
  • Decorators
  • Project Managers
  • Someone who is considering having a Home Staging Career…
  • Anyone interested in this wonderful topic of Home Staging

You will learn:

  • What Home Staging Really Is
  • The Big Difference Between Home Staging and Design or Decorating
  • Why and How Home Staging Earns Sellers More Money in a Faster Amount of Time
  • Why and How Home Staging Earns RE Agents and/or Investors More Money in a Faster Amount of Time
  • Many of Barb’s Home Staging Sayings
  • The 7 parts of Staging
  • The Steps to De-cluttering The Property
  • Getting the Property Q-Tip Clean
  • The Keys to Using the Right Colors for Staging a Home, Inside and Out
  • How To Stage® and Do It Right!
  • Barb’s Proven Steps to Staging Every Room
  • Staging Ideas for Staging Each Room
  • Learn what Furniture Works For Staging
  • What should be in a Home Staging Inventory
  • Learn about whether You Need to Build an Inventory or Not
  • Learn How to Accessorize Rooms
  • Does the House Need a Full Staging or Will a Vignette Staging Work, and What is the Difference
  • How to Stage the Outside of a Property!
  • And much more…

You will BE so very, very happy you invested your time with Barb. You will come away from Barb’s Webinar with knowledge, passion, and an understanding of what to apply to Stage® your home or investments or someone else’s home. Barb will be giving you the true “How To’s’ of Home Staging. And learning from the actual Creator of Home Staging® and developer of the Home Staging Industry is not only a treat but time well vested on your part because it is packed with education and ideas that will work for you. Register to attend Barb’s One Day Home Staging Course Webinar Now, see link below (or any of her full ASP® Home Staging Courses in the future.) You will be so glad you did…

Pargin Realty Raising Money for Jerry’s Kids

Pargin-footer-logo

We received a fabulous message today from our friends at Pargin Realty ERA. They are raising money for Jerry’s Kids and we wnat to do everything we can to support their effort, as they are a great working partner of Homes in Transition. Please take the time to share this post with as many folks as you know… the prizes listed are awesome!  Not only that, but Homes in Transition has also committed to contributing $50.00 CASH for each home Pargin Realty adds to our program between now and the event… what’s more is we will throw in another $1000.00 CASH if they surpass 10 homes. Now is a great time to get invovled.

 

Two weeks from today, our offices are having a BBQ lunch and silent auction to raise money for Jerry’s Kids.  You can bid on a Champagne Hot Air Balloon Ride for 2, $800 golf lesson package, Artwork, $160 home inspection, $200 round of golf and more.  You can buy tickets from me in advance or just show up that day, the more the merrier!  In addition, we are selling raffle tickets and we have a TON of awesome prizes (see list below).  Donations & sponsorships are always welcome too 

 

 

List of awesome prizes:)

Professional Haircuts (10 @ $45-$50 each) 
Alluraderm Facial Treatments/Botox! 
Teeth Whitening Kits 
PC Tune Ups 
Pureology Hair Care Products 
A complete Auto Detail Cleaning/Waxing 
10 Combo passes to Zoo/Aquarium  
Make-up from Aveda 
Scentsy Gift Basket 
Many Restaurant Gift Cards

One filter & oil change

Handcrafted cutting board/wine basket

Fruit basket

Oakley sunglasses

Massage

Staging Diva Provides Detailed Look at Color Consultations

Toronto, ON
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
(UNITED STATES) July 17, 2012 – Color consultations can be a great source of income for home stagers says home staging expert Debra Gould, also known as The Staging Diva. On the Home Staging Business Report blog, Gould shared a behind the scenes look at two color consultations she recently did for Toronto-area homeowners.

“When I’m choosing colors for home staging, I don’t really care too much about what the client likes or will feel comfortable living with, because in a staging situation it’s all about decorating for home buyers. However, if I’m doing color consultations for clients as part of interior redesign discussions, I’ll often bring my color books to help them figure out what look and mood they’re drawn to before I recommend paint colors for their home.”

The first of Gould’s color consultations was at a luxury home in Forest Hill that had been totally gutted top to bottom. She found it quite challenging because the place was still a construction site, with none of the furniture or final lighting installed.

