NZ Business + Management

FRANCHISE FILE

IF YOU’RE THINKING ABOUT FRANCHISIN­G YOUR BUSINESS, DON’T JUST COPY OTHERS, SAYS SIMON LORD. CONSIDER WHAT WORKS FOR YOU AND YOUR FRANCHISEE­S.

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ONE OF THE reasons franchisin­g has become so popular as a way of doing business is that it is so flexible. With variations, the franchise model has been applied to industries as different as fast food and building, hotels and home services. There is almost no industry, it sometimes seems, where a properly-developed franchise system cannot flourish.

And yet many new franchise systems never get off the ground, while other apparently attractive brands fail the moment an economic downturn comes along. Why should this be?

Well, the reason franchisin­g is so flexible is that it is highly adaptable. The original fast food model of modern franchisin­g has evolved into a large variety of structures and formats, each designed to suit a particular style of business. This means you need to do your homework. If you just copy something that seems to work for someone else, the chances are that you will pick the wrong structure.

Let’s take territorie­s, for example. Every franchisee likes to feel that they have an exclusive territory within which they can market their business knowing they are free of competitio­n from other franchisee­s within the same company. That seems only fair, doesn’t it? And it’s certainly a structure that their lawyers and accountant­s like. But how big should that territory be? What should it be based on – maps, malls, postcode boundaries or demographi­cs, to name just four possibilit­ies? Should it be capable of being divided or subfranchi­sed? Should there even be a territory at all?

For the new franchisor, thinking through all these aspects is crucial to establishi­ng a successful and sustainabl­e business model, both for the franchisor and the franchisee. Make the territorie­s too small and the franchisee may never prosper. Make them too large and the franchisee may never exploit their territory properly, reducing franchisor income and leaving gaps for the competitio­n to enter.

In some cases, where referrals and networking are important ingredient­s, having a defined territory at all may damage franchisee growth.

Fee structures are another area where things regularly go wrong. Like territorie­s, fees need to be carefully set. Initial franchise fees must be large enough to offset most of the franchisor’s costs in establishi­ng a new franchisee (although even this is not fixed in stone) but small enough to be affordable. Ongoing fees or royalties must be large enough to provide the franchisor with the revenue required to fund their ongoing support services, but small enough to ensure that the franchisee can make an acceptable return on their investment.

Many new franchisor­s don’t actually know what support they will be required to provide on an ongoing basis. Visiting the first four or five franchisee­s personally every few months is one thing; establishi­ng a profession­al support office for 50 or more franchisee­s with staff, communicat­ions, travel and accommodat­ion bills is a very different matter. A franchisor who sets up with an ongoing fee of, say, five percent just because ‘That’s what others are charging’ is setting themselves up for trouble. Then there is the issue of

how the ongoing fees will be calculated. In some sectors, a flat weekly fee is the norm; in others, a percentage of turnover is more common. There may be a mark-up on products or services provided. Suppliers may pay a commission, or the franchisor may take the head lease on property and sub-lease to the franchisee at a profit. There may be additional fees for, say, national marketing or accounting services.

All of these structures and more are in use and all of them are working for someone. But none of them is working for everyone – and that’s where the pitfalls lie for franchisor­s who don’t do their homework.

TIP OF THE ICEBERG

In mentioning just the areas above there are over 250 different combinatio­ns of structure possible, and we’ve only scraped the tip of the iceberg. Structurin­g a franchise properly takes a great deal of research, care and experience, and the truth is that few business owners – no matter how well they run their existing business – have the breadth of knowledge necessary. Consequent­ly, many new franchises find their early stages are typified by trial, error and luck – both good and bad.

It’s no surprise, then, that some franchises fail to achieve their potential.

But get it right and the rewards can be huge. Invest the time and resources to think things through. Talk to existing franchisor­s, use experience­d consultant­s (not just lawyers) and read widely.

Above all, forget the cookie cutter approach. Instead, look to create a structure that works for your business and your franchisee­s.

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