As soon as you decide that you will be putting your home up
for sale—whether soon or at some point in the foreseeable future—it’s also time
to get strategic about growing your property's value—starting with a generous
dollop of objectivity.
The difficulty stems from a truth about how everybody
perceives much of their property’s value. We escape from hurly-burly of daily
living by retreating to the comfortable confines of our home—our
place. A good part of its value to us and to our family is its sheer
familiarity—the “hominess” that makes it our personal haven. But some of the very
things that make it so comfortable to us will be off-putting to outsiders—and
they are the prospective buyers.
Our great leather easy chair (the dark brown one that’s gotten
a few shades lighter where we sit, and a little off-color where the spills
happened) may look a bit peaked to the untrained eye, but it’s been that way
for years: who cares? The back door needs to be bolted to stay shut…we do that
without even thinking about it—hardly an issue! The sofa may sag, but it sags exactly right (for us)! The bathroom
window that’s sort of stuck (okay, maybe it’s painted shut)…etc. etc. etc.
Professionals are of one voice about the real value you
add to a property when you go to the trouble of systematically depersonalizing
it. It helps to approach doing that seriously and deliberately—to tackle it in
an organized manner. There are any number of ways to go about that, but here is
one way that will pay off:
Step 1
Make
a list... Review your home from top to bottom. Identify every nit-picky detail
in your home that requires repair or renovation. Prioritize your list of
repairs or renovations from the easiest (defined as least expensive/time
consuming) to the most difficult (defined as most expensive/time consuming).
Memorialize the list of repairs/renovations in writing and assign realistic
completion dates for each item on the list. For "big ticket" repairs
or renovations, get an opinion from a full-time real estate professional on
whether the repair/renovation will, in fact, improve the market value of your
home before you incur any expense.
Step 2
After a decent interval, sit down with the list and
re-classify each item into an Easy
Self-Fix List and a Professional-Attention-Needed
List.
Step 3
Get bids from the appropriate professional tradespeople, calculate which fit your budget, then schedule the work.
Get bids from the appropriate professional tradespeople, calculate which fit your budget, then schedule the work.
Step 4
Get started on your own endeavors to address the Easy Self-Fix List. You’ll be able to organize your own efforts to finish up about two weeks after the last of the tradespeople are scheduled to finish their projects (a two week grace period is realistic: you are aiming to finish everything about the same time).
Get started on your own endeavors to address the Easy Self-Fix List. You’ll be able to organize your own efforts to finish up about two weeks after the last of the tradespeople are scheduled to finish their projects (a two week grace period is realistic: you are aiming to finish everything about the same time).
Following these four steps will put you well on your way
to increasing the value of your home. And at any point in the process—from
before Step 1 to the satisfying moment that closes Step 4—give me a call to
discuss how to convert all that increased value into a profitable home sale!
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