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A metamorphosis occurs the moment you decide to sell your property. The
"home" you love so dearly turns into a "house." This shift
in vocabulary is part of letting go -- the emotional detachment process all
sellers experience sooner or later. Home is where your heart is. Houses, like TV
sets, toasters, and tangerines, are commodities sold on the open market. You're
getting ready to sell a house.
Getting your house ready to put on the market takes time. Exposing your
property to the market before it looks its best gives buyers and agents who tour
the house a bad initial impression. It's nearly impossible to get them back for
a second look after you correct the showing flaws.
If you make the right improvements when fixing up your property, you increase
the odds of selling it quickly for top dollar. If, conversely, you make the
wrong changes to your property, you waste the time and money you spent, prolong
the sale, and possibly even reduce the ultimate sale price.
Start the presale fix-up process by getting an outside opinion of your
house's strengths and weaknesses. Good real estate agents are an excellent
source of advice about readying your house for sale. Because agents see your
house with fresh eyes, they can spot flaws you no longer notice. Furthermore,
agents look at your house the way buyers do. They know how to prepare houses so
that they're appealing for marketing -- a process sometimes referred to as
staging. And, last but not least, because agents work on commission, good agents
don't want to waste your time or theirs trying to sell a house that's not up to
snuff.
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