Beyond
marketing
Can Higher Powers
Sell a Home?
Learn about four alternative approaches to attracting buyers.
BY DINAH ENG
Sellers are always are looking for new ways to entice buyers,
particularly in a slow housing market. Some update their
kitchens and bathrooms to make their home stand out from the
rest; others offer creative incentives, such as a year of free
maid service or pre-paid condo assessments.
But there are also those who favor a decidedly more spiritual
approach, calling on higher forces for extra help finding
buyers. One such practice involves burying a St. Joseph statue
in the yard of a home. More complex are the ancient Chinese
philosophy of feng shui
and the Indian practice of
vaastu.
Although these methods are more common with certain cultures and
religious groups, you can expect them to nudge closer to
mainstream during a softer real estate market.
To boost your familiarity with these alternative approaches, we
spoke with real estate professionals who are experienced in
harnessing higher powers. They explain the basics of four
different approaches and provide tips on getting started.

St. Joseph Kit: Saintly
Sales Assistance
How does it work?
You bury a statue of St. Joseph — the patron saint
of home sellers and buyers —
in your yard, and a successful sale will be right around the
corner.
Some say the ritual began centuries ago when a nun prayed to St.
Joseph because her convent was in need of more land. However, no
one’s exactly sure when or where the ritual began, and it’s not
endorsed by any church.
First-hand experiences:
Stephen J. Binz was having a rough time selling his home. His
real estate practitioner asked if he’d heard about the belief
some people have about St. Joseph statues. Binz first dismissed
the idea as ridiculous, but after learning more about the
practice he decided to give it a try.
“I’d been waiting to sell the house for seven months, and within
a few days of burying the statue, it sold,” says Binz, who later
wrote the book
St. Joseph, My
Real Estate Agent
(Servant Publications, 2003). “Most people move during the most
joyful or difficult times of their lives, and these are times
when we all need the prayers and aid of others.”
Phyllis Staines, broker associate with RE/MAX Coastal Real
Estate in Pointe Vedra Beach, Fla., keeps a generous supply of
statues so she’s prepared when sellers say that they’d like to
try it.
“People really believe in this, so what harm can it do?” says
Staines, CRS®, GRI. “I usually have about two dozen statues on
hand at any given time. As the market stabilizes and it takes
longer to sell homes, I think people will look to more unusual
things like this to help sell their home.”
Getting started:
In a sign of the popularity of this ritual, there are dozens of
online retailers
that sell St. Joseph statues and kits. Prices range from around
$5 to more than $20, depending on how large the statue is, what
it’s made of (plastic is cheapest), and what the kit includes
(some come with a burial bag, prayer book, and other
accessories).
People argue over specifics: should the statue be buried in the
front yard or the back yard? Must it be buried near the For Sale
sign? Should it face away from the house or toward the house?
Binz says these intricacies don’t really matter; the secret is
to approach the ritual from a religious standpoint rather than
as a superstitious act. If you don’t believe in the power of
prayer, it might not work, he says in his book.
Feng Shui: Making the Home
‘Feel’ Right
How
does it work? Feng shui,
which literally means “wind water,” is an ancient Chinese design
philosophy that centers on rearranging living spaces to enhance
positive energy, called “chi”, and to create harmony.
“Feng shui isn’t about spending money to make something gorgeous
with designer furnishings,” says Holly Ziegler, a feng shui
expert and broker with Ziegler Properties in Arroyo Grande,
Calif. “It’s about balance and harmony of energy in the home.”
The direction a home faces, its proximity to water, and the
location of rooms within a home, also are factors in determining
if a home has “good” feng shui. When selling a home, you must
focus on the factors that you can control. That may call for
rearranging furniture, adding plants, or introducing new colors
or materials into a room.
First-hand experiences:
“We’ve all been to properties we’d love to stay in, and places
we can’t wait to get out of,” Ziegler says. “The goal is to make
buyers want to stay in a space and call it home.”
Ziegler became interested in feng shui 16 years ago after
visiting a friend who used feng shui principles in her home.
Ziegler was so impressed that she took classes and traveled to
China twice to learn from feng shui masters. She has since made
feng shui part of her career; She wrote four books on the
subject, including “Sell Your Home Faster with Feng Shui;” she
teaches classes, and she consults real estate clients — both
buyer and sellers.
The first time she applied feng shui to a listing, she asked
sellers to remove nearly a third of their furnishings and
declutter their house, among other things. In short order, there
were multiple offers and the house sold for $10,000 over the
listing price.
However, she doesn’t pretend feng shui is a cure-all. “No amount
of feng shui is going to help an overpriced listing,” she says.
“But given two equal listings, the feng shui house will sell
faster and at a higher price.”
Getting started:
Learn about feng shui by
reading books
and
taking classes.
