Real Estate News and Advice   

Home Staging Indianapolis IN

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Home Staging. You will find informative articles about Home Staging, including "Home Staging Helps Bring Top Dollar Sale". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Indianapolis, IN that can help answer your questions about Home Staging.

Jeffrey Hofer
317-607-0075
1060 North Capitol Avenue, Suite E-340
Indianapolis, IN
Eric Baiz
317-626-6364
3130 N Delaware ST
Indianapolis, IN
Monica Acoff
317-722-2000
6045 N. Michigan Rd.
Indianapolis, IN
Doug Buehler
317-258-5412
5506 Allisonville Rd
Indianapolis, IN
Michele Ramsey
317-796-1224
6952 N. Olney St.
Indianapolis, IN
Pamela Cooke
317-289-8791
624 E. Walnut St. Suite #210
Indianapolis, IN
Brandon Flye
317-431-7625
1237 Windsor Street
Indianapolis, IN
Mary Abella
317-748-5887
6441 Harting Overlook
Indianapolis, IN
Diane Welch-Ridinger
317-590-6475
1760 N Shortridge Road
Indianapolis, IN
David Meador
317-716-6092
6101 N. College
Indianapolis, IN
Data Provided By:
 

Home Staging Helps Bring Top Dollar Sale

If your house could be sold looking the way a model home does, do you think it might bring in more money? Chances are it would. That's why home staging is a growing profession that's rapidly changing the way homes are sold.

"Staging is not decorating. Decorating is optional, staging is mandatory in order to sell the house for the most possible money in the shortest amount of time," says home staging instructor Joanne O'Donnell.

O'Donnell has been teaching courses on how to stage a home to be sold for several years. The concept first became known in 1972 by then-Realtor, Barb Schwarz who realized that homes would sell for higher prices if they were prepared to sell first.

Today, hundreds of thousands of real estate professionals, decorators and sellers have come to understand the once-little-known term staging that was coined by Schwarz.

O'Donnell recently taught a course in San Diego, Calif. In the course were two mother-daughter teams, Realtors and even a lawyer.

"When we put your home on the market it is no longer your home; it is a product and we're marketing it," O'Donnell told the students.

Home stagers start by viewing the seller's home inside and out. O'Donnell encourages the students to walk through a home that they plan to stage with the seller, being sure to take notes of items that need to be moved and/or removed.

While home staging may improve the looks of the home, O'Donnell is careful to point out it is not interior decorating. Instead she says it's much simpler.

"You can't go out and buy new things for every problem that you have with a house," says O'Donnell.

She tells the students to be problem solvers, reminding them that her clients are selling their homes and they don't want to spend a lot to do it.

Really home staging is about de-cluttering and making a home desirable to the masses. "Clutter eats up equity," O'Donnell frequently reminds the students throughout the course.

"The whole idea of staging is that you want to market to the largest number of people to get as many offers as possible," says O'Donnell.

There are five key points that must be applied when staging a home. O'Donnell refers to them as the Five C's of Staging: the home needs to be clean, clutter free, have color, be creatively staged, and finally stagers have to compromise with the sellers, because, of course, many sellers continue living in their homes while they're being shown.

"People don't see that a lot of things that are in their houses are part of themselves and when you try to sell a house you want to make it as neutral as possible, not necessarily in the colors, but in the way it's presented," says Gerin Canin, a lawyer from New York who is transitioning into a home staging career.

Canin believes home stagers play a vital role in real estate.

"I think that when people sell their homes they don't necessarily see their house as a potential buyer would see their house. They become attached to things. [The seller] doesn't notice things th...

Click here to read the rest of this article from Realty Times

Agent Publicity | eNewsletter | Local Market Conditions | Video Newsletter | Article Index | Terms & Conditions | Privacy | Contact Us

Copyright © 2011 Realty Times®. All Rights Reserved.