By Kischma Channette
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June 29, 2024
Preparing your home to sell can be a daunting task that requires a multitude of smaller projects along the way. From decluttering to cleaning to staging, here are three stories from personal experience that will help to show you what not to do when selling your home. True Story #1. Setting out for a full day of showings, my clients were excited to see one particular house because it checked all of the boxes for their wants and needs. It was the last showing on our list for the day, and it was the one they most looked forward to. They had high hopes that it would be “the one”. Upon arrival, the wife raved about the study, she loved the size of the kitchen, and she was impressed by the ceiling height of the living room. She was also very observant about how many pets possibly lived in the home based on the numerous feeding bowls placed in several areas downstairs. As I led the way upstairs, she stated that the Owners must have a cat because she felt the onset of an allergic reaction. We casually laughed it off, but as she reached the second floor, her laughter turned into a scream. Unbeknownst to me, a cat had darted out of one of the bedrooms and scampered past her into another room. And that was it. While I was processing what happened, my client scooped up her daughter and was already downstairs and heading out the door. She was not only allergic to cats, but both she and her daughter were afraid of them, too. We never finished the tour, and instead of that house being “the one”, it became “the one with the scary cat”. Sellers, it’s fairly common to remain living in your home while it’s on the market, but that doesn’t mean that Buyers want to see how you live. The house should be presented in a way in which potential Buyers can see themselves living there.