Articles About our
Business
Published July 30,
2006
The New York
Times printed
"As the market cools, sellers
are seeking help from
landscapers and professional  
home stagers to get buyers in
the door"
Presentations Home Staging has been
featured in the following newspapers:



By JAY ROMANO
Published: July 31, 2008
WHILE the Internet has changed the way people buy and sell homes — it’s a lot easier to tour a house on your computer, in your pajamas, than it is to see it
in person — one thing hasn’t changed: houses sell faster when they stand out from the competition. And one of the best ways to set your house apart, real
estate experts say, is to borrow a trick from professional set designers and stage your home.

“Staging is preparing a home for sale so the buyer can mentally move in,” said Barb Schwarz, a Concord, Calif., real estate broker and president of the
International Association of Home Staging Professionals, a trade organization. “Decorating a home is personalizing it,” she said. “Staging a home is
depersonalizing it.”

With the market slowing down in many areas, an increasing number of brokers and agents are recommending staging to their clients. Ms. Schwarz said the
average cost of a stager nationwide is about $2,800, not including the cost of renting furniture. On the East Coast, a stager costs about $3,800.

Deanna Kory, a sales agent and senior vice president for the Corcoran Group, a Manhattan real estate company, said she finds that staged homes sell
faster and for more money than comparable homes in the same area.

Matthew Finlason, a home stager for HGTV’s new weekly program “The Stagers,” which had its premiere on July 20, said a successful stager will view the
home “through the buyer’s eye.” “When a buyer walks into a place, you have to show him the optimal furniture arrangement, the optimal placement of wall
hangings, lighting and art,” Mr. Finlason said. “So once I get the keys to the place, the homeowner’s tastes are completely removed from the process.”

Donna M. Dazzo, president of Designed to Appeal, a home staging specialist in New York, said the most important thing a seller can do is to declutter the
home. Remove knickknacks, trophies, plaques and family pictures.

Earlier this year Ms. Dazzo helped Richard and Mary Lou Manfredi change the look of their 17-room house in Muttontown, N.Y., on the North Shore of Long
Island, which had been on the market for three years. She first removed the clutter and then rearranged the furniture. A sofa crowding the living room was
moved to the master bedroom in front of the fireplace. Two empty bedrooms were converted into offices, and the space between their two bathrooms, once
an office, became a walk-in closet.

The Manfredis returned the house to the market a month ago. “We’re sure we’re going to get an offer,” Mr. Manfredi said. “It’s a different home.”

If the color scheme in the house isn’t neutral — blue walls in the boy’s room, pink walls for the girls and foil and bamboo wallpaper in the bathroom — it
may be necessary to repaint with neutral colors. If lighting doesn’t complement the rest of the new neutral décor, fixtures may have to be changed or
repositioned.

Homeowners thinking about hiring a stager should look at before-and-after pictures in the person’s portfolio and should visit a home on the market that the
stager has handled.

Generally, Ms. Dazzo said, the homeowner should hire a stager, trained ideally in interior or set design, before hiring the broker.

“It’s hard for a broker who wants you to sign a listing agreement to say: ‘Those pictures of your parents and grandparents have to go,’ or ‘There’s an odd
smell in this house.’ ”

It’s also helpful to hire a stager who has been taught the art of staging. “We train people to be professional stagers,” said Audra Slinkey, president of Home
Staging Resource in Vista, Calif. “We train them to transform the home so that it can be marketed to the broadest array of buyers.” Ms. Slinkey said most
buyers want a home that is “move in ready” and often cannot see potential if the owner’s furnishings and artwork obscure the view. Yet, leaving the house
totally empty isn’t a great idea. “Vacant homes take longer to sell,” she said. “And in this market, we’re seeing an increase in vacant homes.”

Ms. Dazzo of Designed to Appeal said that when a house needs to be fully furnished, she recommends renting furnishings for at least six months, which
could cost $1,000 to $2,500 a month or even more.

More Articles in Home & Garden »

A recent article in the Oregonian declared that “To many stagers, slow
housing sales offer a business opportunity -- what better way to give that
house an edge in a crowded market than to add the extra touches that will
wow a buyer? “.  

This clearly was a battle cry for many home sellers to rally to what
seemingly is a “new” idea in Real Estate marketing.  However, Home
Staging has been flourishing in many other markets throughout the USA
and abroad for years.  There are many opinions on the “WHY?”, but all will
agree that a home Staged over one that is not will certainly set that
property apart from all others in a comparable market.

In many areas of the country, Home Staging has been as necessary as
simply cleaning the windows.  If a Seller expected to compete with other
homes in the same price range and category, Staging was required.  In the
Northwest region, Staging is just beginning to establish what the other
parts of the country have already discovered,
“Staging Works”.

But why use an ASP Stager?  An ASP Stager is different from an Interior
Decorator.  An Interior Decorator works with their clients to create a home
that reflects that client’s personality and decorating tastes.  This works
well for the client, but may not appeal to the majority of home Buyers that
may look at that property.  An ASP will groom the home to warmly meet the
eyes of the other 95% of Buyers that will walk through it, giving that home a
better opportunity to capture an offer.

Regardless of the Real Estate market being a “Buyer’s” or “Seller’s”
market, Staging will get a property sold quicker and for a better price than
those that had not been Staged.
Verification of this claim came in the form of a recently completed national
survey which concluded that
 “93% of homes Staged by an Accredited
Staging Professional (ASP) sell in 1 month or less”.

This same study found that   “The Average Time on market for an ASP
Staged home…(was) 33 days or less…”

Presentations Home Staging is one of the largest “Full Service” ASP home
staging companies in Clark County, offering a full line of furniture, artwork and
accessories for the properties that they prepare for sale. Our Staging teams
are all ASP Staging Designers,
Presentations Home Staging works closely
with its clients and their Real Estate Agents to prepare their property for sale in
any market.


Empty homes are certainly the most difficult homes to sell.  They often leave the
Buyer wondering if their furniture will work in the room or even if they like the
size of the room.  Furniture, artwork and accessories are a must for these
homes.  We maintain our own inventory of furniture, artwork, linens and
accessories, while others work with local furniture rental companies to meet
their client empty home needs, or simply to augment a home giving it a fresher
look and appeal.

Regardless of whether your property is empty or not, an ASP from

Presentations Home Staging
should be your first step in preparing your
property for a quick sale in any market.  

Give us a call, we can help!

Presentations Home staging 2008 ©
Presentations Home Staging
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