Step 1: Walkthrough + goals. Identify deadlines, family priorities, and any “do not sell” items. This is also where a team flags specialty categories like vehicles, firearms, precious metals, or notable collectibles.
Step 2: Sorting + keep/donate/trash plan. Clear decision-making prevents accidental loss (and avoids selling items family intended to keep).
Step 3: Staging. Grouping sets, creating clean display zones, and improving shopability can raise sell-through. For in-home sales, the goal is to make the home feel navigable and safe while showcasing items clearly.
Step 4: Pricing strategy. Good pricing balances “fair market” with real-world buyer behavior. It also uses planned reductions to maintain momentum across the sale window.
Step 5: Marketing + buyer communication. Professional advertising matters most for high-interest categories and when you need turnout early in the sale.
Step 6: Sale execution or auction close + pickup. On-site teams manage checkout, security, and flow. For online auctions, pickup windows are structured to protect the property and prevent “no-show” chaos.
Step 7: Post-sale cleanout. The cleanout plan (donation, disposal, haul-off) is what actually gets the home ready for listing, closing, or turnover to the next step.