Monday, May 27, 2013

Home Staging Tips For Sellers Pays Off In Spades!

Home Staging Tips 

The first steps of staging a home, including cleaning, painting,
and de-cluttering. Let's look at the next important steps, including de-personalization,
placement of furniture and accessories to maximize light and space, and setting the mood with scent and sound.













De-personalize.

Don’t take it personally when your stager or real estate agent tells you to pack away everything personal. All those photos, trinkets and treasures you’ve so artfully displayed throughout your home may be meaningful and even stylish, but to potential buyers, they are a reminder that the home has been lived in. Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to take yourself out of the picture and help the next homeowners imagine themselves living there.

De-personalizing is the hardest part of staging for most people because it means getting rid of things they hold dear. Actually, it doesn’t mean getting rid of them — if you don’t want to sell or donate them, you can simply box them up and rent a storage unit. (We used PODS — they’ll deliver a storage box to you, you fill it up, then they transport it to a climate controlled warehouse and deliver to your new location whenever you say so.)
Pack up and store anything that suggests your family lives there. Paperbacks, knickknacks, extra food in the pantry — go through each room one at a time and take away anything that you wouldn’t find in a model home.


In the kitchen, pack up all unused appliances and gadgets, and put appliances you need (even the toaster) in a cabinet. Some stagers say no more than one appliance is allowed on the counter, and only if it sparkles. Take all magnets off the fridge. Remove all other items off the counter except for a vase of flowers and/or a bowl of fruit.

Ditto for the bathroom — open counter space gives the home a cleaner and more spacious feel. Put cosmetics, hair products, toothpaste and toothbrushes in a drawer after you use them each day.
Pictures personalize your home more than anything else, so, as hard as it is, put those precious memories into storage while your house in on the market.

In my old house, picture frames themselves were a large part of my decorating style, so I packed away all of the smaller ones and kept out only a few large frames with bold lines and textures. Then, following the advice of a model-home designer, I replaced family, graduation, and wedding pictures with perfectly lighted, glossy magazine slicks that were neutral and cosmopolitan enough to become model-perfect decor. (My family still jokes about how much we grew to like those newly acquired relatives.)

Don’t forget to depersonalize the front of your home; remove name plaques or other items that personalize the home.
Group and place items to maximize light and space.

Everything you do should be geared toward creating the illusion of light and space. Think bright and airy, and look for opportunities to create vignettes so people envision themselves enjoying the space.
Move couches and chairs away from walls and into small, intimate groupings. If you have large furniture, consider getting rid of at least one piece of it (an overstuffed chair or love seat), and then group remaining items closer together (possibly at a diagonal). Some stagers recommend removing about a third of the furniture in a home to open up space; others suggest that once everything in a room looks perfect, remove one more item.

Remove wall clutter too, if you have it. The size of wall art should play well with the size of the room; too busy, too high, too large or too small can all spoil the look.
Don’t neglect living areas outdoors; buyers will see them as additional space, and it’s one more chance to imagine what it would be like living there. Put up a bright new umbrella and new cushions on your patio furniture to invite buyers outside.
We even set our patio table with colorful place mats and fun plastic place settings, so our buyers could envision themselves kicking back with their friends.

Empty homes are usually hard to sell because most people have a hard time understanding how a space is used or its actual size without furniture for scale. If you’ve moved all of your furniture out, your home sale may depend on having your home professionally staged with furniture and decor brought in. One goal of staging is to help buyers visualize the potential use for a room, which is why most stagers will ask you to move that pool table from your formal dining room.

Arrange furniture so as not to block the natural path through a room. For example, people should see the foot of the bed from the doorway, rather than seeing the side of the bed and having to walk around it. Speaking of the bedroom, stage for romance. Remove the television; most women don’t consider a TV in the bedroom romantic, yet studies show 80% of the time it is women who make the final decision to buy a home. Add pillows and go for luxurious beddings. If you have a mirror or dresser topper, consider removing it to open up the space.

