Anonymous wrote:I recently went to a showing for a house where they did zero staging and no paint touch ups nothing.. Made us think if the owners were unable to afford basic touch ups and some base level staging that they might have not taken care of/maintained less visible things in the home as well that would cost us in the long run like chimney, plumbing, roofing, electrical etc.
This is what we plan to do.Anonymous wrote:I want to see a vacant, freshly painted, deep-cleaned home without carpet or dust collectors like fabric anything in a home. I can use my imagination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do you put your stuff when you stage your home?
Garage or storage unit.
Are there stagers who would solve this for you? Sounds like a common problem? (We don't have a garage).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good staging is very helpful, bad staging is maybe counter productive.
Some people will tell you that they don’t like staging and that’s their personal opinion - but good staging allows good pictures. Good staging + good pictures = best possible position in the market.
I am not a realtor.
A good realtor can bring in some accents or artwork to stage it.
Not demand you out everything into storage and pay to rent their furniture for a couple months.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do you put your stuff when you stage your home?
Garage or storage unit.
Anonymous wrote:Where do you put your stuff when you stage your home?
Anonymous wrote:Irrelevant in a low supply / high demand SFH sales market— like today.
If the house has been maintained well, is in a desirable neighborhood, has a good school catchment, and appeals to its targeted market (families w school aged kids, single people, retirees), you do not need to wasted time staging the house.
Just declutter, freshen the paint, put it on the market.
Anonymous wrote:My home was stage but I don’t think it looked staged. Main thing was we cleared a lot of stuff out will still looking lived in. We still had clothes in the closets and dishes in the cabinets, just a lot less. We also removed everything from closet floors. Our house look fabulous and I think it helped sell the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Staging grew big just as the housing market went online and realtors' role in finding buyers evaporated. Coincidence?
Not a coincidence at all - pictures play a huge role in selling
Exactly what role DO agents play? Because they can’t even bother to work their own open houses. They send warm bodies with no knowledge of the property at all who don’t bother to make people sign in and let any random person wander through your house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Staging grew big just as the housing market went online and realtors' role in finding buyers evaporated. Coincidence?
Not a coincidence at all - pictures play a huge role in selling
Exactly what role DO agents play? Because they can’t even bother to work their own open houses. They send warm bodies with no knowledge of the property at all who don’t bother to make people sign in and let any random person wander through your house.
It is a protectionist guild. But necessary, unfortunately
What is necessary? That they want their big, fat commission checks but can’t be bothered to work for it?
Our landlords just did an open house and despite promising us it would only be realtors with clients, it was public and the agent sent “friends” to “work” and they let everyone on who came to the door and said it was “so great” to have nosy neighbors walk through every corner of our private living space. Zero respect for people and their lives. It’s all about getting their check.