For professional training business owners
Sell your professional training business.
Tiny buys profitable professional training businesses with recurring cohorts, certification value, continuing education demand, and trusted instructors.

The category matters less than the business itself: real profit, customer trust, and a reason to keep it independent for the long term.
Short answer
Does Tiny buy professional training businesses?
Yes. Tiny will consider professional training businesses when they have repeat demand, strong reputation, useful content, instructor depth, and customers who need training for real work.
- Good fit: continuing education, certification prep, workforce training, safety training, technical training, and employer-sponsored programs.
- We like training tied to credentials, job performance, compliance, promotion, or a recurring professional need.
- The business should be more than one charismatic instructor with a course library.
Why this kind of business can last
Professional training is durable when it helps people keep a credential, do a job better, or meet an employer requirement.
We like repeat cohorts, employer relationships, instructor bench, and content that gets updated with the market.
Good training brands earn trust over years.
Strong fit and weaker fit signals
Strong fit
- Recurring revenue from CE, renewals, cohorts, employer contracts, subscriptions, or certification prep.
- Content, instructors, assessments, and operations can continue without the owner teaching every class.
- Strong outcomes, reputation, reviews, completion data, or employer relationships.
Weaker fit
- One-off course launch revenue with no repeat demand.
- A personal brand where customers mainly buy access to the founder.
- Outdated content, weak completion, or no clear professional use case.
What happens after a sale to Tiny
We keep the brand, instructor relationships, and learner trust intact.
Founder transition can include content or instructor advisory time without requiring the founder to run the business forever.
Tiny is not a broker, marketplace, private equity fund, or short-term flipper. We buy businesses we would be proud to own for the long term, and we try not to break the thing customers already trust.
Where to go next
Questions founders ask
Does Tiny buy course businesses?
Sometimes. We prefer professional training with recurring demand, real outcomes, and a business that is not dependent on a single personality.
What training revenue is most attractive?
Renewals, employer contracts, continuing education, certification prep, subscriptions, and repeat cohorts are usually stronger than one-time launches.
Talk to Tiny
If this sounds like your business, email hello@tiny.com with a short description, approximate revenue, and approximate profit. No pitch deck required.