Keep scale and balance in mind when decorating. When accessorizing, repeat shapes and lines of other items in a room. A few large, bold accessories are better than small ones, which tend to look like clutter. Take a tip from photography and graphic design: You can’t go wrong with triangular arrangements and groups of threes.

Lighting. A good rule of thumb is to let in as much natural light as you can, then add main lights and ambient lighting in every room. Sconces can add additional ambient lighting and draw attention to walls and ceilings, making rooms appear larger. Open all window coverings, have them cleaned, and remove them completely if they are heavy or block too much light. Turn on all lights before a showing, even during the day.
Engage the rest of the senses.

Sound. Set the mood for your home with soft music playing in the main living areas. You don’t want to offend anyone if they don’t share your love of country music, but classical guitar is generally neutral and relaxing enough that it lends to, not detracts from, the ambience.

Smell. Scent is an often overlooked part of staging. The ideal scent in a home is freshly baked bread or cookies, but who wants to throw a batch in the oven every time there is a showing? A lightly scented candle (not overpowering) that smells like freshly baked sugar cookies is a good alternative. (My personal favorite: Gold Canyon’s Sugar Cookie candle. You can Google "Shop Gold Canyon" to order online.) To further freshen your staged home, run a lemon through the disposal, put out fresh flowers on the kitchen table, and place a bowl of fresh fruit on the counter. Pineapple and lemons both smell amazing.

Touch.  Adding or highlighting texture throughout your house can be a great way to create an interesting space where people feel comfortable and want to linger. Thick, luxurious towels in the bathroom evoke a spa feeling, and a rich, touchable comforter with extra pillows can make a bedroom feel like a posh hotel.

Hire out or do it yourself?
Should I hire a professional stager or do it myself? That depends. If you can emotionally distance yourself from your home enough to see it objectively, as a commodity, and are committed to doing everything it takes to make it stand out, and you have an eye for style but more importantly a marketing mind, you might fare well. Many real estate agents will insist that you at least consult a professional staging company, then decide whether to hire them or take on the job yourself.

Benefits to using a professional stager include their knowledge of the market and what level of staging buyers expect to see in your price range; they have vendors on hand to do any suggested repairs or updates (painters, handymen, etc.); and they have access to furniture, potted plants, and other art pieces on hand to immediately fill in spaces where you need it.


Keep in mind that paying to have your home professionally staged will usually pay off in spades. Homes that are well staged usually command 6 to 20 percent higher prices than their unstaged counterparts and sell more quickly. Less time on the market means fewer loan payments for you. Plus, if you can sell quickly and avoid one or more price reductions, professional staging could be a worthwhile investment.

If you are considering listing your home, now is a great time. Click Here to get a FREE Report on the Valuation of your home. Give Terry Naber, RE/MAX Properties, Inc. a call at 719-590-4796.  



Thursday, May 23, 2013

How Boomer (Ages 40's-60's) Home Sellers Can Effectively Sell Their Homes To The Millenials ( 30's-40's ) - Newest Largest Group of Buyers


The housing market is snapping back – prices of single-family homes rose 9.3% over the past 12 months, according to the S&P Case-Shiller index.

 Homeowners who are in their 40s, 50s and 60s face both short-term and long-term challenges if they want to hook Millennial buyers in their 20s and 30s (who are also known as members of Generation Y and echo boomers).




Millennials and Gen Xers [roughly age 36 to 49] expect to walk into homes that are straight out of HGTV and look like they’re falling out of a magazine page, with modern colors and furniture styles.  Homes that don’t look like that may sell, but their owners could get a bit hurt on price.

Here is how the experts recommend making your home more fetching

Millennials want to use living rooms as rooms where people actually live.
That means using the rooms for the full range of life’s activities, including entertaining friends and watching TV.  They want their home to allow for easy entertaining. In a PulteGroup survey, 76% of Millennials said “TV, movie and sports watching” was extremely or very important to them in a new home. (Presumably, it would be important in an older home, too.)

Neutral walls “There’s been a popular belief over the years that painting your walls a neutral, off-white is the best thing to do for home buyers, but our research tells us differently. We find that certain bold colors work very well.

