Meet the Founder
Corey Greer.
The person who shows up.
You're trusting someone with your wall, your TV, and a room you've invested in. One specialist. A construction background. A standard that does not adjust based on the job size, the wall type, or the neighborhood.
Technical Background
Built on Construction. Trained on Precision.
The training started in construction — where precision was not optional. Structural work. Systems that hold weight. Environments where a missed anchor is not a cosmetic issue — it is a liability. That background is why every install starts with a wall assessment, not a drill.
Drywall over wood studs behaves differently than drywall over steel. Austin stone and brick veneer need completely different anchor systems. Mount a 75-pound OLED on a full-motion arm, and the forces on that wall have nothing in common with a 45-pound LED on a fixed bracket. These are not details that get figured out on the job. They are assessed before the first hole is drilled, because the wall does not give you a second chance to get the anchoring right.
Every cable route starts with a plan — not a best guess once the wall is open. We confirm mount position against viewing angles and furniture placement. The scale changed. The standard did not.
Why TrueLVL Exists
The Standard the Category Forgot
New home. Premium televisions. The retailer offered a free installation. We took it. The mount was not level. The cables were not routed. No one discussed the scope. The drill came out, and that was the plan.
The installer knew the home did not matter to him, and it showed in every decision he made.
The category trained customers to lower their expectations. They complied. A missed anchor in stone costs $500–$1,500 to repair. A panel separating from the wall is not an aesthetic problem. A Samsung Frame TV that hangs off the wall by a millimeter destroys the entire reason someone spent $3,000 on it.
The industry called this service. It was indifference at scale.
TrueLVL was built on a refusal. Not a business plan. The category had decided precision was optional, accountability was a personality trait, and the homeowner's standards were an inconvenience. That was the part we refused to accept. If you have a television you care about, a wall you have invested in, and a room that needs to look intentional — you already know the difference between a specialist and a handyman.
You are not discovering TrueLVL. You are confirming what you already decided.
On Every Install
What the Standard Looks Like in Practice
These are not extras. They are how the work gets done. Every job. Every time.
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Shoe Covers
On before the threshold is crossed. No exceptions.
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Drop Cloths
Every tool, every piece of hardware lands on a drop cloth. Your floors stay clean.
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Pre-Drill Consultation
We walk through the plan before the first drill touches the wall. Position, height, angle — confirmed with you, not assumed.
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Final Walkthrough
Level, secure, cables concealed, display configured, viewing angles verified. The job is not done until you give approval. Not acknowledgment. Approval.
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Post-Install Follow-Up
A check-in after the install. Not automated. Not a survey. A direct message to confirm the work is holding and the standard was met.
What Clients Say
One Voice That Is Not Ours
"From the moment Corey walked in, I could tell this was different. Shoe covers on, drop cloth down, walked me through the entire plan before he picked up a drill. The TV is perfectly level, the wires are completely hidden, and he did not leave until I confirmed everything looked right. This is how it should be done."
Now you know who is showing up.
The next step is your quote. Two minutes. No obligation. The price you see is the price you pay.
Transparent pricing. No surprises.