Should You Consider Franchising Your Business?
The Decision to Franchise ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦
How Franchising Works Alternatives Quality Control Legal Aspects of Franchising
Marketing Your Franchise
Selling Your Franchise
Creating a Successful Franchise Strategy
Questions and Discussion
◦ Structural Decisions ◦ Financial ◦ Organizational Development
We are going to try to cover a great deal of information, so we are asking that you hold your questions until the end of the session unless they are on a particular slide. © 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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More hands-on experience than any other firm ◦ ◦ ◦
27 consultants with over 500 years of franchise experience 98 out of the top 200 franchise companies Offices in Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, Miami-Fort Lauderdale, Atlanta Toronto, Dubai, UAE & Riyadh
More “senior level” experience ◦ ◦
Hands-on experience at start-up and established franchisors Former CEOs, CFOs, EVPs of two dozen major franchise companies
◦
Vertical specialties by industry segment
The ability to bring more resources ◦ ◦
Adia (now Adecco), Armstrong Tile, Auntie Anne’s, Dunkin’ Donuts, LINE-X, Pearle Vision, McDonald’s, PIP Printing, Schlotzsky’s, Snap-on Tools, Snelling & Snelling, and other national brands
Faster completion Ability to provide assistance in several areas simultaneously
Breadth across four functional areas ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦
Strategic planning Quality control Marketing Organizational development
Franchise experience in 50+ countries
Numerous awards and publications
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Considering franchising your business?
Franchising less than one year?
Franchising more than one year?
We are happy to send you a copy of this presentation, so you can limit your note taking if you so desire.
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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FTC rule 436 cites three elements that legally define a franchise: 1.
The use of a common trademark
2.
The exercise of control or provision of assistance
3.
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”
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Franchisee typically pays ◦ Franchise fee average about $25,000 to $35,000 ◦ Royalty range between 4% and10% ◦ Advertising range between 1% and 2% ◦ Franchisor will often sell product to the franchisee
Franchisor typically provides ◦ Initial training ◦ Operations manual and systems ◦ Ongoing supervision and support ◦ Other support services
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What are your goals? BE SPECIFIC!
What is your risk tolerance?
◦ Certain levels of profits ◦ Sell company for a specific amount
◦ 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
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Year 1 Starting Capital
Year 2
Year 3
Year 4
Year 5
$250,000
$200,000
$200,000
$250,000
$300,000
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
$100,000
$100,000
$100,000
$100,000
$100,000
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
# Opened
Existing Cash Flow Units – EOY
Terminal Value
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
$450,000 in free cash flow by Year Six = $3,150,000 valuation ONLY IF NO INCREMENTAL OVERHEAD IS NEEDED TO SUPPORT
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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
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Year 1
Year 2
Year 4
Year 5
$3,250,000
$1,100,000
$850,000
$1,250,000
$1,500,000
15
7
5
8
10
Capital invested
($2,250,000)
($1,050,000)
($750,000)
($1,200,000)
($1,500,000)
New Cash Flow
0
$750,000
$1,100,000
$1,350,000
$1,750,000
$100,000
$100,000
$100,000
$100,000
$100,000
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24
29
37
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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
Starting Capital # Opened
Existing Cash Flow Units – EOY
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
Year 3
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With an influx of a little over $3 million ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦
Problem: Realistic valuations ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦
Can jump-start growth and leverage off of that growth Will need to get to about 50 – 54 units Total investment $7.5 - $8 million But you are using investor money 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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Leverage Capital
Speed of Growth
Motivated management
Reduced risk
Few operational concerns
Higher quality
Organizational leverage
◦ Franchise unit will usually generate less profit than a profitable unit ◦ But far more profit than an unprofitable company-owned operation
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
Must “share profits”
Less Control Good relations with franchisees take work MYTH: Litigation
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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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Sales
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30 25 15 10 Year © 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Hire Franchise Salespeople 50
Sales
30 25 15 10 Year © 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Hire Field Reps Sales
50
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Hire Support Staff Sales
50
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Sales
50
Personnel Marketing Office Space
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Brochures
25 Cost to get into franchising can range from $50,000 to $200,000+
15 10 Year Š 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Name Fee
Name =
Franchise
System
Fee
=
Trademark License
System
Distributor
Name Fee System Š 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
Name =
Business Opportunity or License
Fee
Dealership
=
Agency Sales Rep
System
Joint Venture
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Name Fee System
Franchise
+ Joint Venture
Equity
Š 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
Name
Trademark License
Product
+
System
Distributor/ Dealer
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Name Fee
= Trademark License
Advantages
Disadvantages
Less Regulation - Still a Franchise in NY
•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.
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Fee System
Business = Opportunity or License
Advantages
Disadvantages
•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?
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Name System
Dealership or = Distributorship
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. © 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Name System
Agency or = Sales Rep
Advantages •Less Regulation •Easier to sell
Disadvantages •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.
