Most homes don't fail because of the market. They fail because of the plan.
The difference between a home that sells in three days and one that sits for three months has nothing to do with the house itself. It has everything to do with the thinking that happened before it ever went live. I see it play out across Edmonton constantly — in Crestwood, in Parkview, in Glenora, in Westmount — at every price point.
9503 142 Street is a good example of what I mean.
Selling a Home in Edmonton Starts With Knowing It Deeply
Before I recommend a price, brief a photographer, or move a single piece of furniture, I walk through a home and learn it. I notice what stops you. What makes you slow down. What you reach out and touch. What you open. What you feel before you've consciously decided anything.
Then I build the entire strategy around those moments.
For 9503 142 Street — a 2023-built home in Crestwood with a dark marble gas fireplace, fluted wood doors, light oak floors, a bonus room, and the only attached double garage in the active Edmonton market — I knew exactly which features would make the right buyer fall in love. My job was to make sure they discovered those features in the right order, at the right moment, in the right light.
I told the sellers to close every fluted door before each showing. Not to tidy up. Because I wanted buyers to have to open them. To touch them. To discover what was on the other side. That moment of discovery is not an accident — it's choreography.
Edmonton Home Staging: Where the Sale Is Won
Buyers decide in the first five seconds inside a home. That moment is created deliberately, or it isn't created at all.
I staged this home using the sellers' existing furniture, brought in additional pieces, art, and decor, and made deliberate decisions room by room. I painted two walls — not as a decorating choice, but because new construction listings in Edmonton all look the same. Bright, white, empty. This home needed to stop the scroll the moment the first photo loaded, and it did.
Every light was on. Every window covering was positioned exactly as I specified. Every toilet seat was down. These are not details. They are the difference between a buyer who feels something and one who doesn't.
Strategic Pricing for the Edmonton Market
This home had history. It had been listed before, at a lower price, and hadn't sold. For some, that history becomes a reason to be cautious. To underprice. To apologize for the location in the listing notes.
The pricing strategy was built on a full competitive analysis of every relevant sale and every active listing in Crestwood, Parkview, and Laurier Heights. I needed to know what Edmonton buyers had actually paid, what argument a buyer's agent would make across the table, and how to hold the line when they made it.
We listed at $1,274,500. Above the previous list price. Above the active competition on the same street. Because the work had been done.
Marketing That Reaches the Right Edmonton Buyer
Magazine-quality photography. A cinematic video. Drone footage that told the story of the community. Paid social campaigns targeting local Edmonton professionals and buyers relocating from BC and Ontario — a growing segment who see Edmonton real estate as exceptional value and move quickly when the right home appears. A coming-soon campaign before we went live. A dedicated landing page. A lifestyle blog feature. Professional measurements. An open house on launch weekend that was packed.
Every element was built for the specific buyer I had already identified — before a single photo was taken.
The Result We Planned For
Unconditional offer. Opening weekend.
What This Means If You're Selling Your Home in Edmonton
I work this way with every listing, in every Edmonton neighbourhood, at every price point. The preparation, the choreography, the marketing — none of it scales down based on price. A buyer walking into a home in Laurier Heights or Westmount or Rio Terrace deserves the same five seconds of certainty as a buyer in a $1.4M Crestwood infill.
If you are thinking about selling, the question is not what your home is worth. It's what your home needs to become — and who needs to feel it.
That's where I start. Every time.
Caitlin Heine is a REALTOR®, the owner of Iconic YEG | RE/MAX Real Estate, and a 2025 RE/MAX Chairman's Club Award recipient. She works with buyers and sellers across Edmonton, from first homes to luxury infill.
📞 587-336-3176 ✉️ caitlin@iconicyeg.com 🌐 iconicyeg.com