Staging New Hampshire

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Five Reasons to Stage Occupied Homes

If you are a seller or are thinking about selling and aren't sure if home staging is for you, here are five great reasons to consider it.

Via Laurie Calhoun Seminole County FL Home Stager (Gloria Home Staging, Inc.):

Picture an occupied home -- comfortably furnished, nicely decorated. How would having it staged help it sell? Is it worth the expense? Here are five reasons for sellers of occupied homes to consider a professional home staging consultation:

#1 –Getting a home ready to sell can be overwhelming to sellers, and they may not know how to begin or what to do. Home stagers can tell sellers where to start, and then guide them through the process, from paint color selection to furniture placement.

#2 – Occupied homes are lived in. The sellers have gotten comfortable with the things they have and how they are placed. Their homes are set for the way they live. The next owners will have an entirely different set of things and their own routine. To market their home, the sellers must consider how the house would work for someone else, and be willing to make changes to the way they live while they sell the home. It’s all about the buyers now, and stagers can help sellers make that mind shift and the necessary changes.

The owner of this office was willing to pack up about 20 boxes of books and largely clear the room out. He was rewarded with a sale in 30 days.

Office before staging  Office after staging

#3 – Sellers need help to see the home as a buyer would. Stagers provide “outsiders’ eyes” to see the home differently. Not only can we view the home’s features impartially, we can spot “red flags” – signals of potential problems – that the seller either knows are no longer a problem (like water stains resulting from leaks now repaired), or is unaware of.

For example, the china hutch in this kitchen was a clear indication to us that the home did not provide enough storage for the sellers’ things. The buyers were likely to assume that there would not be enough room for their things, either, so we advised the sellers to put it into storage.

Kitchen before staging  Staged kitchen

#4 – Decorated does not equal staged. Although they are often beautiful and warmly welcoming places, decorated homes are not meant to be sold. They are meant to be lived in. They are often highly personal, and the décor can distract from or cover up some of the home’s features. Décor can also go out of style. The point of home staging is to show off the home (not the furnishings or the owners’ taste) and make it appeal to a wide segment of its target market. The more highly decorated a home is, the harder it is for buyers to picture themselves making it their own.

Being unbiased outsiders, stagers can point out decorative elements that are too particularly individual, such as paint colors, wallpaper, or collections. The owners of this home had many lovely things, including a curio cabinet containing a large collection of angels. We advised them to pack the angels up, and the result was this welcoming reading nook, instead of a museum likely to distract buyers.

 

Curio corner  Staged readiing nook

#5 – Home stagers specialize in presenting homes to their best advantage. That’s our full-time job, and something we love to do. We are students of home merchandising: We know what colors work well for marketing homes. We know low-cost solutions for outdated furniture and décor. We know whether furniture needs to be removed or added, and how to arrange that furniture so that it shows off the home. We know how to help home sellers, who are experts in other areas, not this one.

In this example, the seller resisted removing the draperies and much of the furniture from this master bedroom. He thought it would look bare, and that the room would not look as large because it would not be showing how much furniture it could hold. We insisted that the room would look bigger, brighter and more up-to-date, and he chose to trust us. You decide whether or not it worked!

Master bedroom before staging  Staged master bedroom

If you are selling your Orlando area home, give us a call at Gloria Home Staging. We will be glad to help make your home feel like home to buyers.

Gloria Home Staging

www.GloriaHomeStaging.com

                             407-695-0023

         Setting your home apart

Serving the Orlando, Florida area

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Professional Home Staging services for the New Hampshire Seacoast

Portsmouth      Rye      Hampton     North Hampton      Exeter      Dover  

603.661.8524

13 commentsSharon Tara New Hampshire Home Stager • November 25 2009 07:29AM

Speechless Sunday...Where's The Nipple?

baby with beer

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Professional Home Staging services for the New Hampshire Seacoast

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32 commentsSharon Tara New Hampshire Home Stager • November 22 2009 08:48AM

8 Myths of Staging to Sell - Busted.

Donna Ross, a home stager in Sydney, Australia, wrote this great myth buster post and I just had to share it.

Via Donna Ross - Home Staging, Sydney, Australia (Great Impressions Real Estate Staging & Consulting - Sydney):

Home staging (or property styling as it's commonly known as on the Australian property scene) is really an art, not a science. One of the many things a professional home stager understands is that it's the house that's up for sale, not the home owner's bread baking ability or taste in music. So, from the sublime to the rediculous - here's 8 myths of staging to sell - busted!

1. Buyers can see past my stuff
No - they can't. 95% of house hunters shop with a 'what you see is what you get' eye. You'll be maximising your chances of a better and quicker sale if you take the time to clean out, clean up and keep your look simple.brewing coffee

2. Baking bread, brewing fresh coffee and playing soft music will make a buyer fall in love with my house.
Maybe once upon a time this was true - but most would-be buyers are onto that old trick. It's more likely to trigger alarm bells, with many wondering what it is you're trying to hide. Your buyers will be happy with a place that looks and smells clean.

