Teaching the Tools of the Renovation Trade
Renovating your home can elevate it to new levels of style, convenience, and even value—that is, if you handle it correctly. Enter Dennis and Teresa Walsh, who provide an essential tool for those tackling renovations: real estate know-how. Together, they teach people how to unlock hidden equity in their homes, make strategic improvements, and ultimately maximize their ROI potential.
A lifetime in real estate
The Walshes are no strangers to this industry. “I’ve worked in construction, remodeling, real estate, and architectural design and have been a professional trainer and speaker for over thirty-five years,” Dennis says. “I even started my first remodeling business at just fourteen.” Teresa, who has worked in real estate since age nineteen, inspired their current venture by wanting to create a helpful resource for real estate agents. Their efforts have led them to counsel approximately 200,000 business professionals, holding nationwide seminars and courses to share industry wisdom.
Elevating your home
Today, the Walshes’ work is centered around two key websites, including a consumer-focused site, yourhome.academy, which offers courses like Residential Construction Mastery, a magnifying glass on how homes are built, including common methods, technology, and components from foundations to windows. “We walk you through the process from the ground up,” Dennis explains. Meanwhile, their Residential Remodeling Mastery class provides a detailed renovation road map, guiding homeowners, renters, and real estate investors through such topics as finding reputable contractors, exploring financing options, and avoiding common mistakes. (The couple also has a second site for real estate professionals, sellnewhomes.com, which teaches agents how to work more effectively with builders, developers, and new homebuyers.)
The course experience
When homeowners hop onto yourhome.academy, they can utilize the self-study training courses at their own pace; each totals about seven hours of instruction. Upon registration, users can download worksheets and interactive forms to better apply and retain knowledge. The construction course, for instance, teaches students how to read blueprints and scale rulers, complemented by printable examples they can follow. “It’s a one-on-one coaching set, but I say that we take people on a little journey,” Dennis says. Subscribers also receive lifetime access to revisit the materials.
From wholesale to retail
The core concept behind the Walshes’ homeowner courses is to help people “sell retail not wholesale.” Dennis breaks down the difference as “cleaning it up a bit, staging it, and then putting it on the market versus finding untapped equity in the home, making improvements to generate a profit.” He also offers a compelling example for homeowners explaining why they should pursue selling retail: investing $40,000 in strategic improvements could yield an additional $40,000–$50,000 or more in profit upon sale—a return of up to 120 percent.
Crafting a “new” home
The lessons to be gained can benefit house hunters as well. For instance, Dennis highlights a significant real-estate trend: “60 percent of home shoppers say they want a brand-new home. However, about 38 percent of those are open to comparing new homes with existing ones to find the best financial fit.”
This is where their residential remodeling course becomes invaluable. Instead of paying top dollar for a new home, he urges homeowners to find an older home with good bones that is yet to be updated, secure it at a better price, then take on the improvements themselves, ultimately creating a like-new structure. “As an added benefit, homeowners get to choose their preferred flooring, cabinets, appliances, and paint, personalizing the space to their exact taste—something not always possible with new builds,” Dennis notes.
Granted, this isn’t a novel concept. Well-known TV shows and social media influencers have popularized home renovations and house flipping. But the Walshes’ courses go further, offering homeowners practical steps for making these dreams come to life.
The remodeling value analysis (RVA)
A 2025 Houzz survey indicated that 52 percent of homeowners planned on undertaking major home improvements last year. To address such demand, Dennis teaches real estate agents to create a remodeling value analysis (RVA). Unlike a typical comparative market analysis (CMA), which just compares similar sold homes in a property’s area, an RVA helps homeowners understand exactly how strategic improvements can impact their home’s value—and which ones to pursue. This analytical process helps homeowners decide whether remodeling makes sense or if they’d be better off selling their current home and finding one closer to their ideal. “You don’t want to be the most expensive home on the street because then the value of the other homes brings it down,” he cautions.
For more info, visit yourhome.academy