Safety
First: Before Listing Your Home, Remove That “Block
of Knives”
By Lucy Butcher
I have been professionally staging homes in Colorado
Springs, Denver and the Front Range area for four
years. Safety for the Realtors who show the homes I
stage (or any home listed for sale), has long been a
passion of mine. Why? Years ago, a friend was a
Realtor in my small hometown of Casper, WY. She
received a call from a man who wanted to see a
property near the mountain. At the time there were
not many homes in the area. That man attacked my
friend and nearly killed her with a knife he found
on the kitchen counter. That memory has never left
my mind.
The reality is that hundreds of Realtors have been
hurt or killed on the job. Realtors and homeowners
alike need to be aware of the real dangers for
Realtors showing a home to perfect strangers. Most
people are kind and do not wish any Realtor harm,
but personal safety must always be at the forefront
of all agents’ minds.
How many of us have that useful block of knives
sitting on our kitchen counter? How many list our
homes for sale and never give the block of knives a
second thought? That block of knives needs to be
removed from the kitchen all together. If that isn’t
possible, then relocate the block of knives to a
bottom cabinet, turn the block so the handles are
facing the back of the cabinet and then slide it
clear to the back. Also, place any sharp utensils
that may be in the silverware drawer, like steak
knives and forks, in a plastic bag and put them in
the same location as the block of knives.
As a professional home stager, I passionately share
the story of my friend’s attack with all my clients.
Not once has a client ever given it a thought about
removing that block of knives, or other potential
safety hazard in the home. For example, I recently
consulted with a woman whose home had been on the
market for a long time. As I was walking through the
home, I noticed that not only did she have the block
of knives on the kitchen counter she also had three
rifles perched against her husband’s desk in the
basement. When I suggested that she remove the
rifles from the home, she balked, saying the guns
were not loaded. I then reminded her that many
people have been killed or gravely wounded by the
butt of a gun. She quickly picked them up and placed
them in the trunk of her car.
All professional home stagers should insist that the
homeowners they work with create a safe environment
for all Realtors showing their home. Also, suggest
that they remove anything that can be used as a
weapon: a child’s bat propped against a wall, the
handgun in the closet, the rifle mounted on the wall
or the hunting knife sitting on the shelf. It’s so
easy to present a safe home for Realtors who are
showing it by discussing safety at all listings
and/or during all staging consultations.
Unfortunately, professional home stagers also need
to guard their own safety, while in their client’s
home. Signs on their vehicles are great advertising,
but at the same time they announce that you are in
the home and most likely alone. Make sure that after
you have unloaded your vehicle, secure all doors,
close the garage door and always remember to ask the
homeowner if they would be expecting anyone to
arrive at their home during your staging hours. We,
as stagers, must also practice personal safety.
It is always so much better to be safe than sorry!
Lucy Butcher is a Certified Master Home Stager and
Interior Redesigner, whose company Presentation Is
Everything, LLC, provides staging consultations,
real estate staging and interior re-design services.
Contact 719-638-4395, email
presentationiseverything@msn.com , or
visit
www.presentationiseverything.net .