Friday, July 13, 2012

Great Ideas for Organizing Spaces







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I am always looking for new ideas for sellers. These came from pinterest.com. This first one looks like they stacked storage bins in a little-used closet. In our house, there are no little-used closets. We are constantly looking for more space. One way to do that is to try and use EVERY available space.





Look at the purses below. Clever idea with shower hooks on the rod.

shower curtain hooks as purse holders


Many condos in our area have open stairways to the second floor. We have many buyers who do not like these because they have the perception of falling through -- especially if they have small children. Look at this bookshelf. Also, since many condos have no basement for storage, homeowners are looking for new storage areas.

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I love this idea -- put a towel rack on the wall and hang your pot lids. It is so simple!

Use towel racks on the inside of cabinet doors to hold your pot lids!!

How's this for a clever hanging pot rack? Take an old window -- look for an architectural salvage company -- and hang hooks on it and suspend from the ceiling. In a small space you have to look at all available space at eye level plus above and below.

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I am afraid that in our house we have so little space I'm discouraged and feel I'll never be able to organize it unless I pay someone to build shelves. If anyone has some clever ideas, please let me know. Look at Pinterst for ideas and be sure to share them.

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Working with Cooperative Sellers





We recently listed a house in Essex and the owners wanted our help staging the home. The house is a wonderful saltbox style with four bedrooms and two and one half bathrooms. The floor plan flows well but it needed to be staged to show it in its best light.

The house has incredible curb appeal -- beautiful gardens with perennials, specialty trees, blueberries and raspberries. The lot is large enough for a woodland garden. The owners created a waterfall that runs down a back slope. Next to the waterfall is a meditaion bench. Just perfect!

Inside, the house needed some staging.


Living room
Woodland Garden

They started by decluttering. Half the books came off the bookcases and art objects were placed in staggered spots. Next we removed all the silk flowers and other artificial flowers. Eveything was cleaned off of kitchen counters except the most important cooking items. We moved a large bureau to a spare room to make the master bedroom look bigger. The mudroom was stripped of everything but  few necessary coats. Two rooms on the first floor felt as if they were lacking purpose -- are these living rooms or a living room and an office? We staged one room as a formal living room with an Iranian rug we had in our staging inventory, and the other as an office and sitting room for quiet reading.


Family Room over Garage

The feeling of size increased! The owners said they wished they had done this years ago. (I hear this all the time.)

With great photos and a virtual tour, the house shows beautifully on the Multiple Listing Service. Staging makes a huge difference but we can only stage if we have cooperative sellers. If sellers are not willing to declutter, to move furniture, and to set the home up differently for showing than they usually have it set up for living, we won't be able to present it in its best light.

Check out this listing and let me know what you think! http://www.nnerenmls.com/nne/maildoc/sd_oBosoJ20120707231107.html

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Enjoying the Burlington, VT Downtown and Waterfront





We took this photo tonight at the waterfront. We had just finished having a maple creemee with our family at Burlington Bay. Afterwards, we walked past fragrant trees in flower, and sat on a bench and watched the sunset.

When we lived in Grand Isle, we were able to gaze out at the lake every day. Now we live in Burlington and see the lake if we walk or drive down. This made me think -- I get to enjoy the lake with very little effort and a lot less taxes! I have to exert some effort but I get exercise doing it. The lake is very accessible and I don't have to live right on the water to enjoy it.

We first had dinner at Leunig's, our favorite restaurant on Church Street. Our granddaughter danced to musice from street musicians. People were juggling, doing acrobatics atop piled chairs, and making balloon sculptures.

 Other restaurants we enjoy on Church Street are The Scuffer and Three Tomatoes. By the lake we eat at The Ice House and Shanty by the Shore.

As the sun was setting, the ferry from Plattsburgh came by and sounded its horn. Sailboats under motor were coming in for the night. All I could think of was how great it was to live in Burlington, Vermont and enjoy its lively waterfront. And it was especially wonderful sharing it with family.

Friday, June 29, 2012

How to Help Sellers - Even For Sale By Owners

We recently previewed a for sale by owner (FSBO) who was willing to work with Buyers' Agents and pay our commission if we brought an acceptable offer. We like previewing for sale by owners because we get to see other homes on the market that are not in the multiple listing service. We might have interested buyers and it is important to be knowledgeable about the market.  And frankly, when the FSBOs get tired of showing and marketing their homes and want to hire a REALTOR, we want them to have met us. If we have made a good impression, they might hire us.

The owner was very pleasant but clearly in a hurry to show us her home. She said she had shown it to countless REALTORS. We felt like we were on a race to see a 2000 square foot home in five minutes. "Here is the living room, here is the kitchen, here is the dining room, let's go upstairs." When I walk through a house, my eyes take snap shots of rooms, I think of ways to stage, look for water stains, cracks in foundations  -  all as I scan the rooms. This was like a nano second snap shot. My brain could not keep up!

When we finished our whirlwind tour, she sat us down and said, "Now, how can you help sell my house?"

I told her I saw some things she could do to help stage the  house if she wanted some suggestions. She said yes, but I think she meant no. I gave her the suggestions but I could tell she thought her house was just fine, thank you very much. I did not go through the list I had come up with mentally  -- put some paintings on the walls as it looks too sterile right now; paint some of the sunflower yellow and peach rooms to a neutral color; remove the laundry basket from the hallway; stage the music room. I had more. I kept my mouth shut.