Carpeted floors -  Younger buyers want hardwood floors.

Homes located far from public transit and poor for “walkability” A new study by the American Public Transportation Association and the National Association of Realtors found that home values performed 42% better between 2006 and 2011, on average, when the properties were located near public transportation.

Walkability is the buzzword that describes how easy it is to walk to stores, schools, work or public transportation. In a Zillow blog post, walkability is one of the “10 things that make a home a good home.”

Poor cell and wireless service. If it’s not easy to get a cell or wireless connection, that would be a definite turn-off for this generation. Consider installing a cell booster device.

How to Make Your Home More Alluring to Millennials
You can’t move your house, of course, so if it’s located far from mass transit, scores low for walkability and is far from cell towers, you’ll just have to live with that and hope to find a buyer who’ll accept the drawback.

If your home has any of the other flaws cited, here’s what to do:

Visit nearby homes for sale to see how yours compares. That’ll let you know whether you need to launch a minor renovation to make your house look like the competition.

You might also learn that although your house looks a little dated, so do your neighbors’ homes.  If the other houses for sale have old kitchens like yours, you may be OK.

Hire a home stager. Terry Naber knows good ones. This pro will swoop in and make your house look more presentable to would-be buyers.

The expert who stages your home might put some of your dining and living room furniture into storage, so prospects could imagine their own tables and chairs there. Or the stager could replace what you have with contemporary, rented tables and chairs from the company’s warehouse.

Most younger buyers don’t have a keen sense of imagination when they walk into a home. If they go into a house with a lot of outdated stuff, it can be difficult for them to see through the clutter and picture what they’ll do with those rooms.

Buyers feel more connected to a house when it’s staged.
Again, Terry Naber can recommend a good stager.

Persuade buyers that your dining room could be something else entirely. Chris suggests putting tent cards in your dining room that say “Dining Room or Office.”  Alternatively, you or your real estate agent could draw up floor plans for the dining room and other spaces that show potential furniture arrangements that differ from your layout and suggest other possible uses.

If your house doesn’t have a home office, real estate pros say, it’s important to indicate where prospects could set one up.

Let us help you list, prep for sale, market, and sell your home for the best value in the Colorado Springs region.  Let us know what information you want by CLICKING HERE
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You Can Reach Terry Naber at RE/MAX Properties, Inc 
by Calling  719-590-4796 and visit www.TerrySellsColoradoSprings.com









































Sunday, May 19, 2013

Colorado Springs Housing Market Makes More Strides In April

The local housing recovery picked up steam last month, as the pace of homebuilding jumped to a nearly seven-year high and the number of properties falling into foreclosure continued to slow.


Single-family homebuilding permits, which serve as a yardstick to measure construction activity, totaled 302 in April in Colorado Springs and El Paso County, according to a report Wednesday by the Pikes Peak Regional Building Department. That's a 58.1 percent increase over the same month last year.

April's total also was the highest number of permits issued by Regional Building in any month since an identical number of permits were issued in June 2006, records show.

For the first four months of this year, single-family permits totaled 927, a two-thirds increase over the same period in 2012.

Historically low mortgage rates, an improving economy and better job numbers all have been credited with propelling a turnaround in homebuilding.

Nationwide, 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages averaged 3.40 percent last week, their lowest point since January, according to mortgage giant Freddie Mac. Meanwhile, the local unemployment rate of 8.3 percent in March was at a four-year low.

Homebuilding is a closely watched sector of the local economy because it employs thousands, including builders, subcontractors, suppliers and the like.

Also, local governments such as Colorado Springs and El Paso County collect sales taxes on the purchase of building materials, which pump millions of dollars into their annual budgets to help fund public safety, parks and other services.

Meanwhile, local foreclosure filings totaled 173 in April, a 41 percent year-over-year drop, a report from the El Paso County Public Trustee's Office showed. Year to date, foreclosure filings totaled 722 through April, down 62.4 percent from the same period last year.

The same low mortgage rates are helping property owners avoid foreclosure by making it easier for them to sell or refinance their homes, housing industry members have said.

























