Best Franchises To Own: Why Home Healthcare Is Hot

Carol Tice

Carol Tice, Contributor

The franchise world has grown over the past 60 years to encompass nearly every type of business — if you want your taxes done, your sidewalk pressure-washed, your windshield repaired, your house cleaned, your dog walked, or a fast-food burger, franchise owners can do that for you.

Out of all the different franchise types, one franchise sector is growing at an amazing rate right now: the senior care or home-healthcare niche. Of Forbes 2014 Best Franchises list for up to $150,000 investment, three of the top ten are home-health brands: BrightStar, Right at Home, and Synergy HomeCare.

These three are the cream of a growing crop. While there were just 13 home-health franchise brands in 2000, that’s shot to 56 companies today, industry research firm FRANdata reports. The growth is even more striking by location — currently, the 45 franchise brands that are members of the International Franchise Association operate 6,000 locations, says IFA Educational Foundation president John Reynolds. In 2001, member franchises operated barely more than 300 locations.

10 Best Senior Care Franchises to Own

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AP Photo/Daily Herald, Mark Welsh Senior Care's Growing Demand

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Senior Care’s Growing Demand

 

Home healthcare is a hot niche, with relatively low investment and high revenue. The number of competitors is rising, with many new brands founded in the past few years. But which franchise offers the best opportunity? Recently released satisfaction surveys of home-health franchise owners conducted by Franchise Business Review spotlight the 10 brands with the highest satisfaction ratings. (Data from FBR and company websites.)

Why is home healthcare franchising on the rise? Here’s a quick snapshot of the unique opportunity in this fast-growing sector:

  • Lower investment. While it can cost $500,000 or more to open a fast-food franchise, most home-healthcare franchises cost $150,000 or less to start up, a feature that attracted Right at Home Seattle franchisee Ben Solomon, who owns two area territories and is buying a third. The investment is primarily for hiring marketing, recruiting and training staff, and for office space.
  • High revenue. From that relatively low investment, home-health franchises can drive a lot of volume, especially after the first year’s ramp-up making connections with key referrers such as elder-law attorneys and social workers. Territories are usually large. Industry research firm Home Care Pulse found median franchise home-health revenue was nearly $2 million. What’s more, franchise owners brought in substantially more than independent operators, Home Care found, giving their businesses a resource advantage over the competition.
  • Growing demand. Demand is forecast to grow sharply, thanks to the aging of baby boomers. The number of people over age 60 is set to triple to 2 billion by 2050, the UN estimates.
  • International opportunity. Most US franchises are just beginning to look overseas at opportunities, with Right at Home being one of the leaders — it recently became the first US home-healthcare franchise to enter China. But the rest of the world is aging, too, to there is still plenty of growth opportunity in new markets.
  • Help with red tape. Mom-and-pop home healthcare operators struggle to keep up as national, state and local laws evolve. For instance, my home base of Seattle is currently debating a possible $15-an-hour minimum wage law. Independents are also hard-pressed to obtain insurance to cover their workers’ activities in clients’ homes. By contrast, franchises become well-known to insurers, smoothing the way for policies, says Right at Home CEO Allen Hager. National chains also have the money to do lobbying and advocate for favorable laws — most recently, against the proposed federal minimum wage increase.
  • Chance to do good. Seattle Right at Home franchisee Solomon says helping seniors stay in their own homes affordably is more than a business — it’s a community service. “I feel great doing this,” he says.

With home-health franchises booming, how can you spot the best one? Ask lots of questions. Franchise contracts vary widely, so read carefully. Solomon said the contract “is like a marriage.” Most franchise contract terms are at least 10 years.

Not all chains are created alike — for instance, Right at Home provides skilled nursing services, while many other franchise chains do not.

One great way to learn about a franchise opportunity is to ask current franchise owners how satisfied they are with their business. To see the home-healthcare franchise chains rated tops by their franchise owners in a recent Franchise Business Review survey, check out The 10 Best Senior Care Franchises to Own.

For more on the best and worst franchises, click here.

Have You Considered a RE-Franchising Opportunity?

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“RE (ready & established)-franchise” opportunity is one of the most efficient and quickest ways to enter a franchise system

re-franchising opportunity Canada

A “RE (ready & established)-franchise” opportunity is one of the most efficient and quickest ways to enter a franchise system. Essentially an incoming franchisee is assuming an existing franchise unit that is “ready & established” and successfully operating. As such, the due diligence and valuation may differ from a new or unestablished unit.

