A 29-year-old cyber engineer from Seattle credits the pandemic for his chance to move to the city of his dreams: Austin, Texas. Due to COVID-19, his company declared his job “permanently remote.” That means he can work from anywhere.
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“Remote work has opened up housing possibilities all over the country,” says Amanda Pendleton, a home trends expert for Zillow (zillow.com).
Zillow ranks American cities on their desirability for single workers. Austin is one of the top ten.
“If untethered from an office, singles can move to places that offer more affordability and a vibrant singles scene,” Pendleton says.
But there’s one major factor impeding the engineer’s move to Austin. He must prep for sale the bungalow he bought in Seattle five years ago. The place is crammed with excess clothes, tech gear, furniture and books. And the man’s real estate agent warns the glut must go, or the house will sell at a steep discount.
Decluttering the bungalow seems like a daunting project to the engineer, a single with a busy work and social schedule.
Neen James, a time management expert, doesn’t know the cyber engineer from Seattle. Still, she’s convinced he can finally get a jump start on his home-selling project through what she calls “the power of 15 minutes.”
“Few of us have full hours of time to commit to an important project. But almost anyone can carve out 15-minute blocks of dedicated time each day by getting up a bit earlier or staying up a bit later. The key is to eliminate all distractions and work only on the task,” says James, the author of “Folding Time: How to Achieve Twice as Much in Half the Time.”
Stephanie Calahan, another productivity specialist and business coach, says integrating music into any major task -- such as household decluttering -- can enliven the spirit and increase the intensity of the work.
“Anything that gets a rhythm going adds momentum,” she says.
Though the cyber engineer favors funk music, Calahan says older home sellers often prefer classical for this purpose.
Here are a few pointers for home sellers:
— Recognize the import of a well-staged home.
Martha Webb, a professional organizer often credited with originating the home staging concept, explains why clearing a place of clutter is essential to a successful sale.
“Nobody wants to buy your chaos when they buy a house,” says Webb, author of “Dress Your House for Success.”
Even in the current inventory-tight market, cluttered homes can sit unsold for weeks or months. When they do sell, it’s often for a much-reduced price.
“Unless you hire a professional organizer, it doesn’t cost you anything to declutter. Yet you have a tremendous amount at stake,” Webb says.
A house crowded with possessions looks smaller than its true dimensions, which is one reason it’s devalued by home shoppers.
“I don’t care if you’ve got a house with 8,000 square feet. It’s still going to feel small,” she says.
-- Consider throwing a fest.
Calahan says decluttering can be more tolerable if the agony of it is infused with occasional amusement. She tells the true story of one insurance company manager whose many boxes of unsorted personal papers included countless old paid bills, medical statements and nearly every greeting card she’d ever received. After several weeks of tedious sorting, she announced a celebratory party to reward herself.
“Eight of my client’s friends came over for what we call a ‘shredding party.’ She asked each friend to bring along a paper shredder. She served wine and brunch and then everyone helped shred her excess papers. It was so much fun that later all her friends had their own shredding parties,” Calahan recalls.
Setting a party date is a good way to end inertia. It gives you a deadline. You know the work must be done by the time your friends come over.
-- Hasten your campaign with creative ideas.
Professional organizers routinely advise those immersed in decluttering projects to take a break every few hours. That helps prevent the beleaguered feeling that comes from trying to take on an entire room all at once or, worse, the whole house.
Calahan recommends preparing a comprehensive written plan that spells out a step-by-step approach. Or you could start with a single part of one room, using a flashlight to define how large an area you’ll tackle at a given time.
“In the midst of a big decluttering project, the flashlight allows you to focus mentally on a single area,” she says.
-- Think about doing a clutter-busting blitz if time is short.
If the home you’re planning to sell has bursting closets and disorder throughout, there’s no way a single person or couple can deal properly with the problem without devoting many days or even several weeks to the task, says Vicki Norris, a professional organizer who lectures nationally on the subject (restoringorder.com).
But one solution is to add extra hands to the task and then to conduct an all-out blitz. Many organizing firms can mobilize a team on short notice; you can find one in your area through the National Association of Productivity & Organizing Professionals (napo.net).
Alternatively, you may be able to recruit a team of friends or relatives. Whether you hire organizers or seek out volunteers, Norris says you should bring in no more than four to five people and designate a leader.
Obviously, if you’re energetic and have lots of time, you can handle the whole project yourself.
“The only difference with a blitz is that you blast through the house faster. This is basically decluttering on steroids,” she says.
(To contact Ellen James Martin, email her at ellenjamesmartin@gmail.com.)