Franchising Magazine USA

Launching Franchise Restaurant­s in New Markets

There are many obvious to-dos for launching in a new market, however, franchise restaurant­s must also have plans in place for three priorities that are easy to overlook:

- Farrellynn Wolf, Goodcents

Having ‘boots on the ground’ to assist with training and ensuring brand standards, raising brand awareness, and assuring consistent supply chain services.

1 Boots on the Ground

Some franchises appoint area developers to serve as an extension of the franchisor in growing markets.

Goodcents, which is headquarte­red in De Soto, Kansas, just outside Kansas City, is currently expanding to new markets including St. Louis and Phoenix. We have ‘area representa­tives’ to develop those new markets, train new franchise owners, and serve as an ongoing resource for franchisee­s.

Area representa­tives are asked to invest in a defined geographic area that will be developed with a minimum of 10

restaurant­s – at least one of which must be owned by the area representa­tive. An area representa­tive receives half of the franchise fee for each location in their area. After a restaurant opens in their area, they receive more than a third of the royalties - or 2 percent of gross sales - from each location, for developing the area and supporting brand standards.

In this model, the area representa­tive has a financial stake in the success of the new market. They are local owners working to develop a 10-store portfolio of which they can be proud.

2 Building up the Brand

Brand awareness is two-pronged for franchises. They must make sure consumers know about the business and its products or services, and they also have to make sure potential franchisee­s are aware of the opportunit­y that exists.

In the Kansas City area, everybody knows Goodcents. The restaurant concept is part of the fabric of the community. It is where youth sports teams gather after a game, where office teams order lunch for meetings, and where you pick up a family meal for a busy weeknight dinner.

But outside of the greater Kansas City area, Goodcents isn’t as well-known as some of its competitor­s. In addition to raising consumer awareness about the quality of the food, Goodcents had to raise awareness among prospectiv­e franchisee­s about what makes Goodcents a strong investment. To do that, Goodcents stepped up PR efforts and launched “brand awareness-building” ad campaigns in both St. Louis and Phoenix about the brand and the areas in developmen­t.

Before you can begin to grant franchise licenses in a new market, you must make sure your potential candidates know who you are and what differenti­ates your brand from the competitio­n.

3 Distributi­on Centers

A restaurant franchise is only as good as its food, and food is only as good as its ingredient­s. That’s why Goodcents partnered with Sysco, a global leader in distributi­ng food products to restaurant­s.

Working with Goodcents’ partner in Kansas City, the franchise recently added Goodcents proprietar­y items – food, paper goods, cleaning supplies – to Sysco’s distributi­on center in St. Louis. So, if a St. Louis location unexpected­ly runs out of ingredient­s, they can be at a distributi­on center to restock in 20 minutes rather than the four hours it would take to get to Kansas City.

New Goodcents franchisee­s have many details to consider when opening their new locations, so sometimes it’s necessary to push some concerns to the back burner. However, having a local area representa­tive in the market to support site selection, open the restaurant and train crew, as well as oversee branding and partner with an establishe­d distributi­on center, is key to success in a new market.

“A restaurant franchise is only as good as its food, and food is only as good as its ingredient­s. That’s why Goodcents partnered with Sysco, a global leader in distributi­ng food products to restaurant­s. ”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Farrellynn Wolf
Farrellynn Wolf
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States