Beware of Home Staging Training Snake Oil

Debra Gould
Anyone who has taken Staging Diva Home Staging Training or has attended an Ask Staging Diva Live event knows that I am honest and upfront about how the home staging industry works. It bothers me when I see companies operating unethically.

Home staging associations, training organizations and others offering the latest "get rich quick as a home stager" product or "guaranteed staging job" are popping up almost every month and most of them offer their own special "credential" or unique "certification" for home stagers who sign up.

Despite some of the home staging training marketing you´ll see out there, the truth is that the home staging industry is a completely unregulated field and there are no real credentials or "accreditation" for home stagers.

You don´t need to take any home staging training to call yourself a home stager. You can decide right now that you want to be a home stager; you can get your business cards printed and say on them that you are a professional home stager and nobody can stop you from doing so whether you´re "certified" or not.

I could have made up my own certification or set of credentials and market Staging Diva Training as being the only place where you can get this pretend set of letters to put after your name. But I consciously decided in 2004 when I created the Staging Diva Home Staging Training Program that I wouldn´t take that approach because I find it misleading both to potential students, and the public at large.

Marketing based on fake credentials is completely dishonest because there is no such thing in this industry. You could actually go ahead and make up your own set of initials to put after your name since this is an unregulated field.

There´s no governing body that regulates the home staging industry. It´s not the same as if you go to a university and take an interior design program. I cannot call myself an interior designer because that is a regulated industry, not the case with home staging or decorating.

Have you noticed that I´m not so-called accredited?


I decided to become a home stager because I had talent. I started earning money staging houses for clients in January of 2003 and called myself a professional home stager because I decided I was. I built my home staging business around what I knew about business and what I´d learned buying, staging and selling 6 of my own homes.

Even in my very first year of business, Reader´s Digest, Woman´s Day Magazine and HGTV didn´t question my expertise or what my home staging credentials were! By year two, I was getting calls from CNN and the Wall Street Journal for interviews, again without anyone asking me to prove that I was a home staging professional.

What the media and my clients care about is that I portray myself in a credible and professional way; I share information in a professional way; I have a very good portfolio of my own before-and-after pictures; I have testimonials from my clients.

What wins clients´ confidence is projecting a professional image and knowing what you´re talking about, not having made-up initials after your name.

There are good home staging training programs out there, but pick one based on what they´ll actually teach you, not because you´re excited about a "certification" or initials to put after your name.

There are good home staging training programs out there, but pick one based on what they´ll actually teach you, not because you´re excited about a "certification" or initials to put after your name.

Your success as a home stager doesn´t depend on having the right "credentials," it depends on whether you know what you need to have a successful home staging business and what you do to establish your credibility as a home stager. That´s exactly what students of the Staging DivaŽ Home Staging Business Training Program learn to do.
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Debra Gould

Debra Gould, aka The Staging DivaŽ, is President of Six Elements Inc., an internationally recognized home staging company. Inspired by many requests from aspiring home stagers wanting to start similar businesses, Gould created the Staging Diva Home Staging Business Training Program.

Gould has trained 7,000+ Staging Diva students in over 21 countries to start their own businesses. All shared a natural talent for decorating and interest in real estate, but didn't know how to make a living in their own house staging business before learning her secrets.

Debra Gould's mission is to inspire and empower others to use their natural talents to earn a living. She followed her dreams and wants to teach others to be able to do the same.

Gould pursued an MBA in Marketing and began a corporate career before moving to advertising. In the 1980s, she launched one of the first integrated marketing firms, which she ran for 10 years. Wanting a more creative life, Debra gave it up to design home accessories. She created the Debra Gould Home Collection, landing a magazine cover story and book feature, followed by her first of several HGTV appearances.

Buying decorating and selling six of her own homes in four years lead to an interest in real estate staging which she turned into a new staging career with the launch of sixelements.com in 2002. Since that time she has staged homes for hundreds of clients in addition to providing home staging training.

Gould is the author of "Staging Diva Ultimate Design Guide: Home staging tips, tricks and floor plans", "Staging Diva Ultimate Color Guide: The easy way to pick colors for home staging projects", and "Staging Diva Ultimate Portfolio Guide: Winning clients with the perfect home staging portfolio".

In addition to HGTV, Debra Gould's media coverage includes: CityTV, GlobalTV, CBC, CBS Radio, CNNMoney, Wall Street Journal, Woman's Day, Reader's Digest, MoneySense, Entrepreneur, House and Home, Home & Decor, Style at Home, Centre of the City, USAA Magazine, FabJob Guide to Become a Home Stager, Home Style, National Post Homes, This Old House, Home Business Magazine, Globe & Mail and others.

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