Thoughtful Design: The Coffee Bar

Thoughtful Design: The Coffee Bar

One of life’s little luxuries is the morning’s first cup of coffee. Perhaps it’s the aroma that wakes you up, or just being able to grab a cup and cozy back into bed for a while, carving out a small space in your bedroom suite for a coffee bar is an amenity you’ll appreciate daily. You can design with a water supply line or a sink, depending on the coffee maker; and, even include a mini frig/freezer for creamer, ice, etc.

Coffee Bar in vanityThere are many configurations and areas to place your coffee bar, such as:

  • Right in your bedroom (as in the Locklear – plan #42074)
  • A cabinet tucked away on your vanity (as in the Locklear Manor – plan #42316)
  • In the walk-way leading into your bedroom (as in the Kauffman – plan #50012)

 

Or, maybe if you enjoy grabbing a cup on your way out the door in the morning, the coffee bar could be in the garage as in this homeowner’s requested design! 

Search plans with built-in coffee bars – on the plan search page, select “Coffee Bar” under the “Other Amenities and Features” drop down along the left search navigation. And, if you see a different plan you like, let one of our design specialists help you customize the plan with your coffee bar!  

For more resources on thoughtful design: 

Brightening Small Spaces

Brightening Small Spaces

Hy-Lite Oval Window

Photos courtesy of Hy-Lite

Natural light is important for any room, but especially in a smaller space. Hy-Lite® has a line of decorative windows designed just for small spaces that feature beveled glass pieces, allowing for privacy without losing the ability to flood the room with natural light. The windows can be ordered in an array of design shapes and styles from traditional to contemporary. Gone are the days of simple frosted glass or glass blocks. Privacy in small spaces is available in beautiful design!

Read more articles in our latest edition of Her Home™ Magazine.

Learn more about Hy-Lite.
(Product spotlights are for informational purposes.)

Have a Seat

Have a Seat

Hester 29344 Walk-in Closet Seat

Hester – #29344

In your owner’s suite closet! Few things are as handy as having a place to sit down when dressing. Yet, unless your closet is large enough to have a center island, finding a place for a seat can be difficult, and may mean sacrificing much wanted storage.

If your closet has a window, that might be the perfect location for a seat. The natural light is wonderful, and you wouldn’t have hanging or shelving in front of the window. Build the seat with a hinged top for added storage or perhaps discretely locating the safe for your valuables.

The Hester – #29344 features a spacious walk-in closet with a window and a seat. See a floor plan you like, but no seat in the walk-in closet? Let us help you Customize your home design. Start your plan search today!

The Often Overlooked 5th Wall

The Often Overlooked 5th Wall

SW ceiling circle

Photos courtesy of Sherwin-Williams

Quite simply, ceilings are often ignored. But various ceiling height and/or adornments can turn an otherwise predictable room into something special!

Think we’re overstating the issue? Quick – what color are your ceilings? Most likely the answer is white. In fact, there’s a specific shade of white known as ‘ceiling white’ that is the default color. Bet the other walls in the room are a little more colorful, a little more expressive. Add drama to the ceiling with color, decorative tiles/panels, or interesting light fixtures. You can even use paint to create contrast and highlight focal points of the room.

Homes with cathedral ceilings, sloped ceilings, or tiered ceilings all add drama and volume (height). In addition, more creative builders and their carpenters are executing creative ceiling adornments. It’s artistry in drywall!

Read more Design Trends.

Search our library of home plans.

Learn more about Sherwin-Williams products.
(Product spotlights are for informational purposes only.)

 

Competing with the Big Dogs

Competing with the Big Dogs

It’s an oft-repeated tune – a national home builder moves into the marketplace, with eyes on becoming the dominant builder, or fast tracks the process by simply acquiring an established local builder. Thoughts of big-box stores moving in and local merchants going out of business ring true. After all, the nationals have the advantages of buying power, huge marketing budgets, lots of working capital, and better access to credit.

But…national builders typically don’t choose to compete on better, only cheaper. They’re playing to their strengths. So, why would you choose to compete using their rules for playing the game? You’re not going to win, consistently, on price.

What if, instead, you could write the rules?

With such a large purchase, price is always important. People use price as a tool for comparison. It helps when trying to make sense of different homes’ different prices. But do you want prospective buyers looking for negatives (reasons why the home is cheaper) or positives (attributes and amenities that help justify the higher price)? And, “cost per square foot?” You probably have your answers for that issue, but a third-party resource will be perceived as less biased. Download the Her Home™ Magazine’s “10 Things You Need to Know Before Comparing Cost Per Square Foot” article here.

Choose Local

Local builders are joining buying co-ops and even joining forces to acquire building lots to be more competitive with national builders. But even nicer is focusing on why your customers get a better value buying their new home from you. Playing to your strengths:

  • You’re local. You know your local market; you may have grown up in your local market; you’ve put down roots there; and, you live there. You have existing relationships with others in your local market. From sponsoring local sports teams to being a co-presenter along with a local lender and Realtor®, you are engaged in the community, and that matters.
  • You’re human. What home buyer would ever meet with the president or owner? Buyers want to work with a builder they can trust, and it’s much easier to trust a person than a corporation.Couple with Blueprint
  • Your reputation. Review sites are full of disgruntled home buyers who bought “lowest price.” Your personal involvement with the buyers, use of quality materials and sub-contractors, and involvement in the community help people want to work with you rather than setting for working with you. Local builders won’t survive without high levels of customer satisfaction, which is the formula for referrals, the most profitable source of new customers.
  • Your focus. You can’t be all things to all buyers. But you can be the best at the niche or target market you choose. High-performance? Eco-friendly? Tech-savvy? Woman-Centric? Differentiation takes the focus off price, and places it on the emotional appeals of the home and how it will feel to enjoy it. Conversely, the less you differentiate, the more price-sensitive you can expect prospective buyers to be.
  • Bragging rights. Don’t limit your focus to mere rational appeals and attributes. Sure, people want lower utility bills, but they’ll love bragging about them – making sure others know they made a great purchase decision. Cutting dependence on maintenance and rescue medicines by building a healthy home speaks to caring, nurturing, making you feel good about your purchase. And, you’ll tell everyone about the difference breathing easier makes! Such attributes help people feel they got a great home and therefore a great deal; and, people are much more likely to brag about a great deal than about getting the cheapest price.
  • New home searches begin online, and digital space levels the playing field. While the big nationals buy billboards, you can win online with quality local content. Each time you post a new blog, you can add a link to it on your social media profiles. Short-staffed? This can be hired out.
  • It’s not just awareness, blogging helps position you as a local expert. Buyers want to make informed decisions, and they’re looking for answers. Developing a few downloadable tip sheets can further help overcome online anonymity, as prospects provide their contact information in exchange for your tips, and you can follow up with knowledge of a specific interest area that prospective buyer has.

Furthermore, national builders’ inherent weaknesses can be advantageous to you. They’re often interested only in larger tracts of land. Local builders may be in a better position to acquire smaller parcels, infill sites, or build on the owner’s land. Due to their structure, national builders can be low to respond, regimented, and bogged down in policies, procedures, and red tape. And, national builders face pressures on profitability, too. The difference is local builders are committed to their market, employing unbridled creativity and flexibility during down cycles. National builders can, and do, exit a market as quickly as they entered it – leaving vendors, sub-contractors, lenders, and yes, even their customers, to fend for themselves.  

At Design Basics, we have the tools to help you stand out from the national builders

Contact us today to learn more. 800.947.7526