Monday, May 13, 2013

8 Steps To Reduce Your Property Taxes



8 Steps To Reduce Property Taxes

As the sluggish economy drags on, county boards everywhere are looking for ways to replace lost income–re-assessments of residential real estate taxes is just one of those ways. Sometimes it's fair, other times it avoids belt-tightening. If your property taxes have been raised and you feel it's unfair, here is how to prepare to meet your assessor for a review to lower them:



1. Look for reporting mistakes. Examine the assessor's entire property description. Note discrepancies and document them with blueprints, surveys, photos or other inspection reports.

2. Compare neighborhood assessments. Are other homes in your neighborhood assessed similar to yours? Check the web first; some counties post assessments online.

3. Compare current sales. Talk to a local real estate agent (if you need a referral, I'm glad to help) and get a report of comparables sold within the last 6 months. Sold homes count, listings don't.

4. Take pictures. Document where your home needs repair compared to other homes in better shape in your neighborhood.

5. Get a new appraisal. If your home is unusual or hard to "comp" this is the one time it can work in your favor. If you recently refinanced and the value is lower, use that report instead.

6. Get your contract. If your taxes increased soon after you purchased, values probably haven't changed that much. Document with your purchase agreement.

7. Are you exempt? There are many special exemptions: homestead, mortgage, senior citizens, veterans, disabled persons, and even energy-efficiency. Check with your county and check them all.

8. Prepare your case. In writing, briefly and professionally describe why you are entitled to the reduction, followed by documentation of your reasons. Make sure you have any required forms completed and know all deadlines for your appeal.
Contact Terry To Buy or Sell Your Home at 719-590-4796.  
Visit our website at www.TerrySellsColoradoSprings.com




Thursday, May 9, 2013

What Women Want In Their Homes - For Mother's Day

Whether you’re looking to buy a new house this month or do a little remodeling, take advantage of the opportunity to give the mom in your life a present she’ll appreciate every day.  Below are a few ideas for housing priorities and renovation projects that typically rate high on women’s wish lists for their homes.

Open Living Areas

The open floor plan is usually a big plus for any mother. They want to be able to cook dinner in the kitchen while monitoring their children’s schoolwork at the dining table. So look for a house that affords this visual luxury or consider the generous gift of getting dirty and knocking down some walls.

Large Closets

What woman doesn’t need more room for her clothes, shoes and purses? If you’re looking at houses, keep in mind how much closet space will work for your wife or mother.

If it’s not enough, see if there’s another area you could convert to create a custom closet. Another great gift would be to upgrade your mom’s closet with a new shelving and organizing storage system.

And great storage doesn’t stop in the bedroom. Most women like to keep the family’s things organized and put away, so think about upgrading some of the other cupboards and closets in the home as well.

Low-Maintenance Living

Some women are expert gardeners or love home-improvement projects; however, many just want to leave those tasks to someone else. Many moms love easy-to-wipe-down granite counters and hardwood floors.  These can be beautiful and functional home upgrades all at the same time.

And especially if you’re shopping real estate for an elderly mother, consider looking at Denver metro area  homes that are new construction, have easy-to-care-for landscaping and maintenance-free siding or brick.

Easy-to-Use Security System

While security is important to everyone, it ranks high on most women’s list of priorities. As a Mother’s Day gift, research providers and have a security system installed. Whether your mother is living alone or your wife is worried about the family’s safety, this practical present will give everyone peace of mind.

Make a big gesture this Mother’s Day by giving the woman in your life that renovation project she’s been pining over. And, if looking at buying a new home, keep in mind what’s important to Mom.

Finally, if you’d like more tips on Mother’s Day home shopping or upgrades, call Terry Naber at RE/MAX Properties, Inc.  at 719-590-4796.  Terry will quickly become your favorite real estate professional because of her 23+ years experience, her knowledge of the Colorado Springs region, her expertise, the volume of homes she has given excellent representation to, and most of all, she gives the best advice!

For a FREE Home Valuation (Its a great time to List your home - prices are rising)