Servitium Research
40+ Sources · All Verticals
Market Intelligence Report

Research across 5 verticals.
40+ sources. Every number sourced.

This page presents the complete research foundation behind Servitium's market thesis — from Canada's 4.3 million solo businesses to licensed professionals across real estate, insurance, auto, and wealth management.

Statistics Canada ISED KSBS 2025 CFIB 2025 Smythe LLP 2025 NAR Tech Survey 2025 BCFSA IBABC CIRO VSA / CADA Broadridge 2024 BDC 2026 Payments Canada 2025
National Overview
The Canadian solo economy in numbers.
Total Addressable Market · Canada
~4.55M+
Solo/micro businesses + licensed vertical professionals nationally · ISED KSBS 2025 + StatCan Dec 2025
Solo businesses (0–4 employees)
4.3M
90% of all active Canadian businesses
Combined annual revenue
$300–500B
CAD/year · ISED KSBS 2025
Solo businesses BC
580–620K
Highest density: 36.3/1,000 adults
Metro Van total SAM
107–150K+
All segments combined
New solo Canadians 2024
+70,000
BDC Feb 2026 rebound study
Metro Vancouver — market segments (estimated)
01
Micro-business birth rate is 3.5× higher than larger firms
11.7% annual birth rate for 1–4 employee businesses vs. 3.3% for 5–19 employee firms. The addressable market grows faster than any other size category.
ISED KSBS 2025, Table 7
02
Digital payments are already the norm
86% of total Canadian payment volume is digital across 22.5 billion transactions in 2024. Infrastructure for mobile-first job completion is in place.
Payments Canada Annual Report 2025
03
Only 10% of micro-businesses are fully digitalized
Despite 92% using some digital tools, only 10% have integrated tools across all core operations. 47% remain in the "beginner phase" of digital maturity.
CFIB Digital Transformation Survey, Apr–Jun 2025, n=1,683
04
Cost and skills barriers are the primary adoption blockers
48% cite high costs and 51% cite lack of digital skills as the primary barriers to software adoption. Servitium's $25/month price and in-person onboarding directly address both.
CFIB Digital Transformation Survey, Sep 2025
Vertical 1 · Core Market
Solo Businesses — All Industries
0–4 employees. Every industry. Canada's dominant business form.
Non-employer businesses (Canada)
3.67M
Dec 2025 · StatCan Daily
Employer micro-enterprises 1–4
649K
59.1% of all employer businesses
The fragmentation problem
$200–$800/mo
What a typical solo business currently spends cobbling together: website hosting ($15–$50) + booking tools ($20–$80) + accounting ($20–$60) + scheduling ($20–$60) + CRM ($40–$80) + payment processing — all disconnected, no integrated workflow, no discovery layer.
Digital adoption benchmarks
CFIB Digital Transformation Survey 2025 · n=1,683
Use some digital tools
92%
But only for isolated tasks — not integrated
Fully digitalized across all operations
10%
In "beginner phase" of digital maturity
47%
Cite cost as primary barrier
48%
Cite lack of skills as primary barrier
51%
Use 2 or fewer paid software tools
66%
Use social media primarily to promote business
84%
Top 5 industries by solo business concentration
ISED KSBS 2025 · Tables 2 and 3
Construction~18%
Professional, Scientific & Technical~13.8%
Other Services~12%
Retail Trade~9%
Real Estate & Rental~8%
🔍
Getting new clients — #1 pain point
59% of our surveyed business owners cited getting new clients as their single biggest challenge. No existing Canadian platform gives solo businesses across all industries a combined discovery + workflow solution.
📊
Home services market severely under-digitized
Total Canadian renovation + repair spending: $105.5B in 2023 (CHBA). Digital platform-intermediated transactions represent just $350–450M — less than 0.4% of the total market. Massive capture opportunity.
💰
USD pricing is a structural disadvantage for all US platforms
USD-priced SaaS tools impose a 30–38% premium on Canadian buyers at current exchange rates. Solo operators show strong resistance at $50–$80/month per platform. Servitium at $25 CAD sits below the resistance threshold.
Vertical 2
Real Estate Agents
BC's most oversaturated professional market — and the most compelling use case for reputation portability.
Licensed agents in BC
29,400
BCFSA Dec 2023 · +35% over decade
GVR members Metro Van
~15,000
~24,000 transaction sides in 2025
The oversaturation crisis
1.6 sides/yr
15,000 GVR members competing for ~24,000 transaction sides in 2025 = 1.6 sides per agent per year. The US median is 10. This compression means per-agent marketing budgets shrink even as competition intensifies — making every dollar spent on visibility more critical.