“In this case, I had to stay fairly neutral because I had no idea what precise colors the furniture and art actually were. And in some cases, I didn’t even have floor color as a reference because the hardwood hadn’t been installed yet! For this home, I relied exclusively on the colors I recommend in the Staging Diva Ultimate Color Guide since I know they work in a wide variety of homes and with different lighting and furniture styles.”

Gould was able to choose a color palette for this five-bedroom, three-story home in just two hours. One of the ways she made it easier for herself was by opening one of her color fan decks and having the client indicate the color of the furniture for each room.

“Naturally, the client’s visual memory of the actual colors may not be accurate, but I needed something to go by. When evaluating wall color options, I’d put them up against the red of the sofa, or the blue of the dining room chairs, for example.”

Gould’s second color consultation was in a home in the Beaches area that was built in 1919. The home featured dark wood trim and leaded glass windows.

“The couple was very nice and the husband really warmed up to the whole process about 30 minutes into my visit. When I arrived, he had his arms crossed over his chest, but once we hit the kitchen and he got to show off his new restaurant-style 6-burner gas stove and tell me about the chef certificate courses he’s taking for fun, he became much more open. It turns out he’s a very talented (amateur) photographer and we had fun hanging many of his works in various rooms of the home.”

His wife served tea, and Gould helped them finalize which glass tile to use for their newly renovated kitchen, selected drapery for the living and dining rooms, and chose paint colors for the entire house.

“In this client’s case, we could have more courage with color because I could see what they liked and all the furniture and lighting were in place. We came up with a fabulous color palette that really pulled the rooms together and worked with the dark wood trim. It was a lovely afternoon for all of us (I know because she hugged me at the end and said all her questions were answered) and I left with a check equal to what many people make in an entire week after only 2.5 hours of work. I don’t say this to brag, but to emphasize that it’s possible to be REALLY well paid for your creative talent when you understand the business of home staging, interior redesign and color consulting!”

For additional tips on selecting paint colors for color consultations and home staging, Gould invites home stagers to visit the Home Staging Business Report on the Staging Diva website.

Staging Your Home: The Ins and Outs of Home Staging

http://www.movingstation.com/staging-your-home-the-ins-and-outs-of-home-staging/

Have you ever wondered what the term “home staging” really means?  There are countless articles and websites dedicated to the art of staging, not to mention the increased amount of home improvement television shows committed to getting your house sold fast.

Staging your home is the act of preparing a residence for sale in the real estate marketplace by putting an emphasis on presentation and appearance.  The goal of staging is to make a home appealing to the highest number of potential buyers, which in turn, allows homeowners to sell their home faster and for more money.  Sounds like a win-win situation, right?  In fact, there is a lot that goes into staging your home for a speedy and prosperous sale.

Careful planning and professional insight is crucial when staging a home.  It is important to understand that preparing a home for sale and staging a home is not the same thing.  Staging a home involves the aesthetics of the house versus repairs and improvements that sellers must do when prepping their home for the market.  Staging your home helps you think like a buyer.  This also forces sellers to lose the emotional connection to their home.

According to a survey conducted by The International Association of Home Staging Professionals®, homes staged spent 83% less time on the market versus those that are not staged.  In addition, 94% of those staged homes sold in an average of 29 days.

Over the next few weeks we will be discussing some of the most beneficial tricks of the trade we have gathered over our professional career.  Stay tuned next week as we explore de-cluttering your house to reveal how spacious it really is.

Sad Event with Housing… will it impact the NM Market?

UPDATE: 346 homes destroyed by Waldo Canyon Fire

POSTED BY PAM ZUBECK ON THU, JUN 28, 2012 AT 4:50 PM

The list of streets has grown from 34 to 35. Here’s the full list and meeting details:

Waldo Canyon Fire Impact meeting

A meeting ONLY for residents of the streets below will be held tonight to inform them of the status of their homes.

Tonight, 8 p.m., Gallogly Events Center, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs

6 p.m. Busses depart shelters
6 p.m. Check-in opens
8 p.m. Residents meeting begins
9 p.m. Press conference at media staging area with residents from the meeting who will give interviews.

This meeting is for residents of the following streets only. This is NOT a public meeting. Residents should bring identification to gain meeting access. Refreshments will be provided. Counselors will be available.

