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Lindsay Robbins
Realtor
    Years of Experience: 5

    10 Years Marketing Experience
    Lifelong resident of Park City and Utah
    Home Staging Company Owner

Direct: 435 659 1550



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@Home Realty
1776 Park Ave. 770 Suite 474
Park City, UT


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Selling a Home in Park City? Make it look its best without spending a lot.

Monday, March 1st, 2010

10 Big-Impact, Low-Cost Remodeling Projects

Working with sellers who have some—but not unlimited—cash for upgrades? Here are budget-minded enhancements you can suggest to make their home stand out.

1. Tidy up kitchen cabinets.

“Potential buyers do open kitchen cabinets and look inside,” says Morrissey. “Home owners can add rollout organizing trays so when buyers peek in, they feel like there’s lots of room for their stuff.”

2. Add or replace tile.

“By retiling very inexpensively, you make a room look way cleaner that it was,” says Javier Zuluaga, owner of Home Repairs and Remodeling LLC in Tempe, Ariz. “Every city has stores that offer $1 to $2 tile, so home owners have to pay only for the low-cost tile and labor to replace a dated backsplash or add a new one. We also use inexpensive tile to upgrade bathrooms.”

3. Add a breakfast bar.

When a wall separates a kitchen from a family room, suggest cutting out an opening to create a breakfast bar. “In one home, there was a cutout in the wall between the kitchen and living room,” explains Matthew Quinn, a sales associate at Quinn’s Realty & Estate Services in Falls Church, Va., who handles estate and real estate sales for family members whose loved ones have passed away. “We left the structure of the cutout, added an oversized granite breakfast bar, and put chairs in front of it. That cost about $600.”

4. Install granite tile instead of a slab.

“Everybody is hot for granite kitchen countertops, but that can be a $5,000 upgrade,” says John Wilder, a general contractor and owner of Fence and Deck Doctor in New Castle, Ind. “Instead, home owners can put in 12-inch granite tiles for about $300 in materials and get very high impact for little money.”

5. Freshen up a bathroom without retiling.

“With a dated bathroom, I recommend putting in a new medicine cabinet for $100 to $150, light fixtures for about $100, a faucet for $50 to $75, and a vanity for $200 to $300,” says Wilder. “And instead of replacing the tile, the existing grout can be lightly scraped and regrouted, which leaves a haze that can be buffed out and will make the tile look brand new. Also install glass shower doors. A French door adds a lot of panache and elegance for $250, and people will notice the door, not the tile. With all that, you’ve done a bathroom remodel for $1,000 to $2,000.”

6. Freshen up the basement.

“If home owners have cement block or poured concrete walls in the basement, suggest they have a contractor fill in cracks with hydraulic cement and then paint with waterproofing paint,” recommends Wilder. “They can then add a top coat to add color. They can also paint the basement floor with a good floor paint, which spiffs it up. The basement may not be finished, but it’s no longer a damp dungeon.”

7. Add a room.

Look for large spaces that can be enclosed to create a new bedroom for just the price of creating a wall. “One time, we closed off a half-wall to an office and added a door to the other side of the room, thus creating another bedroom,” says Quinn. “That $400 procedure, which took a contractor one day, netted about $40,000 in the sales price.” Zuluaga has also added bedrooms inexpensively. “In a two-bedroom house, there was an archway that led to a third room that was used as a den,” he explains. “It had a dry bar where there would have been a closet, so we took out the dry bar and created a closet so the owners had a third bedroom.”

8. Spruce up cabinet fronts.

Suggest home owners update tired-looking kitchen cabinets. Reconditioning is the least expensive move for under $1,000. “If the wood is starting to look shabby from use or contaminants in the air, we take out the nicks and scratches, recondition it with oil, and put new hardware on,” explains Heidi Morrissey, vice president of marketing and sales at Kitchen Tune-Up in Aberdeen, S.D. For $1,500 to $4,000, owners can replace the cabinet doors and drawer fronts, and for $4,000 to $12,000, they can have all the cabinets refaced. “With refacing, owners can change the color of the cabinets by replacing the door and having a new skin put on the boxes,” says Morrissey. “If they have oak cabinets today, they can have cherry the next day.”

9. Replace light fixtures.

“In a foyer and in bathrooms and kitchens,” says Wilder, “replacing overhead light fixtures provides a lot of pop for a little money.” If the kitchen has track lighting, Zuluaga suggests the home owner spend $450 to $600 to have an electrician replace it with recessed canned lights on a dimmer switch to add ambience. For about $700, Zuluaga also suggests installing pendant lights over a kitchen island or peninsula.

10. Tech-up the garage.

“Sometimes we replace the garage door opener with a remote touchpad entry system,” says Zuluaga. “That costs about $425 and makes it look like a high-end system.”

