to the development and refinement of franchise businesses…
Marketing Assistance Franchise Implementation Services
• Franchise Feasibility
• Competitive Benchmarking
• Franchise Structure
• Territory Analysis and Determination
• Coordination with outside counsel on the developmentof legal documents
• Strategic Implementation Plans
• Financial analysis and fee optimization
• Business Plans for Capital Formation
• Operations Manuals
• Systems and Forms
• Quality Control Procedures
• Training Programs and Training Aids
• Training Videos and other Intranet training applications
• Operational audits and best practices
• Learning Management Systems
• Franchise Marketing Plans
• Primary Research on Targeted Franchisee Candidates
• Franchise Brochures and other print collateral materials
• Franchise Promotional Videos
• Franchise Ad Design
• Website development
• Website optimization
• Franchise sales and marketing audits
• Franchise Sales Training
• Implementation Consulting and Coaching
• Franchise Sales Outsourcing
• PR, SEO, PPC, & Social Media
• Company Audits and Best Practices Benchmarking
• Due Diligence
• Expert Witness and Litigation Support
• Franchisee Council Development
• Compliance Audits
• International Expansion
Quality
Franchise
Fully-Coordinated Approach Across Disciplines 3 © iFranchise Group. All rights reserved.
Franchise Strategy Development
Control, Documentation & Training
But
the vast majority of our services are directly applicable to nonfranchised channels of distribution…
Strategy
Development
• Feasibility Studies
• Competitive Benchmarking
• Financial Structure
• Territory Analysis and Determination
• Coordination with outside counsel on the developmentof legal documents
• Strategic Implementation Plans
• Financial analysis and fee optimization
• Business Plans for Capital Formation
Quality Control, Documentation & Training Marketing Assistance Implementation Services
• Operations Manuals
• Systems and Forms
• Quality Control Procedures
• Training Programs and Training Aids
• Training Videos and other Intranet training applications
• Operational audits and best practices
• Learning Management Systems
• Channel Partner Marketing Plans
• Primary Research on Targeted Channel Partner Candidates
• Business Op Brochures and other print collateral materials
• Business Op Promotional Videos
• Business Op Ad Design
• Website development
• Website optimization
• Business Op sales and marketing audits
• Biz Op Sales Training
• Implementation Consulting and Coaching
• Biz Op Sales Outsourcing
• PR, SEO, PPC, & Social Media
• Company Audits and Best Practices Benchmarking
• Due Diligence
• Expert Witness and Litigation Support
• Dealer Council Development
• Compliance Audits
• International Expansion
Fully-Coordinated Approach Across Disciplines 4 © iFranchise Group. All rights reserved.
FTC rule 436 cites three elements that legally define a franchise:
◦ The use of a common trademark
◦ The provision of assistance to (or exercise of control over) the franchisee
◦ The collection of fees, royalties, mark-ups or other monies from the franchisees
If you have all three elements, you are a franchise, regardless of what you call it
Some state definitions vary, but are similar
Do not have to use the “f-word”
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Franchisee typically pays
◦ Franchise fee average about $25,000 - $35,000
◦ Royalty range between 4% - 10%
◦ Advertising range between 1% and 2%
◦ Franchisor will often sell product to the franchisee
◦ Franchisee makes the entire investment in operations
Franchisor typically provides
◦ Initial training
◦ Operations manual and systems
◦ Ongoing supervision and support
◦ Other support services
◦ Trademark & Trademark Maintenance
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Leverage Capital
Speed of Growth
Motivated management
Reduced risk
Few operational concerns
Higher quality
Organizational leverage
Must “share profits”
◦ Franchise unit will usually generate less profit than a profitable unit
◦ But far more profit than an unprofitable company-owned operation
Less Control
Good relations with franchisees take work
MYTH: Litigation
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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* Not responsible for acts of an independent contractor (franchisee) relative to third parties. Exceptions are when a) you create an agency and/or b) if you are negligent.
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved. Liability Type Well-Executed Franchising Company-Owned Growth Franchise Contract Liability X Employment Liability X Property Lease Liability X Equipment Lease Liability X Workers Comp Liability X Slip and Fall Liability X Vicarious Liability Usually not* You always have liability for your agents
you
liability Yes – franchisee No Can
Yes Yes
Can require third party to insure
against
insure against internally
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What are your goals? BE SPECIFIC!
◦ Certain levels of profits
◦ Sell company for a specific amount
What is your risk tolerance?
◦ How much are you willing to invest and re-invest?
◦ What other resources do you have to bring to bear?
