Pliny Mier

Pliny Mier

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Photos from Pliny Mier's post 01/11/2026

🏡✨ Style, Space & Smart Living — NOW $387,500✨🏡
📍 4516 Lone Oak Ln., Longview, TX 75605

Looking for a home that checks all the boxes? This beautiful 4-bedroom, 2.5-bath home in Lone Oak Subdivision delivers space, style, and modern convenience—just minutes from award-winning Spring Hill ISD.

Step inside to a bright, open floor plan with high ceilings and a great flow, perfect for everyday living and entertaining. The private primary suite is a true retreat, featuring a spa-like bath with a freestanding tub, walk-in shower, and spacious closet.

⬆️ Upstairs, the oversized game room is ready to become whatever you need—playroom, home office, media room, or all three!

🌳 Outside, enjoy a fenced backyard and covered patio, ideal for relaxing evenings or weekend gatherings. Energy-efficient features and an EV-ready garage add even more modern appeal.

Quick Highlights:
• 4 Bedrooms | 2.5 Baths
• 3,077 Sq. Ft.
• Built in 2021
• Game room + open concept living
• Covered patio & fenced yard
• Spring Hill ISD
• HOA $50/mo

📞 Ready to take a look?
Call or text Pliny for details or a private showing.

11/24/2025

The following is what I've always taken great pride in doing for my clients! Staying on top of every transaction.

Does the Contract Even Mean Anything Anymore?

Why Real Estate Deals Fail, Why Deadlines Slip, and How Strong Agents Keep Closings on Track

Why Closing Day Success Depends on People, Not Paper**

In residential real estate, everything should be simple on paper. A contract is signed, deadlines are agreed to, and both sides understand the path from “executed” to “closed.” Theoretically, that should be enough.

But anyone who has spent more than five minutes in this industry knows the truth:

The contract is only as good as the people responsible for executing it.

And unfortunately, not everyone in the transaction treats it with the seriousness it deserves.

When You Already Know the Deal Won’t Close on Time
After years of representing buyers and sellers, I can almost predict — with painful accuracy — whether a home will close on time within the first 48 hours. It’s not magic. It’s not intuition. It’s the same issues repeating over and over again.

Here are the top indicators that the contract deadlines mean absolutely nothing.

1. The Small Title Company With No Bench Strength
Let’s be honest.

A one-or-two-person title office rarely closes on time.
Why?

Understaffing

No after-hours communication

No backup when one team member is out

Inexperienced processors juggling too many lanes

Slow responses to lender conditions

Closing packages delivered at the last second

The contract might say “close on the 30th,” but when a tiny title office is scrambling, that date becomes a suggestion, not a requirement.

A great title company is proactive, communicative, and anticipates problems before they show up on closing day. A weak one simply reacts — usually too late.

2. The Big-Box, Out-of-Town, Internet, or Mega-Metro Lender
This is another huge red flag.

If the lender is based in a different state or in a giant metro where your file is number 827 in a queue of thousands, you can expect:

Zero urgency

No accountability

Out-of-sync time zones

Underwriters who don’t understand Texas contracts

Long hold times

Conditions dropped on the file three days before closing

The pitch online is always the same: “We offer the lowest rates!”
What they don’t say is: “If your deal collapses because we miss the deadlines, good luck.”

Great local lenders are partners.
National “call-center lenders” are bottlenecks.

3. The Agent Who Writes a Contract Like They’ve Never Seen One
You can usually identify these agents instantly:

The contract is sloppy.

Paragraphs are incomplete.

Addenda are missing.

Timelines are contradictory.

They ignore basic TREC/TAR guidelines.

And unsurprisingly, their communication is just as poor. They don’t know where the file is in the process, they don’t know if the lender has ordered the appraisal, and they don’t know if title has even received the contract.

But rest assured — they will show up on time to collect their check.

These are the same agents who blame everyone else when the deal falls apart.