Staging your Park City home NOW for a quick sale

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010
If you follow this blog, you know I have said a thing or two about staging your home to sell. Well, the proof is in the pudding as they say. I am representing a buyer who was won over not only by location, location, location (on a golf course) and the floor plan, but also by the cleanliness of the home and the beautiful and organized  furniture. The seller’s were savvy and it paid off! Literally.
So if you need a few tips to help you on the road to selling…here is part 1 of an article featured here.
Living Big in a Small Home
After years of upsizing, Americans are enjoying the benefits of more modest living spaces.

With the average home size declining, owners are cleverly doing more with the square footage they have.

Years before house staging came into vogue as a sales tool, Howard Hoffman was helping sellers rearrange their furniture to maximize floor space and enhance a home’s beauty. Hoffman, GRI, SRES®, now owns Stage & $ell, a home staging and redesign company in Indianapolis.

Chances are he’ll have a lot more business in the years ahead from people needing to resize their lives. With baby boomers entering retirement, young adults delaying marriage, and the economy improving by fits and starts, Americans are starting to embrace the idea that less is more when it comes to their square footage. The average size of a new house decreased last year for the first time in nearly three decades.

“Home buyers have been changing,” says Fran Litton, a planner with Evans Group, an architectural firm in Orlando, Fla. “They still want the luxury and toys, but they’re putting them into a smaller space.”

Although the average square footage of a new house is still double what it was in 1960, in the last year, it decreased slightly to 2,215 square feet from a high of 2,277 square feet in 2008, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau. While the decrease doesn’t approach mid-20th century levels, it is the first drop in house size since the recession of the early 1980s.

Smaller houses can mean bigger challenges for real estate professionals. “Eighty percent of people appreciate only what they can see,” says Hoffman, who also works as a sales associate with F.C. Tucker Co. in Indianapolis. “You have to make sure you’re showing them what you’ve got.” That means making sure each room is easily identified. “Get rid of that desk and computer in the dining room,” he says. “Make sure buyers can see it’s a dining room.”

Hoffman also advises clients to remove rugs to show off hardwood floors and take pictures off the walls. “The less the eye has to distract it, the bigger a room feels,” says Hoffman. “People buy what they see. If they can’t see the floors or the walls, they won’t buy the house.”

Interior designer Roberta Lathrop agrees. She tells her clients with smaller kitchens to clear the counters. “You can’t have all the small appliances sitting on the counter,” says Lathrop, who runs Designs by Roberta in Belmont, Mich. “It will start looking very cluttered very fast.”

Smaller houses require owners to rethink what they have and how they use things. “If you have a smaller house, maybe you don’t need half a dozen different pans,” she explains. “Maybe a single flat griddle that you can put over a couple of burners will do.”

One of the first tasks she assigns clients is to go through their stuff—ruthlessly. “We all have too much stuff,” she says. “Get rid of it. If you’re attached to an item, or think maybe you’ll need it, put it in a box and store it somewhere for six months. Then go back through it.

Have you used it? Have you even missed it? If not, donate it. Get it out of the house.” That goes for clothes as well, she says.

Simple and Smart Marketing Technique for Selling Park City Home

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

So I have talked a lot about loan modifications, short sales, etc. For those of you not in one of these life boats, but want your house to SELL here is a simple strategy worth a try. If your home offers a view of something that looks particularly magnificent at night like a lit up ski run or sweeping views of the city, you may want to try an evening open house.

There is a lot of inventory here in Park City, why not shine at a Twilight Open House!

It works for sellers because many people would rather make themselves scarce in the evening then say on a precious day-off-of-work Sunday afternoon. It works for buyers because many can stop by after work. It helps your listing stand out from the crowd. Many open houses are held during the day or on weekends.

So turn on the lights and the buyers!

Part #6 Deadly Sins of Home Sellers in Park City and Heber

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Deadly Sin #6

Don’t nickel and dime the broker.

Now I know, I probably just turned you off by saying this but I promise I didn’t make this up. A reminder, this series of deadly sins in based on Barbara Corcoran’s advise given on NBC’s Today Show.

It is true, brokers like to be paid for their time. Don’t you? A good relationship with your broker of choice is invaluable. Everyone wants to be paid for their time and for a job well-done.

The broker spends money up front whether the home is sold or not. Marketing expenses can add up fast. Realtor fees and dues are also expensive and part of a broker’s overhead. Insist that you get the service you want and remember you are paying a professional who provides a portion of law services (buying and selling real estate requires a state license and training), liability protection, marketing services, home improvement consultations, often times financial planning services, and sometimes even martial counseling! (although not officially, of course).

Enter the relationship based on mutual respect, keep the communication open and hopefully, at the end,  you will realize it was money well spent!

