Is franchising right for you?
Please take a look at the
article below which was recently published on MSNBC.com http://www.msnbc.msn.com:80/id/29678818/
hopefully Eve Tahmincioglu doesn't mind us reposting her
article. We thought it was very insightful.
When career turns down, franchising is option
Ready-made
business can pay off but requires hard work, money, caution
By Eve Tahmincioglu
updated 8:02 a.m. ET, Thurs., March. 26, 2009
Taso Louloudis knew the construction industry he and his wife
Kim worked in was suffering, but neither expected they’d
both lose their jobs in the same year.
Kim was laid off from her job
at Engineered Homes in Orlando in May, and Taso lost his job
as construction manager for Rey Homes on Nov. 7, his birthday.
“I’ve been doing
construction my entire life, working my way up from
subcontractor to a point where I was the boss that did hiring
and firing,” Taso said.
At age 50, with only a high
school diploma, he realized his career choices were limited.
So Louloudis and his wife
turned to franchising.
More and more laid off workers
are considering franchising as an alternative to working for
someone else, according to experts in the industry.
Some see franchising as an easy
way to entrepreneurship and economic independence. But
becoming a successful franchisee takes a lot of hard work and
money. It could take years before you’re able to replace
your income.
Because the Louloudises love
pets — they have four dogs and five cats at home, many of
whom are rescue animals — they embarked on finding a
pet-related business.
They considered a host of
options, including doggie daycare and pet sitting, but decided
against starting their own company from the ground up due to
the intense competition for such services in their area.
They now own a Fetch! Pet Care,
a franchise that offers in-home pet sitting services.
The Louloudises bought the
franchise for $13,000, plus the cost of a flight to Fetch’s
headquarters in Walnut Creek, Calif., for training. They
expect to bring in sales of about $50,000 by the end of this
year.
Should you open a franchise?
If you really have the heart of an entrepreneur, franchising
is probably not for you. First off, it’s not your business
idea that you nurture and grow. You’ll have to follow a
strict playbook of operating the franchise. Often agreements
are written so you can’t even sell the franchise operation
without the approval from the franchise company, said Walter
Zweifler of Zweifler Financial Research, which analyzes
franchising opportunities for investors.
The industry also falls prey to
scammers who try to get money upfront for a business model
that never delivers on sales promises.
Even if you find a legitimate
franchise, keep in mind that franchising isn’t
recession-proof. The number of franchisees defaulting on Small
Business Administration-based loans jumped 24 percent in
fiscal year 2008, according to the federal agency.
That said, franchising might be
something out-of-work individuals with money to risk and a
desire to run their own business may want to consider. But it
requires a lot of research and intense due diligence before
signing on the franchisee line.
One big challenge is getting
the money to pay for the upfront fees franchise companies
typically need, between $15,000 and $60,000 for most
franchises, said Rieva Lesonsky, franchise adviser for
AllBusiness.com. In today’s economy, getting a loan from a
bank is going to be tough, so some applicants are use their
own savings or severance pay to start a business.
In addition, an increasing
number of individuals are tapping into their retirement funds,
many of which have been battered by the sinking stock market,
to foot the bill.
In some cases, people are
choosing to roll over their 401(k) and IRA plans from their
former employers into a new franchise and then use those funds
for operations, a fairly new practice that may run afoul of
tax laws.
The Internal Revenue Service
would not comment on the issue, but a spokesman for the agency
directed me to an IRS document from October investigating the
practice. When the IRS looked at a number of these rollovers
into business startups, the document says, the agency found
problems with most. This means some individuals may still be
liable for hefty taxes and penalties for early withdrawals.
Even if you find a way to roll
over the funds legally, investing retirement funds “is too
risky because you have all your eggs in one basket,” said
Jennifer Thomas, a certified financial planner with Henssler
Financial Group,
She had a client who invested
his IRA in a business, against her recommendations, and his
business failed. “He lost all his retirement money.”
Controlling your own destiny
Jim Symington, who was laid off in September, doesn’t mind
risking his 401(k) for a shot at franchise ownership. After
working for someone else for 30 years, most recently as a
director of information technology for a manufacturing
company, he was ready to control his own destiny.
“I was angry. I was starting
to think it was gold watch time I had been there so long,”
he said. “My first thought was never again am I going to be
in this situation, be at the mercy of someone else’s greed
or needs.”
He decided to go to a franchise
broker in Atlanta and get some direction on what franchise
would be best for him. (Franchise brokers get paid a
commission by the franchise operators, so keep that in mind
when they’re making recommendations.)
After researching a host of
franchise concepts, Symington chose Mr. Handyman, a home
maintenance and repair firm, on encouragement from the broker.
“Oddly enough, I found a fit
I wouldn’t have dreamed of,” he said. “I used to have a
team of IT guys, and I would send them out on projects to fix
things. But now instead of taking laptops, they’d be taking
hammers.”
Even though the broker
recommended the franchisor, Symington did extensive research
on his own, which included talking to other Mr. Handyman
franchisees and also franchisees that were unable to make the
business work.
It’s key to ask a franchisor
for a list of franchisees, both past and present, to find out
what you can expect.
Run the other way if the
company does not readily give you franchisee information, or
the Franchise Disclosure Document, which includes everything
you’ll need to know about the franchise, including
financials, failure rates and any litigation against the
franchisor. Read it carefully, said Joel Libava, president of
Franchise Selection Specialists Inc.
‘It’s a ton of work’
Symington paid a $68,000 franchising fee and upfront costs,
and the franchisor required at least six months of working
capital, a total of $40,000, to start the business. In return,
he got a wealth of marketing materials, online resources from
the franchisor and a 90,000-home territory.
While the business could be run
out of his home, he opted to get office space in Suwanee, Ga.,
and officially launched his franchise March 2.
In his job as an IT director,
he was making about $100,000, but he doesn’t plan on drawing
a salary from the franchise for at least the first year. With
his wife Tracy doing administrative work at a hospital —
where she has health insurance coverage — and some severance
money from his former employer, he says they’ll be able to
afford basic expenses until the firm ramps up.
For those who think it’s a
cakewalk to run a franchise, Symington offers a reality check.
“It’s a ton of work,” he
said.
He’s not just working 40
hours a week. He also toils in the evenings and sometimes on
weekends, and recently found himself working even though he
had the flu. If he were still an employee, he said he would
have taken the day off to recuperate.
But he doesn’t seem to mind
it at all.
“Having been in the corporate
world, no matter how hard you pedal, your paycheck is the
same,” he said. “Now, if I pedal hard, I can go faster,
make more money. It’s kind of exciting.”
Eve Tahmincioglu writes the
weekly "Your Career" column for msnbc.com and
chronicles workplace issues in her blog, CareerDiva.net.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29678818/
© 2009 MSNBC.com
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