Note to the media: Media is asked to respect the privacy of residents who may receive devastating news. Meeting participants willing to speak to the media will attend the post-meeting press conference at 9 p.m. at the UCCS media staging area.

Residents of these streets should attend:
§ Trevor Lane
§ Linger Way
§ Rossmere Street
§ Tallesson Court
§ Sandray Court
§ Majestic Drive
§ Ravina Court
§ Regal View Road
§ Stoneridge Drive
§ Heartstone Lane
§ Karamy Court
§ Lionsgate Lane
§ Hot Springs Court
§ Jenner Court
§ Brogans Bluff
§ Darien Way
§ Rayburn Way
§ Braeburn Way
§ Timora Way
§ Mirror Lake Court
§ Wilson Road
§ Harbor Pines Point
§ Yankton Place
§ Chambrey Court
§ Charing Court
§ Ashton Park Place
§ Courtney Drive
§ Vantage Vista Drive
§ Vantage Ridge Court
§ Huffman Court
§ Aubrey Way
§ Van Reen Drive
§ Alabaster Way
§ Lannigan Street
§ Capra Way

——- ORIGINAL POST: 2012-06-28 16:29:00 ——-

Colorado Springs Mayor Bach said at the 4 p.m. news conference that 346 homes were destroyed in the Waldo Canyon Fire, which blasted through 34 streets in the Mountain Shadows area on Tuesday. But fire officials said significant headway was made on the fire today, noting it’s now 10 percent contained.

Waldo Canyon Fire

  • FILE PHOTO
  • The fire before it exploded Tuesday afternoon.

Bach said a meeting at 8 p.m. is for families affected by the fire. “This is going to be a tough evening, but we’re going to get through it,” Bach said. “Suzie and I are going to lead an effort to bring every resource to these people who have been hurt so badly.”

Bach asked the press to show “a little bit of humanity” toward the families. “We will move forward as a city like we never have,” Bach said.

Bret Waters, the city emergency management director, said the city is evaluating evacuations. “We expect some significant lifting some mandatory evacuations on the east side of the evacuation zones,” he said, but didn’t say exactly when that would happen.

Police Chief Pete Carey asked for residents’ patience as city officials decide which evacuated areas to release from evacuation. He also noted that officials suspect some criminal activity in the evacuated area and to call 444-7000 to report it, once they’re allowed back home. He thought there was an arrest for a burglary but had no details.

The cooler temperatures today along with some rain helped firefighters achieve 10 percent containment.
“We made significant progress today,” said U.S. Forest Service spokeswoman Jerri Marr. “The weather cooperated today as it has no other day since the fire started” on Saturday.

Rich Harvey, incident commander, added, “We’re feeling very confident we made good progress today, very minimal fire growth, and no injuries to the firefighters today.”

Although Carey said there are less than 10 people who are unaccounted for, he said police are trying to figure out exactly where they might be.

Springs Deputy Fire Chief Tommy Smith said firefighters usually do two searches of each structure, but haven’t been able to do so in the Mountain Shadows area due to the unusual fire conditions. He said those searches will begin tomorrow.

Spring cleaning tips: doing it the not-insane way

Spring cleaning tips: doing it the not-insane way

CLEANING/ORGANIZING By  on MARCH 03, 201130 Responses

My Messy RoomPhoto by allyaubry, used under Creative Commons license.

March comes in like a lion, goes out like a lamb, and its arrival means we’ve finally made it through winter. People emerge from hibernation, grass will start greening, and those of us who live in a temperate zone feel like life is worth living again. Those of you in better climates who don’t know what it’s like to shovel yourself out every morning can suck it.

Sorry. I’ve still got a touch of the winter blues, apparently.

Anyway, let’s talk spring cleaning. It’s a great way to clear the figurative cobwebs still left in your head after the long nights have taken their toll. It sounds like a big undertaking though, right? It sounds kind of high pressure. But it’s okay. We can handle this.

1. Think around the edges. Hypothetically, we’ve been cleaning at least a little all winter. This isn’t a Hoarders intervention, this is spring cleaning. You don’t have to clean the whole house, top to bottom; you can prime the new season by making time for the projects that don’t need attention as often or that fall by the wayside. I’m talking:

  • Washing windows
  • Washing blinds
  • Clean out the fridge and wipe down shelves
  • Give love to your floors – wipe down hardwood, add a protectant if it’s appropriate for your flooring
  • Clean rugs
  • Putting away that pile of books that’s sprouted up near the chair. You’re not going to finish Meditation: A Complete Guide now that it’s warm outside, anyway.
  • Sort clothing. Toss the stuff that’s overly worn, donate the pieces you’re done with.
  • Launder winter clothing and outerwear so it’s ready come fall.

