Welcome to The Main Street Minute, your shortcut to small business ownership.
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Today’s story: A first-time buyer goes after a $700k hydroseeding company growing fast, maybe too fast.
Oh, and one more (massive) thing for all of you before we dive in…
NOVEMBER 2-4 | AUSTIN, TX
This is where BIG things happen for small businesses
And for the first time ever, you’re invited.
For years, we’ve quietly hosted a genuinely amazing event for the SMB world. But now, you’re invited, too. It’s called Main Street Over Wall Street.
3 days of connection, dealmaking, and strategy, in Austin, TX, with hundreds of business buyers, builders, and investors shaping the future of Main Street.
Join us if you’re:
A buyer ready to leverage proven tactics to close your first (or next) deal
An owner looking to scale through acquisitions or operational excellence
An investor who wants to learn from billionaires and connect with operators
Plus, you’ll hear from:
Government leaders on financing and policy
Harvard professors on performance and purpose
Hedge-fund managers on building wealth
Physicians on energy and longevity
AI leaders on creating leverage
Negotiation pros on closing complex deals
Now onto today’s deal…

NUMBERS
The Deal on the Table

Every week, we take a real small business deal straight from inside the Contrarian Community and dive into it here: numbers, story, red flags, and all.
This week’s target: a hydroseeding company generating about $900K in revenue and ~$330K in SDE.

The seller’s a long-time owner who’s shifting focus to his other businesses. He’s keeping the land where the company’s trucks and equipment are stored, but will lease it back for $1,500/month.
The business runs semi-absentee, with 6 full-time employees (one operations manager and five laborers) plus a virtual assistant who handles billing and admin.
And here’s what caught the buyer’s eye:
$1M+ in signed DOT/government contracts over the next 2 years
$300K+ in equipment value
A 19-year-old business that’s seen explosive growth lately (revenue jumped from ~$330K in 2021 to over $900K in 2024)
The buyer — we’ll call her Maya — comes from medical device sales and business development, a career spent leading teams and winning contracts. After a year of studying landscaping deals, she’s ready to make a move on her first acquisition.
Her plan? Lock down contract stability, lean on her BD chops to grow private work, and keep the operator in place to run day-to-day.
Now the question is:
Is this a hidden gem in an overlooked niche, or a business whose recent growth is tied to risky, non-transferable contracts and aging trucks?

KEY IDEAS
6 Lessons Any Buyer Can Steal from This Deal
When Maya brought this hydroseeding deal to the community, the deal experts dove straight into what really determines whether this business could continue to stand up.
1. Rapid growth needs a reason
Revenue climbed from ~$300K in 2021 to ~$900K in 2024, while SDE jumped from ~$50K to ~$300K. Impressive on paper, but also a trend to unpack.
As one expert put it:

Maya found that the surge came after local hurricane recovery work and the hiring of a highly capable virtual assistant who helped the owner tighten operations. That explains the lift, but it also means the current numbers depend on factors that may not repeat.
2. Government contracts can help or hurt
Roughly 60% of 2024 revenue now comes from state and local government projects, including a ~$700K contract. These deals can create predictable income, but they also carry risk.
One expert reminded her:

Maya plans a stock purchase to preserve existing contracts, but she’ll still need to verify that each one allows a transfer of ownership and that she meets all licensing and insurance requirements to stay compliant.
3. Aging equipment eats cash
The company’s equipment is valued at around $300K, but 7 of the 8 trucks are older units. With annual repair costs near $50K, deal consultants advised budgeting several hundred thousand over the next few years for replacements.
Another deal consultant warned:

4. Lease terms can make or break deals
Because the seller owns the property where the trucks and equipment are stored, Maya will lease it for $1,500 per month. Lenders will require a minimum 5-year lease with a 5-year renewal option to match the SBA loan term.
Locking in a long, stable lease with minimal rent increases will protect margins and financing approval.
5. People are a multifaceted risk
The current owner travels for months at a time, relying on an operations manager, five field employees, and a virtual assistant who has effectively become the backbone of the business. Maya will need to meet them early, build trust, and secure their commitment post-close to keep the business stable.
6. Sales experience is a true edge
Maya’s background in medical device sales gives her a clear advantage in relationship-driven contracting.
As one deal consultant told her, “It’ll be a little bit of a learning curve from selling that device to selling to governments. But once you get the hang of RFPs — and with AI these days, it’s so much easier — you could potentially grow this business pretty quickly.”

INDUSTRY
What You Need to Know
Hydroseeding sits in a small but steady corner of the $100B+ U.S. landscaping industry. There are hundreds of thousands of landscaping businesses across the country estimated to be employing over 1M people. It’s a highly fragmented market with plenty of small contractors.
Companies in this category — commercial landscaping, erosion control, seeding, and others — can sell between 2 and 3 times SDE, depending on their contracts, performance, size, equipment, and seasonality.

On paper, Maya’s deal checks out. Her offer of ~$600K on $330K in SDE works out to roughly 1.8x. Maya’s deal is under a signed LOI, but that doesn’t mean it’s hers.
Until the purchase agreement is signed, the seller can back out, accept another offer, or change terms entirely. The next step is to secure a binding agreement that moves her from interested buyer to controlling party.
The deal consultants advised her to move quickly to a signed agreement and make sure it covers the right ground:
Clear contingency periods for financing and diligence
Indemnification clauses for any liabilities that surface later
Seller-specific performance, which legally obligates the seller to close if she meets the agreed-upon terms
Just as important is what not to include: buyer-specific performance language that would trap her into completing the deal even if something material changes.
One consultant put it simply: the goal isn’t to rush the deal, it’s to “quickly create a binding framework that protects you while you verify the rest.”
With the information available, would you move forward on this deal?

THE BOTTOM LINE
What Happened Next?
Maya decided to move forward toward the thick of due diligence, with the aim of working line by line through contracts, licenses, and fleet inspections to make sure the numbers hold.
This isn’t a passive play. Before reaching this point, Maya spent nearly a year inside the community analyzing deals, learning SBA financing, and narrowing her focus to landscaping. She’s shown up consistently, asked sharp questions, and applied every lesson she’s learned.
As one deal consultant told her during the review:

That line stuck.
She’s moved from “hoping to own something” to operating like an owner already, a shift that, for most buyers, is where the real momentum begins.
Want your deals reviewed by hundreds of smart business builders and buyers?
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