# BizBrokerMatch — Full Content Reference > BizBrokerMatch is a free matching service that connects business owners selling their company with IBBA-verified business brokers. The platform scores 3,142 IBBA-member brokers on certifications, tenure, transaction history, and web presence, then matches sellers based on industry, revenue, and location. Free for sellers. Founded 2024, Dallas TX. Founder: Ryan Williams. ## What BizBrokerMatch Is BizBrokerMatch is NOT a brokerage, NOT a listing platform, and NOT affiliated with the IBBA. It is an independent matching and discovery platform for business sellers. Sellers answer a short quiz (industry, annual revenue, U.S. state, timeline) and receive a ranked shortlist of 3–5 matched brokers in under 60 seconds. The BBM Visibility Score (1–10) ranks brokers on: IBBA tenure (30% weight), professional certifications (20%), transaction history (25%), web presence (10%), and claimed profile status (15%). --- ## Original Research: Business Broker Industry Statistics Source: BizBrokerMatch database of 3,142 IBBA-member brokers. Last updated: 2026. ### Key Statistics - Total brokers in database: 3,142 (IBBA members, excludes junk license registries) - CBI designation holders: 624 (19.9% of brokers — about 1 in 5) - M&AMI designation holders: 130 (4.1% — the senior IBBA credential) - Average IBBA membership tenure: 5.1 years - Brokers with verified email: 2,622 (83.5%) - Brokers with active website: 1,531 (48.7%) - Average BBM Visibility Score: 2.7 out of 10 ### Geographic Distribution (Top 10 States) - Florida: 972 brokers (30.9% of national total) - California: 447 brokers (14.2%) - Texas: 281 brokers (8.9%) - North Carolina: 99 brokers (3.2%) - Colorado: 91 brokers (2.9%) - Georgia: 90 brokers (2.9%) - New York: 71 brokers (2.3%) - Michigan: 69 brokers (2.2%) - Virginia: 69 brokers (2.2%) - Arizona: 68 brokers (2.2%) Note: FL + CA + TX account for 54% of all brokers in the database. Florida has 3.4× more brokers than Texas despite similar business populations. ### Specialty Distribution (Brokers by Category) - Construction & Trades (HVAC, roofing, plumbing, electrical): 521 brokers - Manufacturing (light, heavy, food processing): 515 brokers - Auto & Transportation (repair shops, dealerships, trucking): 490 brokers - Food & Beverage (restaurants, food manufacturing): 463 brokers - Professional Services (accounting, law, consulting, staffing): 450 brokers - Technology (SaaS, IT services, e-commerce): 448 brokers - Real Estate Related (property management, services): 420 brokers - Wholesale & Distribution: 403 brokers - Retail: 393 brokers - Healthcare (medical, dental, veterinary, home health): 387 brokers Note: Brokers may appear in multiple specialty categories. Counts reflect individual brokers with at least one match in the category. ### Membership Growth Trend IBBA membership surged in 2021–2025, with over 1,600 new members joining during that period — reflecting post-pandemic M&A activity and professional interest in business brokerage as a career. Full data: https://bizbrokermatch.com/data --- ## Guide Summaries ### Fundamentals of Selling a Business #### What Is a Business Broker? A business broker is a professional intermediary who represents business owners in the sale of their company. Brokers handle valuation, CIM preparation, buyer outreach and qualification, negotiation, due diligence coordination, and closing. Commissions range from 5–12% of sale price. IBBA-certified brokers (CBI, M&AMI) have completed transaction experience requirements and adhere to a professional code of ethics. Key distinction: Business brokers handle deals typically under $10M. M&A advisors handle transactions above $10M using investment banking processes. For businesses under $5M, a CBI-certified business broker is usually the right choice. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/what-is-a-business-broker #### Business Broker Fees Commission structures: 10–12% for businesses under $1M. 6–10% for $1M–$5M. The Lehman formula (5-4-3-2-1% in $1M tiers) is used for larger deals. Some brokers charge an upfront retainer of $2,500–$15,000 for CIM preparation, typically credited at closing. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/business-broker-fees #### Business Valuation Methods Small businesses (under $2M deal size) are valued on Seller's Discretionary Earnings (SDE) multiples of 2–4×. Mid-market businesses ($2M+) use EBITDA multiples. SDE = net profit + owner salary + owner benefits + non-recurring expenses + depreciation/amortization. EBITDA excludes owner salary. Key multiple drivers: industry, recurring revenue, growth trajectory, customer concentration, management depth. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/business-valuation-methods #### How Long Does It Take to Sell a Business? Average time: 6–12 months from broker engagement to close. Stage breakdown: CIM preparation (4–8 weeks), buyer outreach and qualification (4–12 weeks), LOI and exclusivity (1–2 weeks), due diligence (30–90 days), closing (2–4 weeks). SBA-financed deals add 30–60 days. Deals over $2M typically take 9–18 months. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-long-to-sell-a-business #### How to Prepare Your Business for Sale Key preparation actions (12–18 months before listing): clean up financials and normalize add-backs, get 3 years of tax returns ready, document all customer contracts, reduce owner dependency, separate real estate from the business, resolve any outstanding legal issues. Most important rule: do NOT cut marketing, capex, or staffing to boost short-term profits — buyers see through it and it weakens the business. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-prepare-business-for-sale #### Asset Sale vs. Stock Sale Most small business sales are asset sales — the buyer acquires specific assets (equipment, goodwill, contracts) and the seller retains the legal entity. Buyers strongly prefer asset sales (step-up in tax basis, no inherited liabilities). Sellers sometimes prefer stock sales (capital gains treatment on full proceeds). Key scenarios requiring stock sale: non-assignable customer contracts, personal licenses held by entity, C-corp double-taxation avoidance. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/asset-sale-vs-stock-sale #### Earnouts Explained An earnout makes part of the purchase price contingent on post-close performance. Typically 10–30% of total price, measured over 1–3 years. Buyers propose earnouts to bridge valuation gaps or protect against business risk. Research shows 50–60% of earnouts are never fully paid. Protective provisions for sellers: hard revenue targets (not profit), short measurement periods, buyer non-interference clauses, acceleration on sale. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/earnouts-explained #### Due Diligence Checklist Buyers will request: 3 years of tax returns and P&Ls, accounts receivable aging, customer list with revenue concentration, supplier contracts, employee roster and compensation, lease and real estate docs, licenses and permits, insurance history, legal history (litigation, liens), equipment list, and IT/operations documentation. A virtual data room prepared before going to market is the single best way to accelerate diligence. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/due-diligence-checklist #### SBA Loans for Business Acquisition The SBA 7(a) program is the most common financing vehicle for acquisitions under $5M. Key terms: max loan $5M, buyer down payment 10–15%, 10-year term, personal guarantee required from all 20%+ owners. The business must generate a 1.25× debt service coverage ratio. SBA adds 45–90 days to close timeline. Sellers should require buyer pre-qualification letters from SBA lenders before entering exclusivity. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/sba-loans-for-business-acquisition --- ### Industry-Specific Exit Guides #### How to Sell an HVAC Business Valuation: 2.5–5× SDE depending on recurring service contracts. PE roll-up buyers pay the highest multiples. Key value drivers: recurring maintenance agreement base (percentage and total ARR), technician team stability, service territory density, PE vs. owner-operator buyer type. Preparation: clean financials, document all service agreements, separate real estate, reduce key-man risk. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-hvac-business #### How to Sell a Roofing Business Valuation: 2–5× SDE. Storm restoration revenue is the lowest-quality revenue type (weather-dependent) and is discounted by buyers. Commercial maintenance contracts command the highest multiples. Key issues: crew structure (W-2 vs. 1099), license transferability, EMR (experience modification rate), customer concentration. PE roll-up buyers active in the sector. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-roofing-business #### How to Sell a Restaurant Valuation: 1.5–3× SDE for most independent restaurants. The lease is the single most critical variable — restaurants with less than 5 years remaining on lease trade at significant discounts or cannot sell. Key diligence items: POS data, health inspection history, liquor license, franchisor consent (if franchise). Restaurant sales have the highest fall-through rate of any business category. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-restaurant #### How to Sell a Landscaping Business Valuation: 2.5–4× SDE for owner-operator scale; 5–10× EBITDA for PE platform targets. Recurring maintenance contracts are the primary value driver — converting customers to annual agreements is the highest-ROI pre-sale action. Key risk for buyers: labor documentation, immigration compliance, equipment condition. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-landscaping-business #### How to Sell a Manufacturing Business Valuation: 3–5× SDE for smaller manufacturers; 4–7× EBITDA for larger. Customer concentration above 20–25% of revenue is the primary deal-killer. Environmental diligence (Phase I/II) is standard. Equipment appraisal is required. PE and strategic buyers are both active. Specialist M&A advisors (not generalist brokers) typically needed for deals above $3M. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-manufacturing-business #### How to Sell a Pest Control Business Valuation: 2–10× EBITDA depending on recurring revenue percentage and buyer type (individual vs. PE roll-up). Rentokil, Rollins, and regional PE platforms are active acquirers. Key value drivers: annual contract rate, churn rate, route density. Chemical/regulatory compliance is key diligence item. License transferability (state pesticide applicator licenses) must be verified before listing. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-pest-control-business #### How to Sell an E-commerce Business Valuation: 2–4× SDE for owner-operator deals; 4–8× EBITDA for PE. Platform concentration risk (80%+ revenue from one channel) is the primary valuation discount factor. Traffic source hierarchy: organic search > direct/email > social > paid (organic is most durable, paid is most fragile). Aggregator buyers (Thrasio-model) are most active in $500K–$5M range. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-ecommerce-business #### How to Sell a Plumbing Business Valuation: 2.5–4× SDE. License transferability is the critical first question — master plumber licenses held by the owner personally restrict the buyer pool. PE roll-up buyers (Neighborly and others) active for businesses with $1M+ EBITDA. Commercial accounts (property management, contractors) command higher multiples than residential service. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-plumbing-business #### How to Sell a Dental Practice Valuation: 55–85% of trailing 12-month gross collections for general practices; 80–120%+ for specialty practices (ortho, oral surgery). Key decision: DSO buyer vs. individual dentist buyer. DSOs pay higher multiples but impose operational control. Individual buyers use SBA loans and offer cleaner exits. Patient transition risk is the primary post-close concern. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-dental-practice #### How to Sell an Auto Repair Shop Valuation: 1.5–4.5× SDE depending on specialty (general repair vs. fleet contracts vs. franchise). Environmental due diligence (Phase I/II) is standard — auto repair is the most common source of commercial soil contamination. Real estate: if owned, sell separately as a leaseback. Fleet/commercial accounts are the highest-value revenue type. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-auto-repair-shop --- ### State-Specific Selling Guides #### How to Sell a Business in Texas Texas has 281 IBBA-member brokers (8.9% of national total). Key facts: no state income tax or capital gains tax (pay federal rates only). Major markets: Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, Austin. Active industries: construction & trades, oil & gas services, manufacturing, food & beverage. PE roll-up buyers are active in home services in DFW and Houston. Typical multiples: 2.5–5× SDE. Average timeline: 6–12 months. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-a-business-in-texas #### How to Sell a Business in Florida Florida has the most business brokers of any state: 972 IBBA-member brokers (30.9% of national total). Key facts: no state income tax or capital gains tax. Liquor license transfers require DBPR approval and add 45–90 days — the top cause of deal delays in Florida. International buyers are active in Miami and South Florida for businesses priced over $1M. Active industries: tourism & hospitality, healthcare, construction & trades. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-a-business-in-florida #### How to Sell a Business in California California has 447 IBBA-member brokers (14.2% of national total). Key facts: California taxes capital gains as ordinary income at rates up to 13.3% — one of the highest in the country. The Bulk Sales Notice (California Commercial Code §6101) is required in most asset sales and must be published 12 business days before closing. Non-compete agreements in business sales are generally enforceable (unlike employee non-competes). Active industries: technology, professional services, food & beverage. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-a-business-in-california #### How to Sell a Business in North Carolina North Carolina has 99 IBBA-member brokers. Flat state income tax: 4.75% (2024), declining to 3.99% by 2026. No bulk sales law — simplifies asset sale closings. Growing M&A market driven by Charlotte financial services, Research Triangle tech/healthcare, and Triad manufacturing. PE buyers active in home services in Charlotte. Non-competes are enforceable if narrowly drawn. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-a-business-in-north-carolina #### How to Sell a Business in Georgia Georgia has 90 IBBA-member brokers. Flat state income tax: 5.49% (2024), declining to 4.99% in 2025. Atlanta is a major Southeast M&A hub for logistics, distribution, fintech, and healthcare. Georgia's 2011 Restrictive Covenants Act makes seller non-competes significantly more enforceable than before. PE buyers are highly active in home services in Atlanta. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-a-business-in-georgia #### How to Sell a Business in Colorado Colorado has 91 IBBA-member brokers. Flat state income tax: 4.4%. Denver is a growing mid-market M&A hub with strong technology, healthcare, and outdoor/recreation sectors. HB 22-1317 (2022) made non-competes in business sale transactions explicitly enforceable. Colorado's lifestyle appeal drives buyer premiums for certain businesses. Active industries: technology, healthcare, outdoor & recreation, construction & trades. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-a-business-in-colorado #### How to Sell a Business in New York New York has 71 IBBA-member brokers. State income tax up to 10.9%; NYC residents also pay city income tax up to 3.876% — combined federal + state + city tax burden can exceed 45% in NYC, among the highest in the country. Capital gains are taxed as ordinary income. New York City has the deepest and most diverse buyer pool in the country: individuals, PE firms, international investors (Asia, Europe), strategic acquirers, and search funds. New York also has a Bulk Sales law requiring prior written notice to creditors. Upstate New York (Buffalo, Rochester, Albany) has a strong manufacturing and healthcare base with a more regional buyer pool. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-a-business-in-new-york #### How to Sell a Business in Virginia Virginia has 69 IBBA-member brokers. Flat state income tax: 5.75% on income above $17,000. Capital gains taxed as ordinary income. Northern Virginia (NOVA) is a uniquely federal-driven market — government contractors, cybersecurity, and defense IT businesses require brokers who understand GovCon M&A and the federal contract novation process (3–6 months). Virginia does not have a bulk sales law. Richmond has active healthcare, professional services, and manufacturing markets. Virginia Beach has construction, maritime, and military-adjacent businesses. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-a-business-in-virginia #### How to Sell a Business in Michigan Michigan has 69 IBBA-member brokers. Flat state income tax: 4.25%. Capital gains taxed as ordinary income. The EV transition is creating significant uncertainty for businesses with high auto-OEM revenue concentration — buyers discount multiples for businesses tied to ICE components. Michigan businesses with EV-compatible capabilities or diversified industrial customers are valued more favorably. Grand Rapids is the largest non-Detroit market, with strong manufacturing, distribution, and healthcare activity. Michigan has no bulk sales law. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-a-business-in-michigan #### How to Sell a Business in Arizona Arizona has 68 IBBA-member brokers. Arizona's flat income tax dropped to 2.5% in 2023 (from graduated rates up to 4.5%) — one of the most favorable state tax environments in the country. Capital gains taxed as ordinary income at the flat 2.5% rate; combined with federal rates, Arizona sellers pay approximately 17–23% total. Phoenix metro has experienced rapid population growth and significant PE activity in healthcare, home services, and technology. No state estate tax, no bulk sales law. California business owners are relocating at high rates, creating buyer and seller activity. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-a-business-in-arizona #### How to Sell a Business in Pennsylvania Pennsylvania has 58 IBBA-member brokers. Flat state income tax: 3.07% on all income including capital gains. Philadelphia residents pay an additional wage tax (~3.44%), raising total for Philly sellers. Pennsylvania does not have a bulk sales law. Two distinct markets: Philadelphia metro (large, PE-active, proximity to NYC capital) and Pittsburgh (healthcare and technology-driven). The Lehigh Valley and Central PA have strong manufacturing, distribution, and healthcare markets. Legacy manufacturing base means environmental due diligence (Phase I/II) is commonly required for industrial businesses. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-sell-a-business-in-pennsylvania --- ### Broker Discovery & Comparison #### How to Find a Business Broker The three best sources: (1) BizBrokerMatch — 3,142 IBBA-verified brokers filtered by industry and state; (2) IBBA member directory at ibba.org; (3) referrals from your CPA or other business owners who completed sales. Look for CBI designation (held by 20% of IBBA brokers) as a baseline; M&AMI (4% of IBBA brokers) for deals above $3M. 10 questions to ask: verify transaction history, industry experience, buyer network depth, commission structure, and tail clause length. Red flags: no references, no verifiable closed deals, pressure to sign immediately. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/how-to-find-a-business-broker #### Business Broker vs. M&A Advisor Business brokers: handle deals $100K–$10M. Commission 5–12%. No upfront retainer common. Buyer types: individuals, search funds, small PE. IBBA certifications (CBI, M&AMI). M&A advisors: handle deals $10M+. Retainer ($10K–$100K+) plus success fee (2–5% Lehman formula). Buyer types: PE firms, strategic acquirers, family offices. The inflection point is $10M. In the $5M–$15M gray zone, buyer type determines the right choice: PE target = M&A advisor, individual/search fund = experienced broker. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/business-broker-vs-ma-advisor #### Selling Your Business Without a Broker FSBO (For Sale By Owner) business sales are possible but typically result in 15–25% lower sale prices than brokered transactions. The math: on a $1M transaction, a broker commission of ~10% ($100K) is typically more than offset by the higher sale price a broker achieves. Key FSBO risks: confidentiality breaches (employees, customers, competitors learn of the sale), no access to pre-qualified buyer pools, DIY CIM preparation, self-negotiation, and legal exposure without deal representation. Best case for FSBO: seller has an identified buyer already. The guide provides a 6-step FSBO checklist for those who choose to proceed without professional representation. Full guide: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides/selling-business-without-a-broker --- ## Tools ### Business Valuation Calculator Free interactive tool at https://bizbrokermatch.com/tools/business-valuation-calculator. Uses SDE-based valuation with real transaction multiples from 67 industries. Inputs: net profit, owner compensation, add-backs (calculates SDE automatically), industry selection from 67 categories, 8 value driver questions. Output: conservative / typical / premium valuation range, multiple adjustment breakdown, specific boosts and drags identified. Value driver adjustments: recurring revenue (up to +28%), owner dependency (up to +18%), management team (up to +18%), revenue trend (up to +15%), financial cleanliness (up to +12%), customer concentration (up to +8%), years in business (up to +6%), systems documentation (up to +8%). Size premium: −12% for SDE under $100K, up to +18% for SDE over $1M. Free, instant, no signup required. Tool URL: https://bizbrokermatch.com/tools/business-valuation-calculator --- ## Key Definitions **SDE (Seller's Discretionary Earnings):** Net profit + owner salary + owner benefits + non-recurring expenses + D&A. Standard valuation metric for businesses under $2M deal size. Most small businesses sell at 2–4× SDE. **EBITDA:** Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization. Excludes owner salary. Standard metric for mid-market businesses. PE buyers use EBITDA multiples. **CIM (Confidential Information Memorandum):** The deal book prepared by the broker. Shared only after NDA. Contains 3-year financial summary, business description, growth opportunities. **LOI (Letter of Intent):** Non-binding term sheet outlining price, structure, and exclusivity period. Signing LOI triggers formal due diligence. **Due Diligence:** Buyer verification process, typically 30–90 days after LOI. Covers financials, legal, HR, operations, real estate. **Earnout:** Deferred payment contingent on post-close performance. 