Conduct Cash Flow Analysis to See if You Can Reach Your Goals
◦ Example:
Goal = Sell company for $10 million at the end of five years
Two units in operation
Total Equity Investment in New Operation = $150,000
Total available capital = $200,000
Existing Free Cash Flow for Reinvestment = $100,000/year
Units Break Even in First Year
After that, Free Cash Flow from New Units = $50,000/year/each
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Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 Starting Capital $250,000 $200,000 $200,000 $250,000 $300,000 # Opened 1 1 1 1 2 Capital invested ($150,000) ($150,000) ($150,000) ($150,000) ($300,000) New Cash Flow 0 $50,000 $100,000 $150,000 $200,000 Existing Cash Flow $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 Units – EOY 3 4 5 6 8 Cash Flow $100,000 $150,000 $200,000 $250,000 $350,000 Value @ 7x CF $700,000 $1,050,000 $1,400,000 $1,750,000 $2,450,000 Terminal Value $450,000 in free cash flow by Year Six = $3,150,000 valuation ONLY IF NO INCREMENTAL OVERHEAD IS NEEDED TO SUPPORT 12
This Example
◦ Would need to open 27 company units
◦ That would take about 12 years of reinvesting everything
◦ Total Investment = $4 million over that time frame
Cannot get there from here
Alternatives:
◦ Change Goal
◦ Change Time Frame
◦ Change Assumptions (structure, capital devoted, leverage, etc.)
◦ Raise equity to grow faster
If you are raising equity, factor in dilution
◦ If you will give up 50% of the company, you need to grow twice as big
◦ Run the numbers again
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 Starting Capital $3,250,000 $1,100,000 $850,000 $1,250,000 $1,500,000 # Opened 15 7 5 8 10 Capital invested
New Cash Flow 0 $750,000 $1,100,000 $1,350,000 $1,750,000 Existing Cash Flow $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 Units – EOY 17 24 29 37 47 Cash Flow $100,000 $850,000 $1,200,000 $1,450,000 $1,850,000 Terminal Value $2,750,000 in free cash flow by Year Six = $19,250,000 valuation. Divide by two to account for 50% ownership = $9.6 million selling price. AGAIN, ONLY IF NO INCREMENTAL OVERHEAD IS NEEDED TO SUPPORT 14
($2,250,000) ($1,050,000) ($750,000) ($1,200,000) ($1,500,000)
With an influx of a little over $3 million
◦ Can jump-start growth and leverage off that growth
◦ Will need to get to about 50 – 54 units
◦ Total investment $7.5 - $8 million
◦ But you are using investor money
Problem: Realistic valuations
◦ Valuing the existing business – (4X – 7X EBITDA)
◦ Year One Business Value = $700,000
◦ Business Value after Equity = $3.7 million
◦ Sophisticated investor would want 81% ($3M/$3.7M)
◦ Would need to find an investor who would invest $3M for 50%
◦ Might try numbers again at $5 million and a 20% stake???
◦ At some point, just not realistic
Capital availability even with realistic valuations
◦ Limited in today’s marketplace
◦ Control an issue
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Goal Sell for $10M in 5 Years
Average Selling 6.7 times EBIT
Year Five Earnings $10M/6.7 or about $1.3M
Average Royalties $30,000 per franchise
Average Net Royalties $10,000 per franchise
Need to sell $1.3M/$10,000 = 130 Franchises
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© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved. 10 15 25 30 50 Year 1 2 3 4 5 Sales 18
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved. 10 15 25 30 50 Year 1 2 3 4 5 Sales Hire Franchise Salespeople 19
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved. 10 15 25 30 50 Year 1 2 3 4 5 Sales Hire Field Reps 20
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved. 10 15 25 30 50 Year
Sales
21
1 2 3 4 5
Hire Support Staff
Cost to get into franchising can range from $50,000 to $200,000+
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved. 10
30 50 Personnel Marketing Office Space
Brochures
22
15 25
Year 1 2 3 4 5 Sales
Name
System Fee Franchise = Name Fee Trademark License =
System Fee Business Opportunity orLicense = Name System Dealership = Distributor Agency JointVenture SalesRep System Name Fee
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24
Equity +
JointVenture +
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
Name System Fee Franchise Name Trademark License Product System Distributor/ Dealer
25
Name Fee Trademark License =
Advantages
Less Regulation
- Still a Franchise in NY
Disadvantages
•Lower fees
•Do you have strong name?
•No control over brand
Often, this alternative is eliminated because the company does not have adequate brand strength, and, even if they did, they would risk losing their trademark if they did not exercise control. Moreover, it is important to note that the “control” element of the franchise definition is very easy to trigger.
