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A no-nonsense, start-to-finish roadmap for aspiring franchisees
In The Ultimate Guide to Franchising, straight-shooting author Joe Mathews delivers a practical and hands-on "how-to" guide for aspiring franchisees seeking to start their own businesses. In the book, you'll explore real-life stories from the franchising trenches that illustrate how to effectively look past the obvious and dig deep into the bones of a franchise to establish fit, predict success, and mitigate risk. You'll discover the personality types most likely to experience success and failure at franchising and identify the entrepreneurial traits that can expose you to additional risk.
You'll also find:
Perfect for budding entrepreneurs, founders, and other business-minded professionals, as well as employees, leaders, and suppliers to franchise brands who want a better understanding and appreciation for how franchising works, The Ultimate Guide to Franchising will earn a place on the bookshelves of anyone serious about opening their own franchise as well as those who have already begun their franchising journeys.
JOE MATHEWS has nearly forty years' experience working in franchising, sales, and leadership roles. He has worked with companies like Subway, Fantastic Sams, Marco's Pizza, and other world-renowned franchisors. He has written five books on franchising, including Street Smart Franchising.
Preface ix
Introduction xv
Part 1: What You Need to Know Before You Look at Franchises 1
1 Introduction to Franchising 3
2 Special Advice for the First-Time Entrepreneur 25
3 Setting Your North Star 35
4 Matching Your Skills and Aptitudes to Opportunities 69
5 The Learning Curve and Lifecycle of a Franchisee 83
6 What Insiders Want You to Know About Franchising Before You Invest 117
7 Assessing the Skills and Viability of a Franchisor 163
8 The Franchisor Landscape in the United States 173
9 Understanding Where Franchisors Are in Their Lifecycle and Learning Curve 183
Part 2: How Do You Find the Right Franchise? 235
10 Identifying Potential Franchise Options 237
11 The Franchise Buyer Journey 247
12 Your Final Decision Checklist 301
Conclusion 307
Acknowledgments 311
About the Author 313
Index 315
Before I get into what it takes to invest into individual brands, I want to establish some terminology and define some terms.
According to Dictionary.com, a franchise is "the right or license granted by a company to an individual or group to market its products or services in a specific territory."
I find this definition insufficient to the point of being laugh-out-loud funny.
True, a franchise is a legal contract, but when a franchisor is skilled, it takes more the shape of an intangible social contract than a tangible legal contract. The social contract is simple. Franchisees agree to execute the business model to the best of their ability, to build the brand locally consistent with the intention of brand leadership, and to add more value to products and services than it charges customers in price. The franchisor agrees to continually refine processes and systems and go to work each day to add more value to the franchisees' business than it extracts in royalties.
Put it another way, the social contract says, "We each have roles and responsibilities that impact each other. We are in this together and the common bond is building value in the brand." Within this social contract, there is no assumed hierarchy, no parent company that lords over the lesser-than, childlike, dependent franchisees.
Franchisees and the franchisor only pull out the legal contract when this social contract breaks down.
Because the textbook definition of "franchise" describes what the relationship looks like when the franchisor relationship is failing, I want to take the time to create more intelligent and workable definitions.
Throughout this book, I repeat this again and again. Franchisors are in two businesses, and they need to be brilliant at both to succeed.
I briefly describe these two businesses and continue to develop these important themes throughout the book.
For simplicity, I call the end user "the customer," whether the business is business-to-business or business-to-consumer. Virtually every brand is faced with stiff competition within their respective industries. This appears self-evident. However, what does it mean to compete effectively?
A brilliant franchisor will have built a consumer-facing business model, which on balance should receive high marks on all the following criteria:
The following sections look at each of these points in more detail.
Businesses that offer commoditized products and services will ultimately engage in a war of convenience and price. If the customer can't distinguish one brand's offer from the next, then ultimately business will be won by which brand offers the lowest price, is nearest to the customer, or can get to the customer the fastest. The market becomes a war of price and convenience and franchisees struggle to remain profitable.
As a franchisee, you never want a business involved in a price war. Years ago, Subway offered $5 subs. The brand essentially trained the customer to spend no more than $5 on their product. As proteins, commodities, and labor costs increased, franchisees had a brutal time trying to pass these costs to their customers, who wanted $5 subs. Margins shrank. Franchisees became less profitable. The goals of the franchisor - who makes their money on the top line revenue and not on the bottom line cash flow - were not aligned with their franchisees, and thus were slow to respond. Franchisee dissatisfaction soared. Many franchisees started diversifying into other food concepts rather than reinvesting into opening more Subways, to the detriment of the brand.
A small business exists for the mutual benefit of the customer and the business owner. Whether the franchisee is an owner-operator or runs an empire, the business needs to consistently hit their financial objectives or it's a bad investment. The franchisor does not get to say what is or isn't a good investment any more than the business owner gets to tell a customer what they should value. The franchisee alone determines what is and isn't an acceptable return on time, money, and energy.
One of my favorite brands is Sandler, a business training franchise operating inside a nearly $80-billion industry where more than 60% of businesses outsource their training. While their franchise agreement is only five years, many franchisees have a 15-20 year tenure, meaning they keep renewing their agreements and doing business with the brand. Franchisees love what they do. Since the brand markets sales knowledge and experience as its core product, think about the brand's competitive advantage of sustaining a team of highly skilled and experienced Sandler sales zealots around the country.
Sandler, at the time of this writing, is one of the nation's leaders in sales training, with systemwide sales reported to be about $150 million. No brand operating in the training space appears to have more than 1% market share, so it's a dominant brand in a fragmented industry, giving franchisees a real competitive advantage over independents in the same space.
Other than Dale Carnegie, Miller Heiman, and a few other brands, Sandler franchisees compete against a cottage industry of motivational speakers and success coaches who may have personality but often lack valuable intellectual property and sales systems to impart to their clients.
Why do I like dominant brands in a fragmented market? Simple. When a new Sandler franchisee opens in a new market, what competitor can keep the franchisee out? What competitor can make it rough for the franchisee to acquire new business?
The business is not subject to dramatic market fluctuations, or the model is adaptable. Take hair care, for instance. Stylist.com once published a study that showed the average woman spends $50,000 coloring her hair during her lifetime. Whether the stock market is up or down or interest rates are high or low, whether it's raining or snowing, a universal truth remains. Many women don't want gray hair.
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