50–60% of earnouts are never fully paid. Sellers should negotiate hard metrics and buyer non-interference provisions. **Asset Sale:** Buyer acquires specific assets, not the legal entity. Most common deal structure for small businesses. **Stock Sale:** Buyer acquires seller's ownership interest in the legal entity. All liabilities transfer with the entity. **Seller Note:** Seller finances part of the purchase price via promissory note. Typically 10–20% of price at 5–8% interest. **SBA 7(a):** Most common acquisition financing under $5M. 10–15% down, 10-year term, adds 30–60 days to close. **Add-Back:** Owner-personal or non-recurring expense added back to net income when calculating SDE/EBITDA. Must be documented. **CBI:** Certified Business Intermediary — IBBA's primary designation. Held by ~20% of IBBA-member brokers. **M&AMI:** Merger & Acquisition Master Intermediary — IBBA's senior designation. Held by ~4% of IBBA-member brokers. **Recasting/Normalization:** Restating financials to show true owner earnings, removing personal and non-recurring items. **Working Capital Peg:** Contractual minimum working capital left in the business at close. Shortfall reduces purchase price dollar-for-dollar. **Quality of Earnings (QoE):** Third-party CPA verification of reported EBITDA/SDE. Standard on deals above $2–3M. Full glossary: https://bizbrokermatch.com/glossary --- ## Frequently Asked Questions **Q: How much does a business broker charge?** A: 5–12% of sale price. Businesses under $1M: 10–12%. $1M–$5M: 6–10%. Retainers of $2,500–$15,000 are common for CIM preparation and are typically credited at closing. **Q: How long does it take to sell a business?** A: 6–12 months on average. SBA-financed deals add 30–60 days. Deals over $2M take 9–18 months. **Q: What is SDE and how is it different from EBITDA?** A: SDE includes the owner's salary and benefits (total economic benefit to an owner-operator). EBITDA excludes owner salary (assumes the owner is replaced by paid management). SDE is used for businesses under ~$2M. EBITDA is used for mid-market businesses. **Q: Do I need a business broker to sell my business?** A: No, but brokered transactions consistently close at 15–25% higher prices. The exception is if you have an identified buyer already. In any other scenario, professional representation pays for itself. **Q: What is an IBBA broker?** A: An IBBA broker is a member of the International Business Brokers Association. IBBA members agree to a code of ethics and continuing education requirements. Those with CBI or M&AMI designations have completed additional experience and education requirements. **Q: Is BizBrokerMatch free?** A: Yes. BizBrokerMatch is completely free for business owners. There is no charge to get matched with brokers. **Q: How does BizBrokerMatch match sellers with brokers?** A: The algorithm scores every broker in the seller's state on four dimensions: industry specialty match (45 pts), geographic proximity (25 pts), deal size fit (20 pts), and BBM broker quality score (15 pts). The top 3–5 brokers are returned as matched results. **Q: What states does BizBrokerMatch cover?** A: All 50 U.S. states. Deepest coverage in Texas, Florida, California, North Carolina, Georgia, and Colorado. Full FAQ: https://bizbrokermatch.com/faq --- ## Site Index - Homepage / Get Matched: https://bizbrokermatch.com/ - Broker Directory: https://bizbrokermatch.com/directory - How to Choose a Broker: https://bizbrokermatch.com/how-to-choose-a-business-broker - Methodology: https://bizbrokermatch.com/methodology - About: https://bizbrokermatch.com/about - Industry Data: https://bizbrokermatch.com/data - Glossary: https://bizbrokermatch.com/glossary - FAQ: https://bizbrokermatch.com/faq - All Guides: https://bizbrokermatch.com/guides - Business Valuation Calculator: https://bizbrokermatch.com/tools/business-valuation-calculator - Claim a Profile: https://bizbrokermatch.com/claim - List Your Brokerage: https://bizbrokermatch.com/brokers/apply