2. Identify problem areas. Think hard about parts of your routine which could be improved or simplified. My two goals are: find a new solution for our recycling bins, since they look open and messy in our kitchen and get full quickly, and create a filing system for our personal papers. What have you been making do with? Would your entry work better with seating, storage or hooks? How’s your mail sorting situation? Do you always find yourself loathe to put away your yoga mat because it’s a pain in the ass to get to its nook?

3. Set your project goals for the season. Based on the time, budget and space you’ve got, make realistic plans about what you’ll get done around the house. You might start planning on giving your house a new coat of paint or creating a built-in piece for your space. Maybe this is the season you’ll tackle turning your living room into a gamer’s paradise — without an electrical cord in sight.

Use spring cleaning to focus your attention briefly on the upkeep of your household. Maintenance often falls by the wayside when more important tasks come up, so being able to give it attention now can help us be less stressed down the road.

I’m pretty new at this running a household thing and don’t have all the bases covered yet, so I’d love to hear your spring cleaning philosophies. What do you make a point of doing in the spring to save you stress down the road?

Home staging critical in selling a house

Editorial


Front Page – Monday, June 18, 2012

 

Home staging critical in selling a house

Sourced at:  http://www.dailyrecord.us/Story.aspx?id=4991&date=6%2F18%2F2012 


 

When people ask the proverbial question, ‘What’s in it for me,’ when discussing home staging prior to putting a house on the market, Helen Lockhart is prepared with a list covered in bullet points. Most notably, Lockhart said, home staging not only helps sell a house but also brings, on average, a big return on the investment.

Lockhart, owner of Red Chaise Designs, spoke last week to the Faulkner County Board of Realtors luncheon in Conway. She showed before and after pictures on what a difference some very simple adjustments can make in presenting a home for prospective buyers.

While staging a home for sale, Lockhart said one of the most important things to remember is to not hurt the seller’s feelings. Pointing out the benefits of staging can usually resolve that issue.

“Educate them,” Lockhart said. “One, it’s different living in a home than selling a home. Two, you’re not there to judge how they live in their home. Three, it is your job to tell them these things. Four, compare it to a sofa in a garage sale. You may not mind that it has a little spot on it, but you would probably buy something to clean that spot if you were selling it.”

Lockhart said one survey noted that home staging is a 295 percent return on investment, such as flowers, rugs, cleaners, etc. She said to pay particular attention to baseboards, the front door, and making sure that the home is clutter free. She predicts that 98 percent of home staging is simply cleaning and de-cluttering.

“This can all be done with minimal investment if you maximize your dollar amount,” Lockhart said. “You want to neutralize and depersonalize.”

As an example, Lockhart said one person’s collections may not make the house as attractive, and perhaps they should be stored while the home is on the market.

“I had a person say, ‘But my grandmother painted that,’” said Lockhart, who had previously been a Realtor for seven years. “I just had to tell them that it really didn’t highlight their space.

“Staging your home is not like getting your home ready for a dinner party. You want to get it ready, but not perfect. Staging doesn’t need to be perfect to be effective. You want it move-in ready but not move-in perfect. Move-in ready is neutralizing what’s there. It’s de-personalizing.”

Eight-two percent of real estate agents surveyed recommended home staging.
If someone selects a home staging specialist, a contract is signed and then a walk-through report will be made of items that need to be addressed.

“How can staging help your business?” asked Lockhart. “One, you can make more. Two, there’s less time on the market. There, you have happier clients.”

A diagnosis will be presented to the seller, noting things from the proper use of space, to the walls, floors, lighting, art, accessories, case goods, and even bedding. Lockhart said that paints, window treatments, furniture and things that the seller may have grown accustomed to but are not presentable are also addressed.

“The foyer sets the stage for the rest of the house,” she said. “Staging and photos can change opinions and first impressions. Objections add up. The more objections you accumulate the less likely you are to selling your house.”