4. Deals Break Because of People, Not Because of Paper
The contract is important.
The deadlines are important.
The legal obligations are important.

But the deal itself?
It survives (or fails) on ex*****on — not intentions.

All it takes is one person with zero drive, no purpose, and no sense of urgency to derail an entire transaction.

One missing signature.
One unreturned phone call.
One “I didn’t know I was supposed to do that.”
One agent who’s more interested in Instagram than their clients.

And suddenly someone loses their rate lock, their moving truck, their temporary housing, or tens of thousands of dollars due to delays.

Good Agents Don’t Wait — They Drive
A strong agent does not sit back and “hope the deal closes.”

Great agents:

Stay ahead of timelines

Verify every third-party task

Demand communication

Push lenders and title

Update their clients before their clients have to ask

Keep both sides aligned

Solve problems early

These are the agents who understand that their job doesn’t end at “contract executed.”
It ends when the funds have been disbursed and the keys hit the buyer’s hand.

We’ve Got to Be Better
Real estate contracts are legally binding, but lately they’ve begun to feel more like guidelines — optional, flexible, easily ignored by the unprepared.

That can’t continue.

Clients deserve better.
Sellers deserve better.
Buyers deserve better.
The industry deserves better.

If we want contracts to mean something again, then the people behind the contracts must take ownership.
All of us. Every title rep, every lender, every agent, every coordinator.

Because at the end of the day:

A contract is just paper until someone with professionalism, urgency, and purpose brings it to life.

And the ones who do that consistently?
They’re the ones closing deals — on time, every time.

Terry Miller - My Broker

10/29/2025

So You Want to Buy a House?

There’s nothing quite like that mix of excitement and nerves when you decide it’s time to buy a home. The possibilities are endless — neighborhoods, floor plans, schools, backyards, commutes. It’s thrilling… and a little overwhelming. That’s where the right real estate partner makes all the difference.

When you work with a Miller Homes Group independent brokerage agent, you’re getting more than a guide — you’re getting a true advocate. Our agents don’t just open doors; we open opportunities. Every recommendation we make — whether it’s a lender, inspector, title company, or insurance provider — is based on one thing: your best interest.
No Kickbacks. No Hidden Deals. Just Integrity.

At Miller Homes Group, we believe transparency builds trust. That’s why we do not accept kickbacks, referral fees, or financial incentives from any lender, home warranty company, insurance provider, title company, or inspector. We call it clean business. You’ll never wonder if our advice is motivated by a side deal — because it isn’t.

Our recommendations are earned, not bought. We work only with qualified professionals who deliver quality service, not whoever pays the most to be on a list. That means when we suggest a lender or an inspector, it’s because they’ve proven themselves — not because there’s a profit-sharing agreement in the background.

Red Flags: The Affiliation Disclosure Form
Here’s something every buyer should know: if an agent or brokerage asks you to sign an Affiliation Disclosure Form, that’s a giant red flag. Why? Because it usually means the brokerage or agent has a financial relationship with one or more of the service providers they’re “recommending.”

That means someone’s getting paid — and it’s not you.
Franchise offices are especially known for this. Their “preferred partners” often earn the spot not through performance or customer satisfaction, but by how much they pay to be affiliated. That’s not representation — that’s marketing disguised as service. When you see that form, run, don’t walk. You deserve unbiased advice, not a sales pipeline that treats your home purchase like a revenue stream.

Independent, Local, and 100% on Your Side
Buying a home is one of the biggest investments of your life. You deserve an agent who’s focused on you — not franchise fees, kickbacks, or corporate quotas. Miller Homes Group agents are independent by design. We live and work in the same communities where we help our clients buy and sell. We know the local markets inside and out, and our loyalty begins and ends with you.

Because at the end of the day, our goal isn’t just to close a sale — it’s to get it right.
Miller Homes Group
Independent. Local. Trusted.

Terry Miller - Broker

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2107 Courthouse Drive #107
Longview, TX
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