Secrets of Staging: Sell Your House for More, Quickly

How prepping your house can change the minds of buyers

July 22, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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Home staging—a popular trend in the competitive housing market—is often the next step in selling your house more quickly, and sometimes at a higher price. Staging is preparing the home before it goes up for sale.

The practice has become somewhat of an industry—there are certified stagers, staging assessments, and a spattering of literature on the subject. Since the '90s, staging has been practiced by designers and now increasingly by homeowners themselves. According to a study by StagedHomes.com, a website dedicated to all things staging, staged homes sold for 6.9 percent more then their un-staged counterparts. Staged homes stayed on the market for half the time (11 days) that un-staged houses did (22 days).

A comprehensive book published last year on the topic is The Complete Idiot's Guide to Staging Your Home to Sell, by Marcia Layton Turner and Julie Dana. In a chat with U.S. News, Turner explains the phenomenon and how the psychology of staging works. Excerpts:

What is staging, and how has it become so prevalent?
It started about 10 years ago in California and has become this process that homeowners are expected to go through before they put their property on the market. Some Realtors in California will not list the home until it has been staged. And what that means is positioning the home in the best possible light to make it much more likely to sell more quickly and for the full asking price. Only savvy sellers who were flipping homes more regularly would do [staging] in the past. They would set up furniture and take all their photos out and the tchotchkes out to showcase how big their property was. Staging is like Generation 2 for getting your home ready for sale.

What's the psychology behind staging?
When you have a buyer coming into your home, you want their first impression to be positive so they can be emotionally attached to the home and they can imagine themselves there with their furniture. If you have all your personal photos all over the house (you've got your kids artwork on the refrigerator and the family photos over the fireplace), it's hard for them to see their family there; it's distracting. Part of the home-staging process is you take all the photos down, you limit what's on your walls so that they can see how big the walls are. You take out the extra pieces of furniture so that they can get a sense of how large the room really is. Because that's what you're selling—you're selling space. People will pay more for more space, even if it's not literally extra square feet—there's the sense that it's bigger.

How does staging change the buyer's perception?
A lot of decisions are made even before the buyer gets to the front door. You need to make sure the outside appearance is spotless so that they look at it and think "this home looks nice and well kept." It's all these little images (the paint, the door mat, the lawn) that are hitting them all at once, and you're trying to shape that with home staging. If you wanted to move into a certain neighborhood 40 years ago, you'd only have one or two homes to choose from. Now you've got six homes on a block. People are trying to take that extra step. Staging will preserve more of the purchase price. And that's what people need to do—all that they can to get the perceived value of their home up.

Tags:
housing market,
real estate

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One of the 15 “secrets” from MyPhoenixMLS.com article 15 Insider Seller Secrets: Don’t Try to Sell Your Home without Them, is “Paint prospective buyers a picture.” A buyer’s decision to buy is based largely on emotion, not reason. Prospective buyers will pay attention to how they feel in your home. Can they imagine themselves at home there? Isn’t that the same way you purchased your home?

If your home is in move-in condition, with neutral decorations so that the buyer can envision her family at the dining room table or snuggled up on the couch, you’re on your way to a sale. But if the house needs cleaning or repairs – or you have so many highly personalized decorations that the buyer can’t imagine himself living in your home, then a sale is going to be much more difficult.

For more information on home staging, check out www.MyPhoenixMLS.com

MyPhoenixMLS.com of AZ 12:53PM January 28, 2009

We sold our house in two days...it was hard to repaint and take out all our belongings to stage the house...but SO WORTH IT!

I painted my precious pink wall a neutral cream and this was all because of our wonderful realtor, Barb Christianson in Willmar, Minnesota. Thanks again Barb!

Barb Cloyd of FL 4:12PM October 29, 2008

It is very difficult for a novice to guess what's in the mind of a buyer. As a REALTOR, I bring in a professional home stager for each listing I take, and we do not enter the market until the work is completed. Buyers (and time) are both precious, and why waste either one? Even in a slower market, I have been fortunate to present either full price (or multiple offers) to my sellers, allowing them to make a choice and move forward. Pricing, visibility and presentation are all important in today's market.

Thomas A. Werth of WI 8:28AM October 14, 2008

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