3. I'll need to clear everything out to help buyers see themselves living here.
This is only partly true. Wall to wall family photos are distracting, as is your porcelain rooster collection. These things are best put away. But don't go overboard, otherwise you'll end up with a look that feels cold and sterile.

4. If it's an original feature - it adds value.
Sometimes yes - but often no. Generally a property built less than 50 years ago without being updated is more likely to appear dated, rather than classic.

5. My place isn't worth staging.
All homes are worth taking the time to present in a positive light to buyers. The trick to knowing where to start and what to do is in having a good idea of what buyers in your target market will expect, along with learning more about what competing properties in your area are offering.


6. Empty rooms look bigger.            empty room                                          

This is rarely the case. Buyers will always prefer to see how a room is used and what will fit in it, rather than be left to guess. Very large rooms can also be too intimidating for some. Even borrowed furniture can help buyers get an idea of scale and give the eye something of interest to focus on.

7. Converting a bedroom into a home gym won't be a problem.
Bedrooms are one of the most valuable commodities of the 'for sale' property. Having a home gym set up in a bedroom will prompt buyers to wonder why that is. I remember once looking at a house where this was the case. When I came across the bedroom with the gym in it, I immediately began to question if a bed would even fit. Always give the rooms in your house a purpose.

8. No need to worry about wardrobes and cupboards.
Home storage is a big deal to most buyers and is surprisingly valuable. Prospective buyers will open storage cupboards in kitchens and bathrooms, so keep them tidy. Keep only what you're using on a daily or weekly basis, and pack the rest away ready for the move.

Have you got a staging myth you'd like busted? Share them with me here.


 

Donna Ross

Great Impressions Real Estate Staging

"I love helping Sydney home owners and real estate agents catch the eye of choosy buyers with their 'for sale' listings, with fast, simple and inexpensive decorating fixes."

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Professional Home Staging services for the New Hampshire Seacoast

Portsmouth      Rye      Hampton     North Hampton      Exeter      Dover  

603.661.8524

18 commentsSharon Tara New Hampshire Home Stager • November 15 2009 02:21PM

Follow Me on Twitter: My Google Rank Drops. Why?

Bart makes a valid point - after going to all the trouble of getting people to your website, don't send them away to a place where they can find your competition and easily get so distracted that they never return to your website.

Via Bart Wilson (Voyager International):

For years now, we've been reading and seeing how to get our Websites ranking higher on a natural search results page on Google.

Two years ago, Twitter comes along and now the spirit of true, Herd Mentality, thousands of REALTORS have moooooved on over to copying what the other REALTORS are doing -- hoping and praying the technique will generate more leads and sales commissions. 

We copy the same links; Follow Me on Twitter. And we make the mistake of putting too many Follow Me links on our home page despite the fact you've probably spent years trying to get people to COME to your website... you tell them to GO AWAY.

Weeks later, your visibility goes down and you are left wondering what the heck just happened?

Too many redirects from your home page is not only stupid, it's the fastest way to see your page one #1 Google rank drop to #2. Then, it drops to #3. And the slide just keeps on a-sliding down... down... down. 

Moo-Cows on Twitter LinkedIn Facebook

Just look at Santa Fe Properties. A former SEO client of mine. For seven years, they were on page one #1. Then a year ago, they too got bit by the Twitter Follow Me bug. And the Linked In Bug. And one from Christies Great Estates.

This is the part that I just cannot understand.

You spend thousand of dollars on a new site and SEO work. Then you spend MORE money with your offline marketing efforts telling next time home buyers to GO TO www.SantaFeProperties.com. 

FINALLY when you get people USED to going to your website, you now tell these same visitors to go away and find you now on Twitter. Or Linked In. Or Christies Great Estates. Or somewhere else.

So, naturally some of your visitors do leave your site where there are lots of competitors just waiting to gobble up the leads you just told to FIND ME ON SOME OTHER SITE.   What the...?

That might sound a bit silly, but this is exactly what your website says to visitors you've tried to come to your website for months or even years of working to improve your Google ranking. Now that they find you, you tell them to find you someplace else.

Trust me, this can be leading up to; Lead sabotage. And thousands of REALTORS and brokers are just watching their leads drop, and they think by placing the Follow Me links on their website will increases leads... it can create the opposite effect. 

People will click on things and links because you give them reason to do so. They are not immune to Herd Mentality either. 

After a few clicks, is it any surprise why your visitor is now looking at properties from Amazing Realty instead of yours?  For too many REALTOR websites, it's clear to me that too many of you are suffering from Mad Cow Disease, just like Denny Crane from Boston Legal. 

