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Sell Houses Fast
& for Top Dollar: Use New Interior Design
Psychology
by Jeanette Joy Fisher
How would you like to start a bidding
war for your home, ending with a sales price greater than the asking
price -- all within your home’s first three hours on the market?
That’s the kind of results you can expect when you prepare your home
for marketing, using new Interior Design Psychology
methods!
Design Psychology’s innovative interior
design strategies go well beyond normal cleaning, painting, and
repairs, and have been proven to increase homeowner profit while
shortening a home’s market time. And best of all, you don't have to
spend a lot of money to enjoy the benefits Design Psychology can
provide!
Here are a few tips for maximizing your
sales price, while minimizing the out-of-pocket cost of selling your
home:
First, you must emotionally detach
yourself from your home and begin to think of it as simply a piece
of property that needs to be sold. In the end, your goal is to make
your home feel like a well-appointed vacation property and to spur
buyers’ imaginations with dreams of enjoying a new life in your
luxurious home -- soon, and at top dollar!
Imagine your home as a five-star hotel
room with a kitchen. Set out your best china, crystal, and finest
linens, and then start packing everything you won't need, including
all personal items, such as family photos, memorabilia, and other
clutter. Your aim is to create a luxurious feeling for prospective
buyers -- because buyers will pay more for a home that makes them
feel pampered and comfortable.
Once you've got the interior of the
house feeling warm and inviting, it’s time to take inventory around
the rest of your property. Take a notebook, and make three columns
on your notepad: "No Cost Changes," "Small Cost Changes," and "Dream
List Changes." Then start at the street, pretending you're a home
buyer, seeing the property for the first time. It may help to have a
friend with you during this process, in order to be more objective.
Walk around the property, just as a
potential buyer would, making notes about everything that could use
improvement, such as landscaping and exterior paint, listing each
change in the proper column. Then walk to the front door, enter the
house, and then walk through, letting the natural flow of the layout
guide you all the way to the backyard.
Keep a constant eye out for things that
need attention, jotting them down on your notepad as you walk around
the property. Notate everything you find that detracts from the
serene, inviting feeling you're trying to create.
Once you've compiled your list, begin
with tackling the items in the "No Cost Changes" column. They could
be things like pulling weeds, moving plants from crowded garden
areas and transplanting them elsewhere, or rearranging furniture, to
show off your home’s architectural features or to make rooms seem
more spacious.
Always try to see your home as a
prospective buyer would see it. Set up enticing vignettes throughout
the house, such as an intimate breakfast table for two in the master
bedroom or a book sitting on an end table in the reading nook.
Since under-furnished rooms allow
buyers to imagine their own furnishings in a home, it'll be
worthwhile to sell or place unnecessary furniture in storage. If you
find that hard to do, compare the cost of moving a piece of
furniture to the cost of replacing it, and then ask yourself if the
piece is worth keeping.
For tackling the items on your list
that will cost money to address, always make sure the expense will
be worth the benefit.
Using new interior design ideas to
prepare your home for sale can speed your sale and get you a bigger
check at closing. (c) Copyright 2005
Jeanette J. Fisher All rights reserved.
Jeanette Fisher, author of
Sell Your Home for Top Dollar -- FAST! Design Psychology for Redesign and Home
Staging, Doghouse to Dollhouse for
Dollars, Joy to the Home, and
other books teaches Real Estate Investing and Design Psychology. For
more articles, tips, reports, newsletters, and sales flyer template,
see http://www.sellfast.info
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