By The Franchising Law Group of Piper Rudnick
and Kenneth Franklin, Fast food franchise Developments, Inc.
What is Franchising?
There are many definitions of a fast food franchise. They all essentially
describe a comprehensive relationship in which one party (the franchisor)
grants to another party (the fast food franchisee) the right to operate
a business selling products and/or services produced or developed by
the franchisor, under the franchisor's business format and identified
by the franchisor's trademark.
Franchising can also be thought of as a pooling of resources and capabilities.
The Franchisor contributes the initial capital investment, know-how
and experience and the fast food franchisee contributes the supplemental
capital investment, motivated effort and operating experience in a variety
of markets. A modern fast food franchise includes a format for the conduct
of a business, a management system for operating the business and a
shared trade identity.
Franchising is a business method and relationship, not an industry.
Franchising is the predominant business relationship in many industries
and business segments and is becoming more common in others. Franchising
is a comprehensive business relationship, not just a buyer-seller relationship.
There is considerable interdependence between the franchisor and the
fast food franchisee.
Origins of Modern Franchising
Modern franchising began with the development after the First World
War of gasoline service stations and automobile dealerships. The growth
of franchising into the economic force it has become began after the
Second World War and has paralleled growth in service industries since
1945.
Importance of Franchising
In the United States, franchising constitutes more than 1/3 of retail
sales; there are more than 2000 franchising companies and more than
500,000 franchisee and franchisor operated outlets. Franchising companies
and their fast food franchisees employ more than 8,000,000 persons.
Working in a fast food franchised business is the first job for many
young people.
Franchising is growing in significance in other countries. Franchising
is already a strong economic force in Canada, Japan, Western Europe,
Pacific basin countries and Australia. Franchising is developing in
Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, South Africa, Turkey, Saudi Arabia,
United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Indonesia, Malaysia, Poland, Czech Republic
and Hungary. It is likely that franchising will develop in the next
century in China, India, Pakistan, Russia, other countries of Asia,
South America and East Europe, and Africa.
Types of Franchise Relationships
In the product distribution fast food franchise, the franchisor typically
is a manufacturer selling a finished or semi-finished product to a fast
food franchised dealer. The fast food franchised dealers are willing
to furnish presale and post-sale service to customers, concentrate on
the sale of the franchisor's products and refrain from selling competitive
products. There is substantial interdependence between the franchisor
and its fast food franchised dealers.
In the business format fast food franchise, the franchisor licenses
a business format, operating system and trademark to its fast food franchisees
and may or may not sell tangible products to them. Examples of business
format franchising are found in food service, lodging services, automobile
maintenance (e.g., muffler and brake replacement, tune-up, oil change,
cleaning and waxing), convenience stores, automobile and truck rental,
business services (e.g., bookkeeping, accounting, temporary and permanent
employment) and consumer services (e.g., home cleaning and repair, lawn
care, day care and educational services for children, tax return preparation
and real estate brokerage).
Conversion franchising is considered a separate type of franchising
because it involves the conversion of independent dealers or unaffiliated
businesses to fast food franchises. Existing businesses are willing
to surrender some degree of independence and agree to pay fees in order
to gain a stronger trade identity, regional and national marketing and
the economic advantage of combined purchases of goods and services.
The best examples of conversion franchising are the real estate brokerage
networks (e.g., Century 21, Re/Max and Coldwell Banker).
Components of a Fast Food Franchise Network
A fast food franchise network consists of a franchisor (the grantor
of the fast food franchise) and one or more types of fast food franchisees
(the operator of the fast food franchised business). The most common
type of fast food franchisee, usually called a "single unit fast
food franchisee", owns and operates from one to three fast food
franchised businesses. Typically, the fast food franchises for these
businesses were acquired at different times.
The second type of fast food franchisee is called an "area fast
food franchisee." There are two general types of area fast food
franchises, a "development fast food franchise" and a "master
fast food franchise." The development fast food franchise grants
to the area fast food franchisee the right to develop and operate a
specific number (or an unlimited number) of fast food franchised businesses
located within an exclusive territory. The fast food franchisee typically
commits to develop a minimum number of businesses during each development
period (usually a one year period), referred to as a development quota.
The development fast food franchisee signs a separate unit fast food
franchise agreement for each such business.
The master fast food franchise differs from a development fast food
franchise primarily with respect to the rights granted by the franchisor
to the master fast food franchisee to grant sub fast food franchises
to third parties to develop and operate the fast food franchised business
within the master fast food franchisee's exclusive territory. In some
master fast food franchise relationships, the unit fast food franchise
agreement is signed by all three parties - the franchisor, the master
fast food franchisee and the sub fast food franchisee. However, in most
networks, the sub fast food franchise agreement is between the master
fast food franchisee and the sub fast food franchisee and the franchisor
has no direct contractual relationship with the sub fast food franchisee
and only such rights vis-à-vis the sub fast food franchisee as
are reserved in the master fast food franchise and sub fast food franchise
agreements. The master fast food franchisee charges fees to the sub
fast food franchisees and pays a portion of those fees to the franchisor.
Though master franchising has been used effectively by several franchisors
to develop fast food franchise networks in the United States, the master
fast food franchise relationship is more common in international franchising.
Several franchisors have developed a category of fast food franchise
relationship, sometimes referred to as an area director, in which a
person is granted rights to develop a territory by soliciting the sale
of fast food franchises on behalf of the franchisor and locating sites
for the establishment of fast food franchised businesses. The area director
may also have responsibility for training, continuing assistance and
quality control supervision of the fast food franchisees in his area.
