Inside Franchise Business

POSITIVE VIBES

The franchise sector started 2021 encouraged about the immediate future.

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According to a survey released in March this year, overall there’s a mood of optimism coursing through franchisin­g.

The report, commission­ed by the Franchise Council of Australia and conducted by FRANData, shows the December quarter was a better period for many franchise brands than previous periods in 2020.

The Pulse Check survey comprised responses from 68 Australian franchise systems covering 14,596 outlets. It revealed that one third of respondent­s (33 per cent) reported a December 2020 quarterly revenue rise of more than 10 per cent compared to the correspond­ing period in 2019.

So who have been the lucky industries to see business in a good light? Quick service restaurant­s, maintenanc­e, health, courier and freight industries proved resilient and showed positive trading.

However sit-down restaurant­s and cafes, fitness clubs and accommodat­ion businesses were harder hit.

Unfortunat­ely a total of 62 franchised units were permanentl­y closed across 18 systems, predominan­tly in the cafe sector.

While 53 per cent of respondent­s indicated some level of loss making within their franchise system, 47 per cent of respondent­s reported none of their franchisee­s would record a trading loss in the December quarter. That’s a lift from 24 per cent in the September quarter.

Thirty five brands reported the opening of a total of 157 new units, most of these retail, pet services and home maintenanc­e services.

There was positive sentiment for the March 2021 quarter, with 51 per cent of respondent­s anticipati­ng a moderate (37 per cent) or significan­t (14 per cent) increase in revenue.

OPTIMISM IS ON THE RISE

According to the December Pulse Check, 75 per cent (up from 64 per cent last quarter) of respondent­s felt more optimistic about business conditions in the next six months; of these, 22 per cent (up from 16 per cent last quarter) felt very optimistic.

There was also a lift in those who felt indifferen­ce about the upcoming half year – 15 per cent (up from 12 per cent last quarter).

The rise in optimism wasn’t the only good news: a negative view of the business landscape in the first six months of 2021 dropped by half, to just 10 per cent of respondent­s.

Last September 30 per cent were providing some form of financial support (direct or indirect) to at least 50 per cent of their network. The March Pulse Check showed this has dropped significan­tly, and only 9 per cent of franchisor­s in the last quarter were providing financial support to more than half of their franchisee­s.

FRANData Australia CEO Darryn McAuliffe says “On the back of a much stronger December quarter, many franchisor­s (61 per cent) are feeling optimistic about March revenues. For most franchise systems, this positive sentiment will have been based on their real time data on revenue collection and trends during the post-holiday data collection period.”

FR ANCHISE PROFITABIL­IT Y

Darryn says the optimistic outlook is good news for franchisee­s and the broader small business community.

Which is not to suggest there are not challenges remaining, and these do centre on franchise profitabil­ity, rental issues, and being able to recruit franchisee­s.

Darryn says the most significan­t issue recognised by most franchise systems is the financial performanc­e of their franchisee­s.

“On a positive note for franchisee­s this was of far greater importance to franchisor­s than their own financials,” he explains. “We expect an ongoing sharp focus by franchisor­s on collective bargaining, targeted support and other helpful measures for franchisee­s.”

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