It doesn't have to be that way. You can use Twitter and other links to your advantage, but you need to use them wisely and correctly. 

There are SMARTER ways to use Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook. Below are Bartman's Top Ten SAFE Ways to Use Social Media effectively to keep people coming BACK to your website from other channels out there.

Bartman's Top Ten

 

1.) Don't put offsite links on your home page.

If you have page one # 1 ranking on Google now, be careful how many links to offsite websites you ADD to your home page. 

 

2.) Rule of thumb: Place your Follow Me on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn on your Contact Me pages and other pages inside. This is especially important if you are just now building links to your home page.

 

3.) One Way Link Bulding.

ActiveRain.com, Curbed.com and many other Real Estate blogs can be used to build one way, incoming links to your properties. Don't just link all links to your home page. This is not a smart idea. Build links to point to your properties and about the life style and communities you know about. 

 

4.) 1888FreePressRelease.com.  

A great place to post your FREE press releases with links pointing BACK to your website.

 

5.) PRWeb.com.  

The BEST place to post your Press Releases. $100 - $200 cost each, but you get to go BACK and edit the links to make them SEO friendly and point them to your website pages.

 

6.) Get links from Title, Mortgage companies even Landscapers and custom home builders.

They might have a crappy looking website, but ask them for a one way link from their site to yours. NEVER give a link back to them as this will give you what is called Google PR Hemorrhage. Never give reciprocal links BACK to any website until AFTER one year AFTER you've held a page one position on Google.

 

7.) Social Media Pay per Post, Pay per Blog.

There is one firm out there that seems to have done it right. SocialSpark.com is the one to see. You can buy ads on this system to be inserted into popular blogs out there. This is a great way to build awareness of your website for geo-centric, local searches. 

 

8.) StumbleUpon.com

It's a web site that says what id does and does what it says. It emails hundreds of thousands of people every week with suggested Websites they should visit. Visitors to the site indicate a few sites and topics they like. And weekly, StumbleUpon will deliver the user a cornucopia of Websites and some of them... NEED to be your real estate website. 

 

9.) Sell LifeStyle. Don't sell just homes.

This is the big trap of conventional thinking. But next time home buyers today can get their house with or without a REALTOR. So when they come to your website, dazzle them with Life Style. We're just now completing a website for Jane Paulus of Edina Realty now. The website is here:  www.TwinCitiesHomefinders.com  -- See the emphasis on Live -- Work  Play and the rich page content of living in Minneapolis. Google loves this stuff and so will your next time home buyers. 

 

10.) Get your Banner Ads on the iPhone, BlackBerry and Mobile Devices.

Just because you're page one on Google doesn't mean you can't get more leads. Google now offers a Paid Search program that allows you to snag 50,000 banners for $18 bucks or thereabouts. Create Google Visual Ads that are shown on mobile devices. It's cheap and it's effective.

Lots more good stuff to come later. I'm trying to get our company moved to Colorado Springs, but if anyone needs more help on these items above, call me or email me. 

I'm always glad to be of service to you all. 

 

 

 

 

Bart Wilson | Chief Marketing Officer | SEO Rockstar

Voyager International. The Real Estate Marketing Company

Tel: (505) 466-2483  iPhone: (505) 204-8097

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Professional Home Staging services for the New Hampshire Seacoast

Portsmouth      Rye      Hampton     North Hampton      Exeter      Dover  

603.661.8524

10 commentsSharon Tara New Hampshire Home Stager • November 13 2009 09:01AM

Wordless Wednesday - Eeyore Kisses

eeyore kissing baby

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Professional Home Staging services for the New Hampshire Seacoast

Portsmouth      Rye      Hampton     North Hampton      Exeter      Dover  

603.661.8524

30 commentsSharon Tara New Hampshire Home Stager • November 11 2009 07:08PM

DO WE SEE EYE TO EYE?

Most people hang their art too high, or have difficulty arranging artwork on the wall.  This post by Kim Dillon has great tips on making the job easier.

Via Kim Dillon (Creative Eye Home Staging):

tall and short people illustration

I'm 5 foot, 10 inches tall.  If you are 5'2" or 6'4", we probably don't see eye to eye--at least, when it comes to hanging art!

Hanging art at eye level is a rule that just doesn't work!  A better rule to begin the process:   leave 1/3 of wall space above the picture and 2/3 of space below.  Another guide I find very helpful when hanging art over a table or sofa is to leave two fists of space between the top of the furniture and the bottom of the picture.   Both of these are easy, no measure methods.