Part #4 Deadly Sins of Home Sellers in Park City and Heber

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Deadly Sin #4

Not making repairs

For every dollar it costs you to make a repair in your home, a buyer will deduct $3 from the asking price! There are many examples of possible needed repairs…a leaky sink, a hole in the wall, stained carpet, a non-working light switch, damaged roof, broken concrete walkway, broken garage door, etc. I have seen all of these and seen buyers add up deductions from the asking price because of them.

I know, most seller’s HATE the idea of spending money on a home they are selling and they may think “These things have never bothered me, why would they bother the buyer?” If you have the money, spend it. Spend it wisely on the things most obvious. In some cases, I recommend sellers hire an inspector to find needed repairs before buyers find them. I have seen buyers simply walk away from a home because these needed repairs led them to believe there were many more needed “fixes” hiding from sight.

SO bottom line, walk through your home with the perspective of a buyer, find those needed repairs, put in some elbow grease and money.  You’ll have a move-in ready home for buyers to snatch up.

Part #3 Deadly Sins of Home Sellers in Park City and Heber

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Deadly Sin #3

Cluttered Rooms and Closets

Clean out and clean up! You may or may not realize that buyers snoop, they snoop through your cupboards, drawers and closets. Buyers don’t just judge your home based on what they see on the surface but what is behind closed doors. They judge the condition of the things they can’t see by the things they can. If your closets and drawers are clean and organized, they assume that things behind the walls like electrical wires and plumbing are neat and in good repair. You may not have thought a cluttered closet could cost you. Buyer’s who see clutter start deducting from the list price. So protect your home’s value by taking one closet at a time and clean out and clean up.

Part #2 Deadly Sins of Home Sellers in Park City and Heber

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Deadly Sin #2

Not Accommodating Showings

The second deadly sin is not making your home readily available for showings. Buyers have A LOT of inventory to see and consider. Many times I will have a buyer’s agent contact me and say he is taking his client out to show many homes in only a few hours.  If my client’s home isn’t available during their time frame, the home doesn’t get shown. I know from a seller’s perspective, one of the hardest parts (aside from WAITING for an offer) is feeling like you have to be on call anytime day or night for a realtor to show your home. It is a lot of pressure to have your home in showing condition. BUT it is a must. Your home has to be available or you miss the opportunity. Bottom line: If your home is for sale, buyer’s need to see it on their terms and time frame.

Deadly Sins of Home Sellers in Park City and Heber

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

I was watching NBC’s today show today and was impressed with a quick segment titled “The Deadly Sins of Home Sellers.” A lot of great info. packed in a short and sweet T.V. interview with realtor expert Barbara Cocoran. I thought I would share those deadly sins one by one paraphrasing Barbara’s advise as well as adding insight from my “real life real estate experience.”

A lot of seller’s are making some mistakes right now and in a buyer’s market, those mistakes could cost you. As a seller, you must detach yourself (as much as possible) and look at the situation from the outside. So I will try to save you from making these deadly sins or at least repent before it is too late.

Deadly Sin  #1

Being Insulted By a “Low Offer”

Some seller’s are insulted by a buyer’s low offer.  In a buyer’s market, buyers almost feel obligated to put in a low offer. As a seller, you don’t know if they can come up in price or if they are just what some people call “bottom feeders”. Either way, it is worth putting aside your pride to find out. After all, sellers are the one beholden to buyers right now. A seller should play the game, counter until a price is found where both buyer’s ad seller’s are comfortable. A couple statistics supporting this advise: Four out of five buyers come up in price. And most of the time, the first offer a seller receives is the best.

In Park City, as of today, there are 560 properties for sale. Buyers have a lot of options. As a buyer it almost seems irresponsible to not TRY to get the best deal possible. There are seller’s out there willing to deal and if a buyer pays too much, they are upside immediately.

A month ago, I received a call from a buyer’s agent who said her client was preparing an offer on a condo which I had listed. The realtor said the offer although strong was not for list price. I told her my client and I looked forward to seeing the offer. My client’s response to the news was for me to tell the buyer’s agent not to waste her or the buyer’s time. She wanted nothing less than list. Against my advice, I followed my client’s request. My client was emotional about the money she had “lost” already by not selling the condo a few years ago when the market was “hot.” The buyer moved onto another very similar condo in the same development and closed quickly. The irony of this, is that this sold price became the most recent comparable and set a precedent for future offers.  So my client’s condo became less valuable just based on the comparable anyway. For example, my client’s condo was listed for 499,000. The sold condo in the same development was listed for $497,000. It sold for $485,000. Given this recent comparable, what buyer would offer more than 485,000 for a very similar property in the same development? My own client committed the first deadly sin, “Being insulted by a Low Offer.”

I will continue with another blog entry about deadly sins home seller’s commit. Stay tuned….

