Home Staging Training Courses: Make The Right Decision for You
I receive many emails from people who are completely confused by the various home staging training programs available. With so many options, I can understand the frustration. I have created the following list to help you ask the right questions when researching the various programs:
1. If a program offers hands on training, how is it done?
I've heard far too many stories of groups of 40 or more people spending most of their day in their own (or a rental) car driving to various far-flung locations only to take turns rearranging a living room.
2. Is the trainer a recognized expert in the field of home staging?
3. Will the training prepare you for the realities of being an entrepreneur?
No matter how talented you are at staging or decorating, if you don't know how to do the following tasks, you will not make a living at this business: price your services properly, cost effectively market your business, effectively promote yourself to the right audiences, create your own portfolio, find potential clients, get media attention.
A worthwhile training program should really cover all these areas; otherwise they are just talking to you about what will amount to nothing more than a creative hobby.
4. Does the trainer have real world experience starting and growing a profitable home staging business? If they haven't done it, how do they know what they're talking about?
I remember when I did my Masters degree in business, there were professors spouting all kinds of great theories, but only the professors who had actually worked in the real world offered anything really useful or actionable.
5. Has the trainer proved they know how to get media attention for their expertise as a home stager? If not, how will they teach you to do it?
6. Does the company give you an opportunity to learn and ask questions about their program before signing up?
7. Is free information available to aspiring stagers and others or is it all about the money? Is the free information quality content or just fluff?
8. What do past students say about the program? What business success have they experienced?
9. Can you talk to the trainer personally before deciding?
10. Can you attend a free preview to experience something about what the program will be like?
11. Does the program offer a Satisfaction Guarantee? In other words, will you get your money back if it's not what you expected?
12. Is the format of the program or the way it is delivered practical for you? Will you have to travel or be away from family for a few days?
13. Are you being promised anything that sounds too good to be true or unrealistic?
14. Are you being promised official credentials for completing the program so that you will be a "real" home stager; or does the training company admit that home staging is a completely unregulated field that does not require any credentials at all?
15. What type of ongoing support does the company provide for its graduates?
Don't assume because a program costs more that it is better. Make sure you've answered the above questions so you know what you're getting for your money. While there is a wide variation in the costs of home staging training, this should not be the first criteria. The reality is that home staging is a very lucrative business if you know what you are doing on the business side.
So, whether you spend a few hundred dollars more or less on a program is not significant when you consider the big picture. The key is getting what you need from a program and positioning yourself to take your passion for decorating and interest in real estate and turn it into a profitable and creatively satisfying business.
Internationally recognized home staging expert Debra Gould is President of Six Elements and creator of The Staging Diva Home Staging Business Training Program. Debra has staged millions of dollars worth of real estate and uses her expertise to train others worldwide. Visit her at http://www.stagingdiva.com and http://www.sixelements.com
1. If a program offers hands on training, how is it done?
I've heard far too many stories of groups of 40 or more people spending most of their day in their own (or a rental) car driving to various far-flung locations only to take turns rearranging a living room.
2. Is the trainer a recognized expert in the field of home staging?
3. Will the training prepare you for the realities of being an entrepreneur?
No matter how talented you are at staging or decorating, if you don't know how to do the following tasks, you will not make a living at this business: price your services properly, cost effectively market your business, effectively promote yourself to the right audiences, create your own portfolio, find potential clients, get media attention.
A worthwhile training program should really cover all these areas; otherwise they are just talking to you about what will amount to nothing more than a creative hobby.
4. Does the trainer have real world experience starting and growing a profitable home staging business? If they haven't done it, how do they know what they're talking about?
I remember when I did my Masters degree in business, there were professors spouting all kinds of great theories, but only the professors who had actually worked in the real world offered anything really useful or actionable.
5. Has the trainer proved they know how to get media attention for their expertise as a home stager? If not, how will they teach you to do it?
6. Does the company give you an opportunity to learn and ask questions about their program before signing up?
7. Is free information available to aspiring stagers and others or is it all about the money? Is the free information quality content or just fluff?
8. What do past students say about the program? What business success have they experienced?
9. Can you talk to the trainer personally before deciding?
10. Can you attend a free preview to experience something about what the program will be like?
11. Does the program offer a Satisfaction Guarantee? In other words, will you get your money back if it's not what you expected?
12. Is the format of the program or the way it is delivered practical for you? Will you have to travel or be away from family for a few days?
13. Are you being promised anything that sounds too good to be true or unrealistic?
14. Are you being promised official credentials for completing the program so that you will be a "real" home stager; or does the training company admit that home staging is a completely unregulated field that does not require any credentials at all?
15. What type of ongoing support does the company provide for its graduates?
Don't assume because a program costs more that it is better. Make sure you've answered the above questions so you know what you're getting for your money. While there is a wide variation in the costs of home staging training, this should not be the first criteria. The reality is that home staging is a very lucrative business if you know what you are doing on the business side.
So, whether you spend a few hundred dollars more or less on a program is not significant when you consider the big picture. The key is getting what you need from a program and positioning yourself to take your passion for decorating and interest in real estate and turn it into a profitable and creatively satisfying business.
Internationally recognized home staging expert Debra Gould is President of Six Elements and creator of The Staging Diva Home Staging Business Training Program. Debra has staged millions of dollars worth of real estate and uses her expertise to train others worldwide. Visit her at http://www.stagingdiva.com and http://www.sixelements.com

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- Finding Fulfillment at Midlife: Home Staging as a Second Chance Career
- Slowing Economy a Boon for Home Staging Entrepreneurs
- Home Staging for Top Dollar - Equity vs. Ego
- Beware of Being Fooled By Home Staging
- Home Staging Helps Sellers Bloom this Spring
- Home Staging Helps Real Estate Investors and Builders Maximize Profits
- Setting the Stage for Maximum Profit - Home Staging Tips from the Experts
- Cheap Homes For Sale In Great Towns
- Phoenix - Marketing Tips for Selling Your Home
- How to Sell a House Fast in a Declining Housing Market
- You Can Sell Your Home in a Slowing Real Estate Market
- Sell Your Home Faster, and at Your Asking Price, by Boosting Its Curb Appeal
- Is it really possible to sell a house quickly and easily?
- Five Must-Have Skills To Be Successful Home Stager
- Why Hire a Professional Home Stager?
- The Future Looks Bright for Real Estate Staging
- Selling Your Home? 7 Tips to Hiring a Professional Home Stager
- Homes For Sale By Owner
- Cheap Homes For Sale
- Tips to Improve Your Home's Value