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Name = System
Joint Venture
• • • •
General Partnerships Limited Partnerships 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. © 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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TM License Business Opportunity
Dealer / Distributor
Sales Rep / Agent Joint Venture
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
NY Franchise Law
Securities Laws
Sales Rep. Laws
Fair Dealership Laws
Relationship Laws
Business Opp. Laws
Franchise Laws Franchise
Federal & 26 States
New York Only
26 States State / Industry Specific
35 States
State and Federal
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Franchise & Business Opportunity Legislation within the U.S. ND
WA
MN
ME
SD
OR
WI NY
MI IA
NE
NH
IL
UT
IN
OH RI KY
CA
VA
OK
NC
CT MD
SC TX
LA
AL
GA
Legend: FL
States having no franchise or business opportunity laws
Alaska States having franchise registration laws only Hawaii
States having business opportunity laws States having both franchise registration and business opportunity laws
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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
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Technology-based shared services ◦ Use an app to drive business ◦ Avoid franchising by top-down fee structure ◦ Uber, Lyft, Airbnb
Certification programs ◦ Certification Mark, not a Trademark
TM/SM = Source of Product or Service
CM = Characteristics of a Product or Service
◦ Cannot be used as a TM by the owner of the mark ◦ Must be willing to offer to all who qualify ◦ Cannot have exclusive territories ◦ Can easily stray into a franchise relationship
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The decision should be goal driven ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦
Distance Speed Obstacles Risk tolerance
A Volvo or a Rocket Ship?
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
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Successful prototype Credibility Differentiation “Sizzle” Buyer appeal Value Proposition
Teachability Adaptability Systemization
R.O.I.?
Sell?
Affordability Profitability
Market trends Capital Management
Succeed?
Clone?
The Key is Creating a “Win-Win-Win” Scenario © 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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The franchisee should make a return on the time they invest ◦ No different than if they were to go out and get a job ◦ Salary should be “market rate”
The franchisee should make a return on their investment ◦ No different than if they invested in a stock ◦ Return should be commensurate with what they would make if they were to make an investment of similar risk ◦ Ability to sell back their investment at the end of the term
Franchisees expect that they will need to build their business ◦ Will expect these returns in three years or less
Annual Cash-on-Cash R.O.I. at the unit level – our criteria ◦ 15% for Owner Operators ◦ 20% for Area Developers (who will support additional overhead)
Occasional exceptions
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Cost to Open a New Unit
$
150,000
Add a Franchise Fee
$
25,000
Add Working Capital
$
25,000
Franchisee Estimated Investment
$
200,000
Estimated Franchisee Revenue Year Three
$
500,000
Current Profit after Owner’s Compensation
$
70,000
Adjust Owner’s Compensation
+$
15,000
One-Time Only / Capital Investment
+$
5,000
Tax Minimization Strategies
+$
5,000
Shared Overhead
+$
5,000
Interest and Debt Service
+$
5,000
Depreciation and Amortization
+$
5,000
($
30,000)
$
80,000
Subtract Royalties, Fees, & Price Adjustments Estimated Franchisee Profit (adjusted) Divided Estimated Profit by Estimated Investment Estimated Franchisee Return © 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
$80,000/$200,000 40%
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Perfecting the business
◦ If you have perfected your business, SELL IT! ◦ If you are standing still, someone is gaining ◦ McDonald’s in 1955
Quick vs. Slick
◦ If you are going head to head with more established competition and your business model is not highly differentiated – be sure to refine first ◦ More unique, the sooner you should franchise Risk: Someone with a camera and a notepad First mover advantage
Who was the first . . . ? © 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Risk of Failure Business Model Risk
Competitive threat
Speed To Market Š 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Business plan/strategic direction
Legal documents and registrations
Operations manuals
Training program
Quality control mechanisms and systems
Effective marketing plan
Franchise collateral materials
Website and web-based marketing
Advertise
Design and implement a sales strategy
Staff an organization to implement the plan
Capital
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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You are entering a new business. Goals drive your business. Start with support and cost structure. What do you need to do to help your franchisees succeed? Don’t rely on guesswork: The
future of your business is at stake.
Financial analysis is essential.
Reverse engineer your success.
