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Buy a Business · Sourcing

How to Find a Business to Buy

Where the deals are — from the public marketplaces to the off-market businesses that never get listed.

Part of the free hub Buy a Business · ~5 min read

There are two markets for businesses for sale — the one everyone sees, and the one where the best deals quietly trade. Knowing the difference is most of the game.

The listed market

Public business-for-sale marketplaces and business brokers are where most buyers start, and it’s a reasonable education: you’ll see asking prices, industries, and rough financials. But it’s also the crowded front door — listed deals draw the most competition, and the best ones move fast or never list at all. Use it to learn the market and to practice reading deals, not as your only channel.

The off-market search — where the real edge is

The strongest deals are often proprietary: found by reaching owners directly, before they list. This is the same logic as the hidden job market — less competition, warmer terms, and a seller who feels chosen rather than shopped. You build it through:

What to target

The most financeable, livable acquisitions tend to be a little boring: established, profitable, with diversified customers and systems that don’t live entirely in the owner’s head. Favor a field you actually understand — your skills decide which business you can run well (see Circle the Field). Then qualify it on the numbers (valuation) and the risks (diligence).

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