Curb Appeal
Start with the outside of your house, or your curb appeal. Look at the outside of your home from a quick glance from the street. What jumps out at you? What wonderful features seem hidden? Knowing this assists us in deciding what we can do to attract buyers. If your house needs retouched paint and better landscaping, you'll want to make that a priority. Follow the Curb Appeal Checklist and increase your home's final selling price.
Curb Appeal Checklist >
Make yourself at home...
Could a buyer picture themselves lounging in your living space, reading a good book in your reading nook or getting work done in your home office? I want your house to pleasantly accept buyers and offer them a sense of ease. I'll help you do this by suggesting small improvements that highlight your home's features. I'll suggest that you remove clutter. Surface areas like tables, desks and counters should be cleared off. Arts and crafts, sentimental items, family photos, and refrigerator drawings should be packed away. I can help you simplify the decor of house. A home that is not in order seems smaller and buyers have a harder time imagining themselves living there.
I know exactly what a room's best characteristics are and how to highlight them. Enhancements that directly affect your dollars include fixable like pieces of furniture that should get removed, rooms that need new paint, carpet that needs to be replaced, fixtures that need replacing, and windows that need cleaning.
I'll ensure your home has mass appeal and that it's inviting, avoiding paint colors that are too bold and window treatments that are too flashy. And if the house is vacant, you can rent staging furniture. The goal is for your home to look ready-to-live in as opposed to abandoned.
Welcome Home Checklist >
Setting the Stage In every opportunity, we want to capture buyers' attention. We'll include cozy-looking bedspreads, pillows on your couch and bedding, and new towels in the bath rooms. We want buyers to feel like your house is their future home. |