Metro Vancouver agent annual spend
NAR Tech Survey 2025 (n=1,241) · Real Estate Webmasters survey (n=300) · BCFSA
Total marketing + tech combined
$8.5K–$20K/yr
10% of GCI rule applied to $50K–$75K median GCI
Marketing spend annually
$5K–$15K/yr
Technology spend annually
$3.5K–$10K/yr
Lead generation (Google Ads + portals)
$3K–$12K/yr
Professional association fees alone
$2K–$2.5K/yr
Facebook CPL for Canadian RE (2025)
~$124 CAD avg
Where RE agent spend goes annually (CAD)
🏢
Reputation belongs to the brokerage, not the agent
When a REALTOR moves brokerages, their reviews stay behind. Servitium's reputation portability means their verified work history travels with them — making Servitium the only platform that gives agents true professional ownership of their track record.
📱
CRM penetration is shallow — 34% of agents spend $50–$250/month
NAR Tech Survey 2025 (n=1,241). Despite the availability of tools, most agents use disconnected combinations of spreadsheets, email, and portal lead systems with no unified client-to-close workflow.
Vertical 3
Insurance Brokers
Canada's P&C insurance brokerage market is high-margin, relationship-driven, and severely under-digitized in client-facing tools.
Licensed brokers/employees in BC
8,400+
IBABC · 870+ brokerages
Canada P&C insurance industry revenue
$11.1B
23,084 businesses · IBISWorld 2025
Small brokerages outperform — on less tech
34% EBITDA
Small BC brokerages (under $2M revenue) achieve 34% EBITDA margins vs. 25% for large firms — while spending less on technology (2% of revenue vs. higher for large). The opportunity: better client-facing tools that don't disrupt the margin structure that already works.
Small BC brokerage annual cost stack (3-person)
Smythe P&C Insurance Brokerage Report 2025 (10th Ed.) · n=Canada-wide sample · Gold standard data
Technology total (4% of revenue)
~$18.3K–$32.6K/yr
Marketing total (2% of revenue)
~$15K–$30K/yr
BMS software (Applied/Vertafore)
$8K–$15K/yr
Google Ads (Insurance CPC: $4.52 USD)
~$6K–$18K/yr
Combined tech + marketing
~$27,230/yr
📲
Only 24% of brokers offer mobile apps
Only 18% have client self-service portals. Insurance clients increasingly expect digital touchpoints — especially for renewals, policy queries, and claim status. The gap is wide and growing.
🔒
Applied Systems dominates but faces Competition Bureau scrutiny
Applied Systems holds an estimated 50–60% of the Canadian BMS market (Tier 3 estimate). The Competition Bureau opened an investigation in 2023 into potential abuse of dominance — creating an opening for alternative platforms.
Vertical 4
Auto Dealerships & Salespersons
Metro Vancouver's auto market is dense, competitive, and moving toward digital discovery — but individual salesperson tools remain fragmented.
Dealerships Metro Vancouver
700–850
VSA / CADA data
Auto salespersons Metro Van
~3,500
VSA licensing data · est.
Independent auto dealership annual cost stack
VSA pricing (confirmed) + industry estimates · Metro Vancouver
AutoTrader.ca subscription
~$7,200/yr
$600/month estimated · not publicly listed
DMS (Dealerpull or similar)
~$1,788/yr
Social media advertising
~$6,000/yr
CARFAX Canada dealer account
~$1,800/yr
VSA dealer licence (used cars)
$1,181/yr
Total estimated annual tech + marketing
~$29,755/yr
👤
Individual salesperson visibility is near zero
Dealership websites feature inventory, not salespeople. Individual auto salespersons have no portable professional identity or verified review system. When they move dealerships (which happens frequently), their client relationships and reputation stay with the previous employer.
📊
Salesperson pricing at $49/month — lowest barrier vertical
At $49/month per salesperson, Servitium's auto vertical is the most accessible price point after solo businesses. A single referral or repeat customer covers multiple months of the subscription cost.
Vertical 5
Wealth Management Advisors
Canada's ~14,800–15,400 CIRO-registered advisors spend heavily on marketing but lack consumer-facing discovery tools matched to their professional standards.
CIRO-registered advisors Canada
14,800–15,400
CIRO registration data
Metro Vancouver advisors
3,000–5,000
~180+ advisory firms in Metro Van
Marketing investment without strategy
$7,748/yr
Average annual marketing spend by Canadian advisors (Broadridge 2024). Yet only 20% have a defined marketing strategy. Advisorsavvy.ca is the only consumer-facing matching platform in Canada for advisors — and it's early-stage with limited scale. The gap is wide open.
Wealth management marketing + technology landscape
Broadridge 2024 Advisor Marketing Study · CIRO data
Average annual marketing spend
$7,748 CAD/yr
Broadridge 2024 Canadian Advisor Marketing Study
Have a defined marketing strategy
20%
Annual technology spend range
$5K–$25K/yr
Consumer matching platforms in Canada
1 (early stage)
Advisorsavvy.ca is the only option — limited scale
Servitium seat price
$199/mo
🎯
No viable consumer-facing matching platform exists in Canada
Advisorsavvy.ca is the only dedicated platform connecting Canadian consumers with advisors — and it remains early-stage with limited reach. This is the most uncontested vertical in Servitium's pipeline.