Keep the following in mind as you explore this option:

1. Due Diligence- Why is the Franchisee exiting the system?

Within any healthy franchise system there are always locations available for RE-franchise. Franchisees choose to leave systems for a variety of reasons such as illness, retirement, marriage breakdown, lack of passion for the business, profitability or perhaps they are seeking a new challenge or a change. Part of the due diligence process will include figuring out exactly why the franchisee has chosen to leave the system.

2. A Known Entity- Is financial data available for review?

Since the franchise is already in operation, sales history and financial statements should be available for review. The price may be more or less than a new location and with professional assistance, it may be easier to obtain financing and create a business plan or budget for an existing business.

3. Local Brand Awareness- Has the business established goodwill within the community?

Because the business is established in the local community, general awareness and knowledge of the brand may exist. Find out how well known and established the brand is within the local community and how the existing franchisee has contributed and been involved.

4. Timelines- When do you want to get started?

Assuming an existing location may be a quick and efficient way to predict and manage operating cash flow. As well, the transition time may be less than if you were to start a brand new location, especially if it is a ‘bricks and mortar’ concept. The length of time the business has been operating may vary but local marketing programs, staff, service level agreements etc. should already be in place, and the business should have an established client base.

5. The Terms- What are the terms of the franchise agreement?

Make sure you are aware of the term remaining on the franchise agreement and understand that you are only “guaranteed” to operate the franchise until the expiry of the franchise agreement. For example, if only two years remain on the franchise agreement, you are only guaranteed to operate under the brand for that amount of time. Find out what options may be available to extend term as this could affect the financing options available. In many cases franchisors may agree to allow you to purchase additional term.

The Final Say

Ultimately, the franchisor will have the final say in approving you as a franchisee and the re-franchise transaction. Understand that they entered this agreement with one party and now, part way through agreement they are being asked to change partners. The franchisor will always want to be sure that the new partner is as good as or better than the existing operator and will have certain criteria that must be met- financial and otherwise. A re-franchise opportunity may be a great way to get into a successful and proven location. No matter which option you chose, if you are prepared and have done your “due diligence,” you can approach the opportunity with confidence.

8 Little-Known Franchises That Make Millions

 

In this article Maggie Overfelt starts out stating there are many household names that most of us recognize in franchising. We all know about them. Many of us don’t realize most franchises are names we have not heard of, or didn’t realize they are, in fact, franchises. Maggie goes on to give examples of some of the franchises and those who have succeeded with them: 3 restaurants, which make up a great majority of franchises, and 5 other segments, the number of which just keeps getting larger, as entrepreneurs try to capitalize on the concept that has worked for them.

The concept has worked for them because they worked hard to make the concept profitable. This does not usually come easily.

If you like a concept and you think it feels right for you, don’t think that buying into the concept is the be-all and end-all: that you can just put your money down and it will work for you. You still have to work at the concept to make it work for you. Do your homework before buying into a franchise. Talk to other franchisees. Get a feel for their hardships. They’ve been there and can relate to you how the franchise worked for them. Then you can judge whether you can make the franchise work for you.

The bonus of buying into a franchise is, it worked for someone else, and it can work for you, IF YOU WORK AT IT.

The franchiser is there to help you with decisions they have likely made in the past.

You are your own boss, but you are not alone.

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BY | FROM CNBC

McDonald’s, Popeyes, Domino’sPizza, and Dunkin’ Brandsare all part of a growing contingent on Main Street that is poised for growth this year. The franchising industry has become an integral part of the American economy, contributing 3.5 percent of U.S. GDP, or $472 billion. It’s expected to create more jobs and grow faster than the rest of the private sector in 2014, according to research conducted by IHS Global Insight for the International Franchise Association Educational Foundation.

Overall, the number of franchise categories is expanding into nearly every nook and cranny in the marketplace. Here we profile entrepreneurs who have reaped millions by carving a toehold in novel market niches where they could leverage their skills and past experiences and capitalize on some big trends in the U.S. economy–from doggie day care and mosquito exterminators to shipping depots. Read on to learn lessons from eight franchise owners who have moved beyond–some well beyond–the million-dollar annual sales mark.

8 little-known franchises making millions

Image credit: Capriotti’s

Kelly Gwinn, Capriotti’s Sandwich Shop

Working for Capriotti’s Sandwich Shop is all Kelly Gwinn, 45, has ever known. “I started at the first location when I was old enough to see over the counter,” said Gwinn, whose aunt and uncle launched the company as a one-shop turkey sandwich place in Wilmington, Delaware, in 1976.

Gwinn worked as part of the franchise company’s corporate staff, but after a few years in, “I missed being in the stores; I missed the customers; I missed that environment–that’s where the action and the fun is,” Gwinn said.

