12-12-2025, 04:51 PM
I've been doing DIY for about 5 years now, and I've had my share of both successful home improvement projects and some that... well, let's just say they taught me valuable lessons.
What I've noticed is that the most successful projects aren't necessarily the most expensive or complicated ones. Sometimes it's the small things that make the biggest difference. For me, a project is successful when it solves a real problem, stays within budget, and actually gets finished (we all have those half-done projects, right?).
But I'm wondering what other people consider when they think about successful home improvement projects. Is it about resale value? Personal enjoyment? Functionality? Or something else entirely?
What criteria do you use to judge whether a project was successful?
What I've noticed is that the most successful projects aren't necessarily the most expensive or complicated ones. Sometimes it's the small things that make the biggest difference. For me, a project is successful when it solves a real problem, stays within budget, and actually gets finished (we all have those half-done projects, right?).
But I'm wondering what other people consider when they think about successful home improvement projects. Is it about resale value? Personal enjoyment? Functionality? Or something else entirely?
What criteria do you use to judge whether a project was successful?