📋
CIRO compliance creates need for structured workflow
CIRO-registered advisors must maintain documented client interaction records. Servitium's Hub inquiry flow with vertical-specific stage tracking (needs assessment → quote prepared → quote presented → closed) provides a natural compliance-aware workflow.
Primary Research · March 2026
Servitium's own validation data.
A Meta ads pilot run in March 2026 provided direct market validation across 17 surveyed business owners. $201 CAD total spend.
Cost per qualified lead
$16 CAD
From a $201 CAD Meta ad campaign · March 2026 · Metro Vancouver and Ontario
Survey results · 17 business owners · March 2026
94%
Expressed pilot interest (yes or maybe)
65%
Rated platform as "valuable" or "total game-changer"
71%
Willing to pay $25+/month — aligns with launch price
59%
Cited getting new clients as their #1 challenge
Business types represented in survey
Cross-industry validation — confirms demand beyond home services
Other service businesses6 respondents
Trades (plumbing, electrical, HVAC)4 respondents
Home services (cleaning, landscaping)3 respondents
Professional services (consulting, accounting)2 respondents
Price willingness vs. biggest challenge
Leads in 2026 pipeline
13
Qualified business leads with contact info
2024 qualified leads
43
Historical pipeline from prior campaigns
Total ad spend
$201
CAD · All 2026 survey campaigns
Research Foundation
Sources — tiered by reliability.
40+ sources across 5 research areas. Tier 1 = government/regulatory body data. Tier 2 = credible industry surveys. All figures attributed; estimates flagged.
Tier 1 · Government
Tier 2 · Industry
Tier 3 · Estimates
T1
ISED Key Small Business Statistics 2025
StatCan data · Business counts by size · Dec 2024 + Jan 2026 editions
T1
Statistics Canada Daily — Business Counts
Non-employer businesses Dec 2025 · 3.67M nationally
T1
BCFSA Licensing Statistics
29,441 licensed RE professionals in BC · Quarterly data
T1
IBABC (Insurance Brokers Association of BC)
870+ brokerages · 8,400+ licensed brokers/employees in BC
T1
CIRO (Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization)
14,800–15,400 registered advisors nationally · 3,000–5,000 Metro Van
T1
VSA (Vehicle Sales Authority of BC)
Dealer licensing data · Confirmed pricing for D-plates and CFC
T1
Payments Canada Annual Report 2025
86% digital payment volume · 22.5B transactions 2024
T1
Smythe LLP P&C Insurance Brokerage Report 2025 (10th Ed.)
Gold standard Canadian P&C data · Aggregate revenue >$1.4B · FY2024
T1
CHBA — Building Excellence Journal 2025
$105.5B Canadian renovation/repair spending 2023
T1
NAR 2025 Technology Survey
n=1,241 active REALTORS · Sep 2025 · 34% spend $50–$250/mo on tech
T2
CFIB Digital Transformation Survey 2025
n=1,683 Canadian SME owners · Apr–Jun 2025 · 10% fully digitalized
T2
CFIB Small Business Digital Presence Survey 2025
n=2,478 · Sep 2025 · 70% have website · 84% use digital for promotion
T2
BDC Self-Employment Rebound Study Feb 2026
~70,000 new solo Canadians joined in 2024 · ~2M total self-employed
T2
Broadridge 2024 Canadian Advisor Marketing Study
$7,748 CAD average annual advisor marketing spend · 20% have strategy
T2
GVR (Greater Vancouver REALTORS) Monthly Data
~15,000 members · ~24,000 transaction sides in 2025
T2
Real Estate Webmasters Agent Survey
~300 active agents (US + Canada) · 2024–2025
T2
Bank of Canada Merchant Acceptance Survey 2023
89% SMBs accept debit/credit · 49% accept mobile payments
T2
Grand View Research — On-Demand Home Services 2023–2030
Canada 5.7% of global market · US$738M by 2030 at 14.8% CAGR
T2
Servitium Meta Pilot Survey — March 2026 (Primary Research)
n=17 business owners · $201 CAD spend · $16 CPL · 94% pilot interest
T3
Metro Vancouver median GCI ($50K–$75K)
Derived from Job Bank BC median ($54,354) adjusted for Metro Van prices. No direct survey data available.
T3
AutoTrader.ca dealer subscription (~$600/month)
Not publicly listed. Cardog.app analysis suggests $450–$2,000+/month range.
T3
Applied Epic pricing (~$150 USD/user/month)
Not publicly listed. Sourced from Insurance Journal forums and ITQlick. Varies by modules and volume.
T3
Jiffy take rate (20–30%)
Sources conflict: SideHusl says 12–18%; UrbanTasker says 20–30%. Jiffy does not publish a fixed rate.
T3
On-demand platform market size Canada ($350–$450M)
Extrapolated from Grand View Research: 5.7% of global market at 14.8% CAGR from 2022 base.

Tier 3 estimates are clearly flagged throughout the research. All Tier 1 and Tier 2 figures are the primary basis for market sizing and financial projections. Tier 3 data is referenced for competitive context only.