Commercial finance brokering is not the right path for everyone who asks about it. Before investing time in building funder relationships and a deal flow pipeline, it is worth an honest assessment of whether the model fits your situation, skills, and risk tolerance. The ISO model is a pure commission business — income is entirely tied to deals that fund, and funding happens on the funder's timeline, not yours. New brokers who underestimate the lag between starting and first commission frequently quit in month three when they have spent 90 days working without income.
The model fits well for people who have existing relationships with business owners — through accounting, equipment sales, construction, professional services, or prior lending or banking roles. If you regularly talk to business owners about their operations and finances, you are already in position to encounter financing needs. Converting those encounters into deals is a skill you can develop. If you have no existing business network and no clear path to deal flow, the ramp time is longer and the early months are harder.
Commercial finance brokering also fits people who want income upside beyond a salary ceiling. The commission model means there is no cap on what you can earn — a single large equipment deal or a month of strong MCA volume can produce more income than months of effort. That volatility is a feature for people who can handle it and a serious problem for those who cannot. If you need a predictable paycheck to cover fixed expenses, build the broker business as a side activity until commission income is consistent enough to replace your salary.