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by Howard Bassuk
It
may sound like a match made in heaven, master licensing may be anything
but that, or exactly what you've been seeking. This report lists the
pros and cons.
So
you want to build an empire! You want to be part of something, big,
strong, dynamic, and well respected. You will not be satisfied with
owning several franchised territories alone, you want more!
However, you don’t want to re-invent the wheel if there is one
out there you can ride along with. You know enough to know you don’t
want to try to build your empire all by yourself. Starting your own
franchise company does not seem to make sense but simply owning one or
more units of a particular franchise doesn’t satisfy you either. Is
there a way to do all these things? The answer is YES!
Its called “area” or “regional development”. The basic idea of
“area or regional development” is to have a franchisee who also acts as
a local adjunct to the franchisor. As this adjunct the area developer
is not just a franchisee, but is also the franchisor’s support person
in a local market. Under this arrangement, the area developer and the
franchisor share both the responsibilities to the franchisees, and the
revenues from the franchisees.
Franchisors often like having regional or area developers as
part of their system and infrastructure. With area/regional developers,
the franchisor can have regional management without having corporate
employees. This “regional or area developer” for lack of a better
description, is part franchisor, and part franchisee.
In fact,
depending on the exact nature and scope of the work and contract
between the franchisor and the developer, an area developer could
become a sub-franchisor required to have his/her own franchise offering
circular (UFOC).
Fortunately most area/regional developers are not required to
become sub-franchisors. They typically enter into an agreement with the
franchisor whereby they, as a regional or area developer provide
certain local support to the franchisees in a specified region or area.
They become, to a greater or lesser degree, the rough equivalent of a
regional manager.
In return for providing these local services, the franchisor
and the area developer each get a share of the franchise fees and
royalties paid by the franchisees in the region owned by the developer.
Although there is no mandatory formula for dividing these funds, the
fee splits typically range from 50%-50% to 60%-40% (with either side
getting the higher or lower percentages).
To earn the “developer’s share” of the franchise fees and
ongoing royalties, the developer, depending on the particular deal,
will help assist the franchisor in many different ways. These can
include everything from helping to find franchisees and locations for
them, to assisting franchisees in their lease negotiations, and opening
and ongoing training and assistance.
This allows, a franchisor to provide localized support, and
better responsiveness to franchisees’ needs without having to have the
cost burden created by employees. As such, many franchisors feel that
any fees or royalties paid to area developers are well earned.
For the area developer, their investment of time and money can
also be a good one because a mature and well-developed region can
produce both impressive fee and royalty revenues for the area
developer, and an exciting and dynamic workplace environment. It can be
lucrative, challenging, stimulating, and enjoyable!
Although area development can be both extremely exciting and
extremely rewarding, it is not without significant commitment and risk
to the regional/area developer. There is no guarantee of what will
happen in the region that a developer buys, yet developers can expect
to pay a substantial fee to acquire that region.
Many times the fees are quite reasonable compared to the
opportunity regional ownership offers, but even so, some fees,
depending on the size of the region acquired, and the opportunity that
is being acquired, can amount to hundreds of thousands or even millions
of dollars!
There can be a real benefit for the franchisor as well. In
addition to receiving a fee for granting the area rights to a
developer, the franchisor also gets someone who can provide greatly
needed local support for franchisees in local marketplaces. These
developers are counted on to provide the critical help that franchisors
must provide to their franchisees, while still managing finite
financial and human resources. For a younger franchisor, area/regional
developers can be a real blessing!
Regional developers can help franchisors grow more quickly
then they could otherwise on their own. Instead of hiring people to
provide local support, the franchisor is paid a fee by the developer
for the rights to develop the particular region. As such, the
franchisor not only does not have to hire a local or regional support
person to provide these services, he/she is paid to grant these rights!
When done properly, the franchisor can use these funds to complement
other needed parts of the business, and further facilitate growth and
stability within the system!
And, the franchisor often gets a very capable manager! Most of
the regional developers that I have seen have solid management
credentials, are hard workers, and are committed enough to the system
to have invested in the franchise themselves. Not only do they pay a
fee for the rights to the region/area that they acquire, they often
open the region’s “prototype” location for the franchise.