When you really want to delve into the finer points of hanging art, I found a very complete article at this link:  http://interiordec.about.com/od/artindecorating/a/Gwheretohangart.htm

Once you have decided where to hang the art, here are some more tips/tools I find helpful:

  • Hercules Hooks--they are my favorite tool and save lots of time and aggravation!
  • To keep things on center--use two hangers (or nails) about 5" from each outside edge (bumpers on the bottom of pictures helps with this as well and protect walls, but if you are staging with the home owner's own art, you may not want to take the time to add bumpers).
  • For staging, keep art around the room at approximately the same height so the eye has an easy journey!
  • Cut our shapes the size of frames and tape on wall with painter's tape before attempting to hang groupings.  You can even measure where the nails should be!
  • Wear an apron to keep your tools handy!

I would love to know any other tips you have to make this job faster! 

Submitted by Kim Dillon, Creative Eye Home Staging serving areas of Pennsylvania, Delaware and Maryland.

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Professional Home Staging services for the New Hampshire Seacoast

Portsmouth      Rye      Hampton     North Hampton      Exeter      Dover  

603.661.8524

13 commentsSharon Tara New Hampshire Home Stager • November 10 2009 07:10AM

Don't Underestimate The Power Of Negative Impression

negative expressionLet me be the first to admit it:  I've been known to whine and complain.  I'm not perfect and I haven't yet mastered a positive attitude.  I'm not alone...there is no shortage of people willing to piss and moan right along with me. Misery loves company and, more times than not, people will dwell on what's wrong, not on what's right.  Negative energy is quite powerful. 

It is much easier to complain and whine about problems than it is to come up with solutions.  Today's buyers are looking for a home they can move right into, not a house they have to improve or customize to meet their needs.  They are more likely to notice negative features before positive ones, and the negative features will make a stronger impression on them.   

Don't underestimate the power of negative impression.   Think about it....if you got ten compliments on a new haircut and then one person made fun of your haircut, the negative comment would be the most memorable of all the comments you received.  One negative erases the ten positive...it's that powerful. 

Positive marketing begins with preparation and positive impression begins with quality MLS photos.   When listing your house, the pictures you choose for the MLS are crucial to the impression that is made.  Show eight fabulous pictures and then one bad one and it's the bad one that will get the most attention.  The bad picture is the one that will make the strongest impression on potential buyers.

There is a lot of attention given to the power of positive thinking, but when it comes to selling your house, it is very important that you take into consideration the power of negative impression.

 Something you should keep in mind when preparing your house for sale. is that it is very difficult to see your own house through buyer's eyes.  Your emotional attachment hinders your ability to be impartial.     If you want buyers to notice the positive features in your house, those features need to be highlighted and the negative features need to be minimized. 

Consult with a professional home stager to learn more about creating the right impression through preparation and presentation.

 

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Professional Home Staging services for the New Hampshire Seacoast

Portsmouth      Rye      Hampton     North Hampton      Exeter      Dover  

603.661.8524

33 commentsSharon Tara New Hampshire Home Stager • November 09 2009 08:53PM

Wordless Wednesday - Jack Meets Zack

two baby boys

two baby boys

new baby

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Professional Home Staging services for the New Hampshire Seacoast

Portsmouth      Rye      Hampton     North Hampton      Exeter      Dover  

603.661.8524

23 commentsSharon Tara New Hampshire Home Stager • November 04 2009 12:21PM

Free Advice For Sellers - Show Them Something They're Not Expecting

It is common knowledge that you need to prepare your house for sale.  You would have to be living under a rock not to know that you have to "declutter"to make your house more desirable, and it is highly unlikely that you haven't seen some form of home staging show on television.

haunted houseSo, I have a question for you....

What gives? 

How is it possible that there are so many filthy, cluttered, poorly maintained houses out there on the market?

I'm not talking about running into one every now and then.  I'm talking about more times than not...

 

The market is cluttered with "BEFORE" pictures!

 

Maybe it's just me...maybe it's the nature of my work...

I am, after all, called in to give advice.  Maybe I'm only seeing the ones that really need help.  Maybe I've spent too much time checking out houses on the MLS.

 

window cleaningFor those who are serious about selling their house?  Here is some free advice... 

Get the buyers' attention.  Show them something that they are not expecting. 

Surprise them! 

After a long day of touring nightmares, 

make your house the house of their dreams. 

Show them something they didn't see in any of the other houses.  Show them clean, organized, freshly painted.  Show them light and spacious.

Here is a novel idea:

Clean under the sink, organize all the cabinets, drawers, and closets.  Clean inside the oven and refrigerator.  Clean all the windows. 

 

 

 

It's really not that hard to impress buyers when your competition is so bad!

 

More information on preparing your house for sale:

The Secret To A Fast Home Sale

Are You Preparing Your House To Sell Or Sit?

NH Home Stager Reveals Secrets To Selling

 

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Professional Home Staging services for the New Hampshire Seacoast

Portsmouth      Rye      Hampton     North Hampton      Exeter      Dover  

603.661.8524

18 commentsSharon Tara New Hampshire Home Stager • November 03 2009 04:11PM