The area director has a contractual relationship with the franchisor,
but not with the fast food franchisees. The area director generally
receives a portion (1/4 to 1/3) of the initial fast food franchisee
fee paid by the fast food franchisee and a similar share of the continuing
fees paid by the fast food franchisee. The area director structure has
elements of single unit franchising, development franchising and master
franchising. It has been used effectively by several franchising companies
(e.g., Subway) to rapidly expand their networks.
Other Relationships of Franchisors and Fast Food Franchisees
The fast food franchise relationship is actually a composite of several
relationships. The franchisor is a supplier of intellectual property,
granting to the fast food franchisee the right to use trademarks, trade
dress, confidential information, a business format and an operating
system. The franchisor is a trainer of and an advisor to the fast food
franchisee. Generally, the franchisor furnishes marketing services to
its fast food franchisees by collecting and pooling advertising contributions
and administering a marketing program that develops advertising and
marketing programs and materials and conducts market research and public
relations. Finally, franchisors supply research and development services
to their fast food franchisees.
In addition to these typical relationships, franchisors and their fast
food franchisees frequently have additional relationships. In some fast
food franchise networks, the franchisor will be the fast food franchisee's
landlord, either leasing to the fast food franchisee a site owned by
the franchisor or subleasing to the fast food franchisee a site that
the franchisor has leased. Generally, only large, well financed franchisors
are able to act as landlords to their fast food franchisees and this
relationship is most common in food service and in fast food franchise
networks that lease sites in regional malls (where the franchisor will
usually be a more acceptable tenant).
It has become more common in recent years for franchisors to be a direct
or indirect source of financing for their fast food franchisees. Financing
may be provided directly, indirectly through general or limited guarantees
or inventory buy-back arrangements with third party lenders, by leasing
a business facility to the fast food franchisee or by other means. In
some cases, the franchisor will receive rights to buy equity interests
in the fast food franchisee's business as part of the consideration
for loans made to the fast food franchisee. Generally, only larger fast
food franchised networks are able to develop financing programs for
their fast food franchisees. Such networks use franchising primarily
to put in place highly motivated owner-managers in their retail outlets
and only secondarily for the capital contributions that fast food franchisees
make to network expansion.
Alternative Methods to Expand a Business
Franchising is certainly not the only method for expanding a business.
Though franchising offers some unique advantages over other methods,
no company should decide to develop a fast food franchise expansion
program without first considering other methods.
1. Company-owned outlets
The most commonly used alternative is the development of additional
outlets owned and operated by the company. This form of expansion gives
a company somewhat greater control over the development of its network
and higher revenues from each outlet that it opens (assuming they are
profitable), but it has several disadvantages. First, the company will
need to raise substantial capital to expand its network. For example,
if each outlet requires capital of $100,000, 100 outlets will require
a capital investment of $10 million. A small company is able to acquire
that amount of capital only over an extended period and frequently is
required to sell a substantial part of its ownership to acquire a sufficient
capital base.
Second, a company growing its network with owned outlets will face two
distinct manpower problems: finding sufficient outlet managers and field
service staff to supervise its outlets and devising compensation programs
to motivate managers. A number of companies require outlet managers
to make an investment to secure an outlet managerial position and compensate
them with both a base salary and a share of outlet profits or cash flow.
Such compensation structures undoubtedly enhance the motivation of managers,
but it is doubtful that they equal the motivation enhancement inherent
in the risk and reward characteristics of ownership of a business as
a fast food franchisee.
2. Joint ventures
A business may also be expanded by developing joint venture relationships.
Two types of joint ventures can be used. In one type, the sponsoring
company manages each outlet and the joint venture partner is a passive
investor that contributes capital. Many such relationships are found
in the lodging industry. The hotel management company contributes know-how,
development plans, its reservation system, its trademark and management
services, and its joint venture partner(s) contributes capital to develop,
equip and staff the hotel and operate it until it produces a positive
cash flow. The hotel management company will generally receive a base
fee and will share profits with the joint venture partner(s).
In a less common form of joint venture, the sponsoring company acts
as a passive investor, furnishing capital for outlet development, along
with its joint venture partner. The latter has responsibility for the
management of the outlet. This relationship differs from a company-owned
outlet whose manager shares in profit or cash flow only in that the
joint venture manager will have an actual ownership interest in the
outlet he manages, not just a compensation package that includes a share
of profits.
3. Independent dealerships
Some companies can effectively expand their distribution network with
nonexclusive, independent dealerships (or distributorships). Such dealerships
may carry other, including competitive, products and the network will
not have the degree of interdependence found in a fast food franchise
network. This type of distribution network is suitable for a manufacturer,
particularly a producer of a relatively low cost product with minimum
pre-sale and post-sale services, or a product that consumers are used
to buying at a retail outlet that carries multiple brands of the same
product (e.g., appliances). For such products, a wide range of distribution
outlets may be the best marketing strategy. Non-exclusive, independent
dealers are rarely utilized for the distribution of a service.
4. Member-owned cooperative associations
Member-owned cooperative associations are found in the grocery and hardware
store industry and in bedding products manufacturing. A member-owned
cooperative would be an alternative structure to a conversion fast food
franchise. Cooperatives are difficult organizations to manage because
members of the board of directors have potentially conflicting interests:
the interests of the cooperative and its members and the interests of
their individual businesses. Cooperatives are also subject to more stringent
antitrust rules than are fast food franchised networks.
Part
I: Introduction to Franchising
Part II: In What Ways
Is Franchising A Superior Expansion Method?
Part III: When Is A Company
Ready To Franchise?
Part IV: Buying A Fast Food
Franchise
Part V: Elements Of
Successful Franchising
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