We left her house exhausted. It made me think about our recent experience with sellers who are hiring us to list their home. What a contrast!

We spent three hours last Saturday walking slowly from room-to-room, evaluating the space, suggesting first to de-clutter, then to create a focal point for each room. We transformed two rooms that did not have a strong visible function. One became a library/study and the other, a formal living room. We moved paintings around to different walls; we gave away artificial trees and silk flowers; we brought an oriental rug from our staging inventory plus two bedspreads. The sellers were left with a list of improvements to make -- shampoo carpets, fill nail holes where we removed some family portraits, buy some new bath towels that they will leave out for show, pack up or donate books.

The sellers were at first hesitant to make the changes. I understand -- they have lived happily in spaces they love for many years. We explained that there is a way to live when your house is not on the market and a way to live when it is on the market. After an hour, they were tossing things into the trash with abandon. Any changes we suggested, they wrote down. That afternoon, they went to the store and bought all the items on their list including a new dining room light fixture. They love the way their house looks. "I wish we had done this years ago," they told us.

What a wonderful contrast between the willingness of our clients to listen to our advice and the FSBO owner who really didn't want to make any changes.

REALTORS view hundreds of homes every year. The Ericson Team sold 42 last year, so imagine how many we showed. We know what buyers are looking for. We also know that buyers will make a judgement in the first few minutes -- sellers don't get second chances. Buyers in their 20's and 30's are in the category we call "The HGTV Generation." They watch all the home shows to get ideas for curb appeal, decorating and remodeling. If your house isn't up to their standards, they will pass it by. We help sellers make good first impressions.

When the house we staged is listed, I'll put info and photos on this blog!

Sunday, June 17, 2012

How Pinterest.com Can Help You Sell










I admit, I'm just getting started on pinterest.com, the website where people can share ideas and others can copy and "pin" them in category files. Pin them today and access them later.

I'm obsessed. I not only love looking at the site, I am amazed at how creative people are.

I have a category called "Ideas for Sellers." When I see something helpful, I pin it and drop it into that file. When selling, you not only have to declutter (you can find storage ideas on pinterest.com) but you have to make an impression. Each room needs a focal point whether it is a fireplace or fabulous granite countertops in the kitchen. Pinterest gives you ideas to create that "Wow!" moment when  a buyer walks through the door.

Closets too cluttered? Today I saw this idea made from inexpensive crown molding.


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And everyone loves fire pits! What a great way to show how inviting your outdoor space is. Lots of times the house is small but if you create outdoor "rooms" or interesting gathering spaces, buyers will feel like the house is bigger than it is.


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And what about this for a great space saving idea?

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If you haven't discovered pinterest.com, check it out! You won't believe all the great ideas for your home whether you are selling or not!

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Your Agent Can Find the Perfect Property!

We worked with a buyer who identified the street she wanted to live on. We represented her as a Buyer Broker, so we sent a letter to all the owners letting them know we had a buyer interested in a home on their street -- were they thinking of moving?

We got a response, she liked the house very much and wanted to buy it. After some consideration, the sellers decided the timing was not right. If she could wait until the end of the summer, they would be happy to sell to her.

I check the multiple listing service several times a day, looking for new listings for our buyers. As I was looking for her, up came a listing on that street! We had seen it before but it was already under deposit, came back on the market for a day and was back under deposit again. She wasn't focused on that street at the time. Now she wanted that street and the house was back on the market! This was a foreclosure, so we were concerned there were problems with it -- maybe there was mold... or structural issues -  but I called her and we ran down to see it within the hour.

It was perfect -- great condition, better location than the other one. The listing agent said there were unresolved title issues and the previous buyers got tired of waiting for the resolution. We went right to my office and wrote up an offer. It was accepted by the bank that day!

We had to wait for title issues to be resolved. We negotiated a couple of inspection issues. But it only took about eight weeks to close.

Your Buyer Broker has a responsibility to be looking out for your best interests and that means looking for the right property. When you hire a REALTOR, he or she will comb the for sale by owners as well as the MLS for homes that fit your criteria. Because I knew where she wanted to live, I was focused on that section of the town and specifically that street. (Though we never thought another house would come on the market!) We jumped on it and she now owns the house of her dreams!

Persistence and paying attention to the market yields happy results!

Friday, May 4, 2012

Carpet in the Basement = Offers

I have a house for sale that had old carpet in the basement. It was stained from some pet and food damage (think spilled beer) but basically was acceptable for a basement. Trouble was, buyers said the basement smelled. They said it smelled like a litter box (there was one way in the corner behind a door) but the litter was always cleaned.

Then there was a back up in gutters and some water seeped in through a corner of the  basement, travelling to the carpet. Now the carpet was dirty and wet. And according to a lot of buyers, smellier.

Solution? The sellers went to Home Depot and bought low grade but nice carpet for the basement. They put it on an 18 month no interest charge knowing they would pay it off when the house sold. All of a sudden, we had about five showings a week and an offer. We are expecting a  competing offer.

And guess what, no smell. It was the carpet that was giving off a litter smell. Once it was changed, the smell was gone and the basement presented itself as great living space. This is especially important in a small house where families might outgrow the space on the main floor quickly.

It just shows that an investment of $1,000 - if it is spent correctly - can do the trick and get results!