For training software founders
Sell your training software company.
Tiny buys profitable training software companies for SOPs, onboarding, knowledge bases, certification, enablement, and recurring learning workflows.

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 training software companies?
Yes. Tiny likes training software when customers use it to onboard people, maintain SOPs, prove training completion, publish knowledge, or keep teams aligned.
- Good fit: LMS, SOP software, knowledge bases, enablement, certification, assessments, and documentation workflows.
- We like products tied to recurring training needs: onboarding, compliance, product updates, safety, support, and continuing education.
- The best products become part of how a company remembers and teaches its own work.
Why this kind of business can last
Training products compound when content, completion records, and workflows build up over time.
We like software that supports real operational needs rather than nice-to-have content libraries.
Evidence of completion, version history, permissions, and search can make the product sticky.
Strong fit and weaker fit signals
Strong fit
- Recurring revenue from businesses, professional groups, regulated teams, franchises, or product-led companies.
- Customers use the product for onboarding, SOPs, required training, certifications, support docs, or internal enablement.
- Content and records stored in the product make switching painful but fair.
Weaker fit
- One-off course sales with little repeat usage.
- A content business with no software moat or platform retention.
- A product with weak completion, search, permissions, or reporting in categories where those are required.
What happens after a sale to Tiny
We keep the product and customer trust intact. Documentation and training tools need reliability more than drama.
The team can keep serving its niche, with support from Tiny when it wants help hiring or investing in product.
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 LMS businesses?
Yes, if the LMS is profitable, recurring, and has a clear niche or workflow customers rely on.
What if revenue includes course content?
That can work if the content has recurring demand and the software or platform relationship is strong.
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.