Archive for October, 2008

WE ARE HIRING!

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

As the company grows, we need more people!

We are hiring

*Admin Assistant (paid hourly, benefits, on site)

*New Media Marketing & PR Intern (college credit, work from home)

*Graphic Design Intern (college credit, work from home)

Please let us know if you know of anyone!

The details are at https://www.jobscore.com/jobs/staged4more/list

Cheers,

Cindy

Did you just hire Mr. Joe the Plumber to Stage Your House?

Monday, October 20th, 2008

When mainstream media checked the background of Mr. Joe the Plumber, they found out he didn’t have a plumber’s license to practice.

Joe the Plumber with Obama Courtesy of MSNBC.com

Joe the Plumber with Obama Courtesy of MSNBC.com

Well, it’s a similar issue in the staging industry: you don’t need a license to practice staging. Additionally, there is no regulation or ethics committee when it comes to business practices for staging. Essentially, anyone and everyone can wake up one day, “bing,” with that lightbulb going off above their heads and say: “Well, I’ve decided! In this recession, home staging sounds like a lucrative career, so I am gonna do it!” Silly as it sounds, it happens more often than we thought.

So as a consumer, what to do when you are hiring a stager? How do you make sure that you are hiring a stager who is responsible, ethical and will stage your home to get you best return on your staging investment?

Here are a few tips:

*Ask probing questions: Instead of just asking “How long have you been in the business?” ask “How many homes have you staged?” Because someone can be “in business” for a long period of time and not actually stage a lot of houses. You want to gauge how many projects the stager has done and what is his/hers past track records.

*Don’t just hire based on pricing: Figure out what you really get for the price tag. When you compare proposals, look at what does the lowest price tag include vs. the highest price tag include. The most expensive doesn’t mean it’s better, and vice versa. Also find out if there are other surcharges.

*ALWAYS, ALWAYS interview more than 1 stager: Hiring a stager is really not a decision to be taken lightly. Because the difference between a good stager vs. a bad stager can be days on market, # of offers, etc. which can have significant consequences of your final sales profit.

Got any other tips? Share them in the comment box below!

Testing & Glitches on the Site

Sunday, October 19th, 2008

Hey ladies & gents

You may have noticed that bits and pieces are missing or moving around on the staged4more site. The main reason is we are making transition into the new theme and site, we have grown out of this current scheme and ready to re-stage our home on the web! (Or maybe it’s just Halloween approaching and the spirits are being playful and start shifting stuff on us!) So pardon our dust, and let us know if you have any feedbacks you would like to see on site.

Cheers,

Cindy :)

Hot or Not?

Friday, October 17th, 2008

Should someone use this rug to stage?? ;)

Road Kill Carpet

Do you know the feeling that you do not want to take a look at something, but you still do? The Road Kill carpet is a continues struggle between attraction and repulsion. It’s a warm, soft, cuddly carpet that attracts you to take a nap on it. But at the same time its a repulsive image of a car-flattened, bloody fox. [per Craftzine]

Blog Action Day 2008: My D.C. Life

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

This is my contribution to the Blog Action Day 2008

our old living room

After graduating from Cal, I spent a year working for City Year D.C., an AmeriCorps program, in Washington D.C. Our stipend came out to be $2.50 – $3.00 per hour. To make ends meet, I lived with 5 other co-workers (just so happened it was 3 boys and 3 girls, exactly like the Real World house casting), and took a waitress job at Dupont Circle in additions to already working 50-hour weeks.

Granted I wasn’t living in “true” poverty, but all of us in the program were basically living on borderline poverty line. But luckily with 6 of us in the house, we were able to split everything 6 ways. When you split everything 6 ways, well, it didn’t seem that terrible. Still, ramen and cheap groceries were major stock in our house.
hole in the ceiling
Our house was 2 blocks away from where Rockridge park, where Chandra Levy’s body was found (Modesto college student who disappeared, consequently erupted scandal of hometown congressman was having an affair with her). We lived in the vicinity of 4 different liquor stores that had iron bars and bullet proof glass in front of the counters, and a half way house. When I was living in that neighborhood, I was so oblivious that I didn’t even notice the women and their pimps, the drug dealers.