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Advantages
Disadvantages System Fee Business Opportunity orLicense =
•Less Regulation?
- More at the state level
•Lower fees
•Do you have strong name?
•No control
•Create competition
•Poor image
This can be a viable option for some, but the loss of the branding element is an issue that should be carefully considered. For example, what would happen to your licensed channel if a branded channel were to be introduced by your competitors? Will you have national accounts? Or a desire to create consumer brand loyalty?
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Dealership or Distributorship = Name System
Advantages Disadvantages
•Less Regulation
•Easier to sell
•ABSOLUTELY NO FEES
•Support provided for “free”
•Must have product to sell
•No revenues from service
•Products can be “stepchild”
•Dealer defections to: - better products - cheaper alternatives
Dedicated dealerships can have many of the same advantages as franchising. The biggest disadvantages are the need to pay for services out of the wholesale margins. CAUTION: Can create an inadvertent franchise after the fact, as happened with Mitsubishi v. To-Am.
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Advantages Disadvantages Agency or SalesRep = Name System
•Less Regulation
•Easier to sell
•ABSOLUTELY NO FEES
•Support provided for “free”
•Must have product /service
•Turnover is high
•Increased training costs
A “top-down” flow of revenues will avoid franchise laws. Again, be aware of the creation of an inadvertent franchise.
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Joint Venture = Name System
• GeneralPartnerships
• LimitedPartnerships
• Corporations
• L.L.C.s
Advantages Disadvantages
•Less Regulation
•Easier to sell
•May make more $
•ABSOLUTELY NO FEES
•Negotiated each agreement
•Marriage vs. Parent
•Majority end in “Divorce”
•Fiduciary Duty
•Accounting difficulties
•Underreporting
•No profit = no distributions
•Exit barriers
•Liability
•LOSS
On a one-off basis, this can be reasonable means of expansion, but is perhaps the worst vehicle when more aggressive growth is planned.
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Franchise
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved. 31
Legend: States having no franchise or business opportunity laws States having franchise registration laws only States having business opportunity laws States having both franchise registration and business opportunity laws CA WA SD ND MN WI IL IN MI NY VA MD RI UT NE TX FL GA SC NC CT ME KY IA LA OH OK NH Hawaii Alaska
& Business Opportunity Legislation within the U.S.
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved. Franchise Laws Business Opp. Laws Relationship Laws Fair Dealership Laws Sales Rep. Laws Securities Laws NY Franchise Law Franchise Federal & 26 States TM License New York Only Business Opportunity 26 States Dealer / Distributor State / Industry Specific Sales Rep / Agent 35 States Joint Venture State and Federal 32
Fractional Franchises (Two years and 20%)
Large Investment (Over $1M excluding R/E)
Sophisticated Franchisee (Five Yrs. + $5M Net Worth)
Minimal Payment (pays/commits less than $500/first 6 mos.)
Leased Departments
Single Trademark License Exclusion
Fall under other regulations (PMPA)
Officers and directors of the franchisee (very specific def.)
CAUTION: The FTC Exemptions are NOT honored by all states
◦ Patchwork Quilt
◦ Need an attorney to decipher
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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The decision should be goal-driven
◦ Distance
◦ Speed
◦ Obstacles
◦ Risk tolerance
Don’t have to choose only one vehicle
Don’t decide to franchise (or whatever)
◦ Instead, decide:
Do I want to build a third-party distribution channel?
Do I want that channel to be branded?
If it is branded, do I want to control quality?
How do I want to be paid?
The law (or your lawyer) should never dictate your good business decisions
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Perfecting the business
◦ If you think you have perfected your business, SELL IT!
◦ McDonald’s in 1955
Quick vs. Slick
◦ More unique, the sooner you should expand
Risk: Someone with a camera and a notepad
First mover advantage
Who was the first . . . ?
◦ If you are going head-to-head with more established competition and your business model is not highly differentiated – be sure to refine it first
What is right for YOU?
◦ What are your goals?
◦ What are your constraints?
◦ What is happening in the market?
◦ Do you have something unique?
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Determine if your business is, in fact, franchisable (or if it can be expanded through any third-party distribution)
Determine if third-party distribution channels are the best means of expanding your business
Gain an understanding of what is involved in franchising, licensing, etc.
Understand various cost options (and combinations of options) and how they can be adjusted to meet your growth goals
Please consider our Analysts to be resources to you
© 2013-2024 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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www.ifranchisegroup.com 708-957-2300 38
you would like a free copy of my book
Your Business” or a 90-minute educational video on the process of franchising, please email us at info@ifranchisegroup.com
mention that you received the offer here.
If
“Franchise
and