Staging Your Home to Target Park City and Heber Valley Buyers

Friday, September 11th, 2009

I get  a lot of questions from my clients regarding how to stand out in this challenging market. Park City attracts very discretionary buyers. It is important to appeal to them and their pocket books. Each detail of your home must be addressed. So to satisfy some of those seller’s out there hungry to have a few tips and tricks when it comes to helping their house sell quickly, we continue our discussion on staging. And just a note…I will be supplementing our staging conversation with other important real estate information as often as possible. There is a lot to this real estate business and I hope to impart as much helpful information as possible.

So to pick up where we left off, we covered the “curb appeal” of your home last time.  Remember, whatever picture is painted from viewing the outside of your home, will be carried with the perspective buyers as they entire your front door.

Now let’s talk about one of the areas that I believe to be the most important in the home for home staging;  the entry way.

This is the area you step into when opening the front entrance. It’s a critical area, because it represents the potential buyer’s first impression upon walking into the house. Some homes here in Park City and Heber have awe inspiring entry ways with everything from immaculate chandeliers and antiques to past hunting trophies.  This area is a key area in your house in setting the stage for the rest of the home.

Keep the entryway open and free of clutter. Shoes, umbrellas and coats should not be stored in this area when a potential buyer is seeing your house.  Again you want your house to look like their home! This will make the house seem larger, right from the get-go. Make sure the entry has plenty of light. This is for safety reasons as well as general appearances. A bright entryway gives the initial impression of a warm, inviting home.  Again, I like to use yellows in the accents to really bring this area to life.  Get rid of that worn welcome mat and buy a new, high-quality welcome mat. It’s a home staging essential … and well worth the $20 you’ll spend.

The entry way is integral to good staging.  For sellers on a limited budget, I will always recommend special attention paid to the entry of any house.

Next time we will talk about everybody’s favorite room…the Bathroom!  I’m sure you can’t wait!

Park City Real Estate: Selling Your Home Tips and Tricks

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

As promised, I want to share some tips and tricks of home staging and how to make your home more desirable to potential buyers.

Before I begin, I’d like to reiterate why I think staging is so important and why I started a staging business to help clients sell their home.  Staging forces you, the seller,  to think like a buyer!!!! That cannot be overstated!  When you set out to stage your home for the market, you will be looking at the home as if you were a buyer.  This process changes your perspective on your home from one of an emotional attachment to one of a scrutinizing buyer looking for value and quality.

Now, when starting to stage your home, the main objective is to organize and de-clutter. Clearing away shelves, closets and cabinets is a big part of the home staging process.  It is imperative to depersonalize your home and make it as inviting to as many buyers as possible.  Clearing personal items that neutralize the home give buyers the feeling like this home is ready for THEM.  That does not mean the home is boring!  Fresh paint, newly cleaned carpets and cut flowers give an inviting feeling without giving the impression that the home is already owned and not available.

The best place to start from is the curb. Start by creating a list of items needing attention. Go out to the curb in front of your house with a notepad and pen. Jot down anything that “leaps” out at you.  Have a friend perform the same type of inspection, you will be amazed what you overlook!  Ask questions like “how does the paint look?”  Shutters and trim are noticed the most.  “Is the lawn, bushes and shrubs a distraction?”  Usually lawns are only noticed for the wrong reasons!  Trim bushes and trees as needed to give a tidy appearance. In particular, make sure they are not blocking windows or doors.  Flower beds are great if kept neat, Mulch is your best friend when trying to boost your curb appeal. Adding fresh mulch to your existing flower and plant beds can make a big difference in appearance. Best of all, it is inexpensive and readily available at your local garden store.  Check your flower beds and lawn for weeds every day while your house is on the market. Remove any weeds you find.  “Is my entry way inviting?”  It has been proven that the color yellow is soothing, add yellow flowers and accents to draw the eye to the entry way.  Homes in Park City and Heber Valley may spend most of their time on the market during the winter months. Make sure your walk ways are clear and the driveway is plowed or shoveled. You don’t want buyers slogging through piles of snow. Create a winter-wonderland verses a snow nightmare.

A few other things that have been proven to boost the first impression of the home are to make sure the windows are spotless. This includes the frames around the windows, as well as the shutters. This adds a lot of sparkle to your overall curb appeal.  If you have vinyl railings outside your home’s entrance, give them a good washing. All you need is a bucket, a hose, and soap.  If you have a large porch that’s ideal for sitting? Add a nice bench, or a pair of chairs, to help people see themselves relaxing on the porch.  Remember, people will see the outside of your house before they see the inside. If the home’s exterior makes a bad first impression on potential buyers, they will carry that negativity inside the house with them.

Check back later as I move to the inside and tackle the inside of the home.

Market Recap

  • Avg. Sales Price: 379,000

  • Avg. Days on Market: 69

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