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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There are certainly a large number of neophyte franchisors who take a “Ready-Fire-Aim” approach ◦ Often rely on guesswork ◦ Or analysis of what comparable franchisors are offering to make major decisions
“Me-Too” is not a strategy – it is a recipe for disaster! ◦ Uniqueness is important to success, whether achieved through the business model, marketing, support, structure, fees, or marketing. ◦ Me-Too assumes that business economics are the same, support is the same, and that a new franchisor will simply differentiate themselves based on great franchise marketing ◦ But established franchisors often have many advantages not shared by newer franchisors ◦ So the Me-Too strategy that is taken by many new franchisors can actually be responsible for their failure
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The impact of a 1% royalty mistake ◦ If a single franchisee generates $500,000 in revenue ◦ 1% = $5,000 off the bottom line ◦ But franchisees will never tell you that they are paying too little and often inertia will keep the royalty where it is at for years Lost revenue from a single franchise Times 100 franchises opened Times 20 years Lost enterprise value at 10x earnings Total Loss
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
$5,000 $500,000 $10,000,000 $5,000,000 $15,000,000
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Discussions with Key Stakeholders
Review existing material, forms, & documentation
Develop preliminary outline
Determine gaps in current documentation
Assign responsibility for content creation
Identify Subject Matter Experts for gaps
Interview Subject Matter Experts
Onsite observation of units & documentation
Resolve Best Practices Conflicts
Draft material to cover all identified gaps
Edit all material into common style & “voice”
Revise first draft of Operations Manual based on client input
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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The FTC rule ◦ Disclosure document with 23 items ◦ Disclosure fourteen days prior to sale ◦ Final Franchise Agreement seven days prior ◦ Financial Performance Representations ◦ Consistency with Franchise Disclosure Document
State laws
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The Franchise Sales Pipeline Public Relations
Print Advertising
Trade Shows
Direct Mail
Example CPL = $250
Example CPL = $150
Example CPL = $100
Example CPL = $75
Internet Leads Example CPL =$25 - $75
Brokers Cost Per Sale =$15K - $25K
Referrals/ Unsolicited CPL = $0
Lead Generation Time Varies by Media
Average CPL: $113
Send Marketing Materials, Prequalify, Schedule Meetings
Meet With 3 – 10% of Leads
Convert 15% - 20% of Completed CIRFs to Sales
Close 65% - 75% of Discovery Days
iFranchise Group - 2015-2019
Initial Meetings with Candidates Further Qualify
Follow-up meetings, assist with business plan & secure financing
Award Franchise
Average 45 – 90 Days Lead to Meeting Time to close can range from 30-90 days or more following the initial faceto-face meeting Total time to close: often 12-20 weeks Average Marketing Cost = $8,571 per sale Overall Expected Close Rate = 1.8%
Source: Franchise Update.
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A good concept +The Right Message +Marketing Plan +Adequate marketing budget +Good sales technique = leads = meetings = franchise sales Some studies have indicated the average new franchisor will sell: An average of 9, 11, and 13 franchises in their first three years Median sales of 4, 5, and 6 sales in their first three years © 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Franchise Program for Aggressive Growth Approximate Development Activity Schedule MO 1
MO 2
MO 3
MO 4
MO 5
MO 6
MO 7
MO 8
MO 9
MO 10
MO 11
MO 12
Discovery & Benchmarking Initial Planning Session Strategic Planning Financial Sensitivity Analysis Franchise Agreement
Legal Coordination
Strategy Legal Documents Quality Control Franchise Marketing Organizational Development
Disclosure Document State Registration Process Operations Manual Training Programs Training Videos & LMS Content Primary Research/Profiling Franchise Marketing Plan Develop/Print Brochure Mini-Brochure Franchise Sales Video Website Optimization Franchise Sales Training & Manual Franchise Implementation Strategy Implementation Consulting
The iFranchise Group does not provide legal services but instead works through outside legal counsel
Franchise Program for Moderate Growth Approximate Development Activity Schedule MO 1
MO 2
MO 3
MO 4
MO 5
MO 6
MO 7
MO 8
MO 9
MO 10
MO 11
MO 12
Discovery & Benchmarking Initial Planning Session Strategic Planning Financial Sensitivity Analysis Franchise Agreement Disclosure Document State Registration Process Operations Manual Primary Research/Profiling Franchise Marketing Plan Develop/Print Brochure Mini-Brochure Website Optimization Franchise Sales Training & Manual Franchise Implementation Strategy Implementation Consulting
Legal Coordination
Strategy Legal Documents Quality Control Franchise Marketing Organizational Development
Franchise Program for Conservative Growth Approximate Development Activity Schedule MO 1
MO 2
MO 3
MO 4
MO 5
MO 6
MO 7
MO 8
MO 9
MO 10
Discovery & Benchmarking Initial Planning Session Strategic Planning
Legal Coordination
Strategy Legal Documents Quality Control
Financial Sensitivity Analysis Franchise Agreement Disclosure Document State Registration Process Operations Manual
We can modify our programs to meet the needs of any company getting into franchising. Our fees can range from $20,000 to $200,000+.
MO 11
MO 12
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Consulting and legal costs vary based on franchise company’s situation: ◦ Desired speed of growth influences services needed ◦ Ability to do work internally
Do not go into franchising undercapitalized ◦ Legal fees: $15,000 to $35,000+ ◦ Consulting and Development: $40,000 to $200,000 ◦ Organizational expenses: $10,000 to $25,000 ◦ Franchise Marketing: $8k - $10k per sale (six months) ◦ Personnel: varies widely Can bootstrap growth Can spend hundreds of thousands
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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Franchising is a means of duplicating success, not creating success
Thrives by creating win-win situations
You must be selective
Franchising is a new and different business
Is not the right solution for every business
Provides one of the most powerful business expansion models ever developed
© 2019 iFranchise Group. All Rights Reserved.
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www.ifranchisegroup.com 708-957-2300
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