

Make Money as a Business Broker | Trent Lee
Trent Lee — #1 ranked business broker in the U.S. seven years in a row, with 600+ closed sales totaling over $200M in deals and more than $15M in personal commission.
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Early hustle: Painted address numbers on neighborhood curbs and mowed lawns — learned value creation early.
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Current role: Licensed business broker & appraiser. Specializes in small to mid-sized businesses, valuations, and finding qualified buyers through cash, SBA loans, or seller financing.
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How he got here:
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Inspired watching his father sell his 700-employee company (private equity deal).
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Learned firsthand how CPAs, attorneys, and buyers operate in M&A.
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Started and sold businesses (financing consulting & medical alert response center). Frustrated with brokers he worked with → became one himself.
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How to become a business broker:
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Licensing depends on the state (some require real estate + broker permit, others none).
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Associations like IBBA help standardize training/education.
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Strong background in accounting, contracts, negotiations, and marketing is essential.
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Challenge: takes 12+ months before first commissions hit; most fail because they run out of money before their first big close.
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Earnings potential:
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Smaller deals: 8–15% commission. Larger/private equity deals: lower %.
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First year = expect $0 while building pipeline.
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Year 2+, even a few deals ($500K–$2M businesses) → six figures+.
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Industry is older (often second careers), but huge opportunity for those who survive the ramp-up.
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Why brokerage over ownership?
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Trent opts not to buy businesses himself. Brokerage gives income without employees, leases, or headaches.
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He’s built wealth through business sales commissions, investing proceeds into 24 fully paid rental properties.
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Why so few business brokers?
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Most owners don’t even know brokers exist (unlike real estate).
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Lack of awareness & high skill bar keeps supply small — which means big opportunity for specialists.
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For Buyers:
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Buying an existing business = easier path to cash flow than startups.
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Zero-money-down deals are rare clickbait; you’ll usually need ~10% down. Can come from:
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personal cash/savings,
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self-directed retirement accounts,
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equity partner, or
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combination of buyer + seller financing.
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Buying with 0% down = 100% leverage → dangerous if market fluctuates. Better: leverage smartly so downturns = inconvenient, not devastating.
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Brokerage is a lucrative but long game; plan financially for the first year with no income.
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For buyers, don’t chase unicorn “zero down” structures — get creative but realistic with 10% in.
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Buying an existing cash-flowing business is almost always better than starting from scratch.
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Email: trent@fcbblv.com
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