Then, make an effort to be in touch with your intuition as you
prepare a home for sale. Make sure that every room feels good,
from the furniture layout to the
lighting.
Other simple tips for good feng shui: Make sure the entrance to
the home is unobstructed and clear of clutter, keep toilet seats
down, enhance natural light, show off the home’s best views, and
pepper healthy plants throughout the house.
“Eastern thinking looks at the big picture and the
interconnectedness of all things,” says Kathleen MacKenzie, a
salesperson with Winkler & Co. in Austin, Texas, who teaches
feng shui to real estate practitioners. “Feng shui is just
common sense. Things in the environment affect us, and there are
ways to overcome the problems.”
MacKenzie includes feng shui consulting as part of her
commission and says it has helped her grow her business. “If
you’re a listing agent, applying feng shui can help you stage a
home and sell it quickly for top dollar, usually without
spending money,” she says in her book,
Feng Shui Basics for
Real Estate Agents.
Vaastu: In Tune with Nature
How
does it work? Vaastu
shastra, or simply vaastu, is very similar to feng shui in that
its goal is to create a peaceful, balanced environment. Applied
in architecture, site selection, and interior design, this
ancient Indian science focuses on being in harmony with the five
basic elements of the universe — sky, earth, water, fire, and
wind.
By following various guidelines that involve geography,
topography, and even physics, home owners can achieve balance
with nature. Prosperity, good health, and positive thinking are
some of the desired results.
First-hand experiences:
Bhaskar Alan Deva, a vaastu consultant in the San Francisco Bay
Area, works with clients to evaluate potential home purchases
and to create a more balanced living environment.
“The direction a house faces is important, as well as size and
the materials of the house,” says Deva, who studied with
Rev. Sri Swami
Satchidananda and
another vaastu master in India. “Sometimes problems can be fixed
simply by changing a room’s purpose, like switching the master
bedroom to another area of the home.”
Deva recommends that sellers do a ritual cleaning of the home to
release any negative energy. It’s also good, he says, to have a
separation ceremony so that members of the household can let go
of their attachment to the house, which will send positive vibes
to prospective buyers.
Getting started:
Vaastu is less common and more complicated than feng shui, so it
will be harder to find classes. But
books on the
subject are abundant.
According to
Sampatti.com,
an Indian real estate information Web site, these are ways to
incorporate vaastu in a home: Don’t use bright paint colors,
don’t display images that depict violence or sadness, and make
sure that the stairs leading into the home are not damaged in
any way.
Even if you don’t plan to practice vaastu, just knowing the
basics will impress clients who use vaastu as a guide when
buying or selling a home, says Donald Marcy, CRS®, a broker and
sales representative with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage
in Madison, N.J.
“It’s important to be aware of all ethnic and cultural
differences that affect the way people shop for a house,” says
Marcy, who has had clients select a home based on vaastu
principles. “If you’re not, you’re missing out in a big way.”
Metaphysical Energy: Tap
into the Soul of a Home
How
does it work? By
recognizing that everything emanates energy — including your
feelings, pets, and even objects such as furniture and TVs — you
can make changes to yourself and your home that will create a
positive, welcoming vibe that attracts buyers.
First-hand experiences:
Faith Ranoli, who holds a Ph.D. in metaphysical studies, has
branched into the real estate market as a holistic home
inspector, specializing in hard-to-sell properties. She helps
her clients create a healthy environment and emotionally let go
of the property. Once that happens, resistance from buyers
disappears, she says.
Ranoli, who also has decades of experience in the construction
industry, says anyone can intuitively discern why a house isn’t
selling, but people don’t always listen to their intuition. For
example, if one of the sellers loves the house and isn’t
mentally prepared to move, buyers may sense it and back off.
Although you can’t see it, the seller’s energy communicates the
message: “Mine. Keep Out.”
“The mind knows the information it’s fed, so we want to be
conscious of what we put into it to create exactly what we
want,” says Ranoli, who gives workshops for REALTORS® on how to
harness the energy of emotion to buy and sell properties
quickly.
She encourages owners of difficult properties to literally speak
to the house; ask why it’s not being receptive of a new owner
and what you can do in order for the home to accept a new
family. Then, listen to what the house says.
“Whether you believe in this or not, try it as an exercise of
imagination and just see what happens,” Ranoli says in her book,
The Mystical Guide
to Home Inspection
(Thornton Publishing Inc. 2005).
Getting started:
Ranoli leads workshops for real estate practitioners in the
Denver area. If you don’t live in that area, there are many
books on
metaphysical science
that will teach you more on the topic.
A house is a “living breathing organism with a life
consciousness of its own,” Ranoli says in her book. “You have to
tap into that consciousness to see what’s going on.”
This article was published
on: 08/01/2006

|