The regional developer like the franchisor, also has a large
upside potential. If the developer can successfully develop a region
and they received 40%-60% of the ongoing royalty from all the open
stores in that region, plus any revenues from a location or locations
that he/she also owns. It can be extremely profitable!
To give you an idea of what this can mean, let’s look at some
hypothetical returns that an area developer may enjoy. Let’s assume
that there are 50 locations in a particular region, and that each of
these locations produces $300,000 per year in revenue. That means that
the annual revenue in the region would be $15,000,000. Let’s further
assume that the royalty paid is 6%. Therefore, the royalty on that
revenue would be $900,000. If you were the area/regional developer, and
you got 50% of the royalties paid, you would earn $450,000 a year, not
counting any money you made from your own locations! Not bad for
getting up each morning!
A regional developer can probably earn more money in a
franchise system, than anyone other than the franchisor, but he/she
will have a lot of responsibility too, so its hard work!
However, after a few years, the burden on regional developers
lessens as new units in the region become fewer, and the older units
need less and less day-to-day support. A region, in its mature stages
can be absolutely heavenly for the area/regional developer. It can
provide both significant revenues, and significant freedom. This
combination can more than pay back any risk, investment or hard work
from the early years.
So the rewards sound great! But, the regional developer
usually has to be more of a risk taker than a normal franchisee. He/she
has to be willing to pay the franchisor for the rights to help develop
an area that has virtually no other franchisees at that point. And,
because area/regional development is most attractive to franchisors
when they are young and need more help to grow, most area development
deals come from franchisors that are less proven then a more mature and
chartable franchisor would be.
So it's a win-win, right?
Franchisors get investment dollars to help them grow, and they
get managers to provide local support without having to hire people.
The regional/area developers get an opportunity to build and own a
region for a developing franchise company. If the combination of the
franchisor and the regional developer are successful in building the
region, both the regional developer and the franchisor can enjoy strong
revenues for many, many years!
But not so fast! While it may sound like the perfect recipe for a match made in heaven, it may be anything but that!
Like so many other things in life, “Area/regional development”
is fraught with both positive and negative possibilities, both of which
happen regularly, and like so many things that sound good at the
beginning, regional/area development can be a very mixed bag.
A potential negative for the franchisor is that they are
mortgaging future revenues in return for early local support. As the
franchise becomes more mature, the needs of the franchisees tend to
become more national in scope, and the regional developer is not the
person or place where solutions are best generated. Because of this,
the franchisees increasingly look to the national franchisor for
solutions. However, with as much as 40%-60% of the royalty revenue
still going to the regional/area developer, a sizable and precious part
of the available revenue never makes it to the franchisors' coffers,
and is therefore unavailable for use in providing needed products, and
services.
This can mean that although the franchisees may be paying
large amounts of royalties, it is possible that the amount that the
franchisor receives is not enough to enable the franchisor to provide
some needed programs!
Additionally, the franchisor can be put in a very difficult
position if an area developer turns out not to be as competent as the
franchisor first thought he/she would be. In a normal employer-employee
situation, the employer could simply replace the employee who was not
performing adequately. It’s not that easy with an area developer that
is not the right person for the job. The franchisor might have few or
any viable options in terms of replacing a regional developer that is
not as good as the franchisor and the franchisees need.
Although the area/regional developer probably has a strong
management background, there is no guarantee that he/she will be good
at the diverse requirements needed in their region. It also does not
mean that they fit the particular franchise that they buy, and may
mis-match.
Since the franchisor is ultimately the one that most
franchisees look to, the franchisor may wind up having to fix the
problems created or not solved by their own regional developers!
On the other side of the coin is the possibility that it is
the franchisor who may not have the business ability to continue to
grow throughout the various development stages that are required. There
is no foolproof way to predict how far a company will go, so a person
investing in a region, has to make part of his/her investment on faith!
The bottom line on all of this? Area or regional development
can be a great boon to both the franchisor and the regional developer.
However, there is also risk involved for both sides. A franchisor may
not want to offer regional opportunities after it gets to a certain
level of maturity, so most opportunities will be young. If you think
that area or regional development makes sense to you, and you can find
the right franchisor to do it with, it may turn out to be a great long
term investment.
Copyright 2005. All Rights Reserved
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