Home Staging: The Winning Way to Sell Your House for More Money

by Barb Schwarz (John Wiley & Sons Inc., 2006)



An important distinction between staging and decorating a home is that the goal of decorating is to personalize a space, whereas the goal of staging is to depersonalize it. The smart real estate professional understands that staging a home before placing it on the market will help sellers fetch top dollar, says Barb Schwarz, the self-proclaimed founder of the home staging industry, in her latest book. When your sellers have too much furniture, too much clutter, and too much of their unique tastes and interests on display all over the house, potential buyers have a hard time looking past all that and envisioning themselves living there. This book provides practical tips to stage each room of the house as well as how to tackle exterior challenges to increase curb appeal. While the black-and-white photos and the blurry color photos that illustrate the before-and-after staged homes make it difficult to truly appreciate the power of staging, Schwarz still makes a convincing argument for why real estate professionals should be doing this with their sellers.

Tips From the Book:
  • Do the sniff test. If your sellers have dogs, cats, hamsters, old carpeting, mildew problems, or if they love to smoke or cook foods with a pungent odor - and you can smell it, chances are that buyers will, too. Ventilate the home and invest in an air-cleaning and deodorizing machine or products to remove pet odors. Another option is a cleaning product with living enzymes that consume the odor-causing agents and remove the smell permanently.
  • Pack up early. Sellers should pack up several large pieces of furniture and as much of the clutter in each room as possible. Don´t just shift the stuff to another room or garage - rent a storage space and get it out of the house before showing. "The way you live in your home and the way you sell your house are two different things," Schwarz writes.
  • Stick with beige. Carpeting shouldn´t look like a Crayola box - in a shade of purple, brown, wild yellow, shocking blue, black or white - or be shaggy or patterned. If your sellers have loud carpet in their homes, recommend that they replace it with plain, "real estate" beige. Don´t assume that buyers will be able to look past the bad carpeting and just offer a credit off the purchase price. Most buyers will keep looking for a house with fresh carpeting.




  • Use the rule of three. Three items are pleasing to the eye. Whether it´s artwork, figurines on a shelf, a magazine stack, pillows, afghans, or candles, arrange them in threes for a pleasing display as accents in any room.