dining room

Still, housing condition was bad. Within a week of living in the row house, we came home from work finding a piece of ceiling on the floor in the living room. The real estate management company didn’t bother to give us any attention at all. In comparison, we were small potato clients. We were poor, and they had luxury clients to deal with. We had issues with sewer where the gross stuff came back up from the pipes. Dryer was broken. By the time most of us moved out a year later, the giant hold still lived in the ceiling, with the water pipes exposed. When the weather got warm, we soon found in addition to Jeff, the freeloader who were just “crashing” but never ended up moving out until he found a girlfriend to mooch off, we had mice as our new roommates. And somehow we couldn’t get our full deposit back! What a crazy world?

oh our new housemate
Living with low wages and working 70-80 hour weeks taught me a lot about living below our means. It was a testy year. Groceries were terrible. We bought the cheapest things which usually contained high fat, grease and all sorts of chemical. I gained a lot of weight because fast food was the cheapest thing. (How can you beat $5 fried chicken that came with all sorts of sides and a giant soda?) Gaining weight made me had less energy and more testy in dealing with tough situations, which we encounter a lot working with DC public school systems. Living with 5 other people (who you also saw at work daily AND on weekends) in a 3 bedroom house was also rough. I ended up living in attic because half way through the fall I realized that there were no insulation in sun room, I would be freezing to death if I continue to live in sun room. Attic had more insulation and my thermal sleeping bag proved to be a fantastic investment.
More importantly, I learned about “the vicious cycle.” It’s very difficult to escape poverty, because while you are trying to make your ends meet, you really can’t afford to think about what is green or eco-friendly for your house since all the eco-friendly stuff costs at least 2-3 times more comparing to drugstore brands. You also can’t think about buying high-quality food, because Whole Foods would really take your entire paycheck of a month for your one-week worth of food. I can’t even imagine people who have families, kids to feed, dress and send to school, and dealing with mortgages and car loans. Or what if you have children who are sick? How are you going to pay for their bills if you don’t have health insurance. Life is much more easier when you only have your own mouth to feed, yet I was working 70-hour weeks.
I obviously survived, and plenty of other AmeriCorps members have similar stories. (I once heard about 15 people living in a 2 bedroom house, now that’s AMAZING.) All of us *chose* to have this job and live on the stipend, but how about people who didn’t choose to? Who didn’t grow up with the means to go to school to receive higher education? Or people who can’t afford afterschool care, or babysitters, but have to work 2 jobs to support their families? They didn’t *choose* to not read to their kids and do their homework with them. They are simply too tired.
So let’s help others to get out of that cycle. There are a lot of ways you can help:

a. You can donate to charities to help people get assistance to gain independence.
b. Support new entrepreneurs through micro-lending organizations and courses
c. Involve your local politicians
and many many others!

30 Simple Ways to Battle Poverty With Technology

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

Tomorrow is Blog Action Day, a day started by bloggers to raise awareness of an important issue on October 15 every year. Last year was environment, this year we are raising awareness on battling poverty.

Blog Action Day 2008 Logo

So far, 9,014 sites and 9,571,358 RSS subscribers are raising awareness to Poverty, are you? 3 simple ways:

1. Blog about Poverty
2. Donate to micro-lending organizations like kiva.org
3. Promote by getting the word out there!


Blog Action Day 2008 Poverty from Blog Action Day on Vimeo.

I originally wrote a post on promoting Blog Action Day 08 but wordpress ate it for Sunday brunch :( but Skellie did such an amazing job I figure I should just point out Skellie’s blog on technology and poverty: [Click here to read Skellie's 30 Simple Ways to Battle Poverty With Technology]

My favorites of Skellie’s 30 are #2, #4, #29.

Welcome to Staged4more Blog~

Monday, October 13th, 2008

Hello

Carnival of Real Estate readers, Welcome to the Staged4more Blog!

Since Staged4more is a home staging company in San Francisco bay area, most blog posts have to do with designs, staging, real estate marketing and San Francisco bay area. Feel free to give us any suggestions on the blog or layouts of the blog. We are actually in the process of switching to a new wordpress theme. We have out grown our current site.

We are also looking to broaden the scope of our blog and actually coming out with a magazine. If you would like to become a contributor, please let us know!

Cheers,
Cindy
Boss lady @ Staged4more ;)

You can also connect with us:
twitter: @cindeelean
facebook page
linkedin