It wasn’t until eight years after Gwinn bought her first Las Vegas shop in 2002 that she found the one with the growth potential she wanted: an existing shop across town located near the University of Nevada. After selling her first shop to finance the purchase, Gwinn moved to be closer to tourists, across the street from the Hard Rock Hotel. Today her customer traffic is twofold: a steady stream of regulars–many of them college students–and tourists. Since 2012, Gwinn’s shop stays open 24 hours to cater to the city’s nightlife and recording nearly $1.2 million in annual sales.

How she pulled together start-up capital: (Capriotti’s charges a one-time $40,000 franchise fee; the company estimates it costs anywhere from $197,000 to $607,500 to open one of its stores.) “I took advantage of the generous mortgage and housing market at the time, and luckily the brand was strong enough to have made it through the recession.”

The hardest part of being founder/CEO: “Location. Right now there are so many chains and so many franchise brands out there that it’s tough to find a spot that you can maximize.”

Source: Capriotti’s

8 little-known franchises making millions

Image credit: Zaxby’s

Sterling Coleman, Zaxby’s

Coleman owns seven locations of Zaxby’s, the Southern chicken fingers and wings chain.

His first shop, just outside Atlanta, which hit $1.5 million in sales its first year and $2.8 million last year, doubles as a manager training center for Zaxby’s corporate. Coleman’s most recent location opened last July and is on track to pull in $4 million this year. While Coleman has toyed with buying into other food franchises, he’s sticking with Zaxby’s for now, hoping to expand into Oklahoma City and Dallas soon.

“Even in tough economic times, Zaxby’s showed flat to 1 percent growth. That says a tremendous amount of how stable the brand is,” Coleman said.

How he pulled together start-up capital: (Zaxby’s charges an initial franchise fee of $35,000 and an ongoing royalty charge of 6 percent of weekly sales.) “I saved my bonus checks and put up my home for collateral–a tremendous amount of saving hard-earned cash to get a loan.” (Coleman worked as a sales rep for Sara Lee, Frito-Lay and Prestone before buying his first franchise.)

The hardest part of being founder/CEO: “When you go from one store where you’re the manager to opening up multiple stores, it’s having the right people that you can bring in and trust–people who see your vision and [can fit into] the same culture that you already have within your organization.”

Source: Zaxby’s
8 little-known franchises making millions

Image credit: BrightStar Care

Jeff Tews and Susan Rather, BrightStar Care

With their market exploding, thanks in part to aging baby boomers, Tews and his wife–based in Madison, Wisconsin–have grown their venture into a 32-employee operation with five locations, 500 caregivers and $9 million in annual sales. And, according to Tews, 62, gross profits are growing at about 38 percent to 40 percent a year–enough so that he and Rather, 53, are able to take weeks off at a time to bike around the U.S., where the two stay connected to work via email at rest stops.

How they pulled together start-up capital: (BrightStar charges an initial franchise fee of $48,000.) “[I used] $100,000 worth of personal investment and my severance, which carried us into the next year, when we broke even–we didn’t pay ourselves a salary at first.” Tew had 30 years’ managerial experience in telecom and banking before being laid off by U.S. Bank in 2006.

The hardest part of being founder/CEO: “When we disappoint the customer. We have 500 field employees, and we rely on our nine customer-care managers to manage those folks, which means we’re not touching [customers] directly. The key is finding people who make sure their standards are upheld and make sure the employees have the compassion that’s so needed in this business.”

Source: BrightStar Care

8 little-known franchises making millions

Image credit: Scott Douglas

Scott Douglas, Mellow Mushroom

It took Mellow Mushroom a month to call Douglas in for a franchisee interview, and once his finances were approved, it took another year or so to scout, lease and open his pizzeria, which sits in the retail-heavy Carytown district near downtown Richmond. But it’s a business that pulled in $3 million in sales his first year.

“It’s a grittier location with an older demographic–we fit in well here,” said Douglas. “The space was an old record store that had a great history of selling music. We play up the vinyl.”

From its opening in May 2013 throughout the summer, the pizza joint was waiting-list only. Douglas, who burned out on a life in the Fortune 500 world before taking a chance on the franchise, works almost every day wherever he’s needed–fixing the air-conditioning, sharpening pizza cutters and mopping.

How he pulled together start-up capital: (Mellow Mushroom charges an initial $50,000 franchise fee.) “I put money away for 20 years. Around 2008, when I started researching Mellow Mushroom, capital was tight, banks weren’t lending, but I found one particular bank that was more receptive. It had helped finance 10 other Mellow Mushroom deals, so it knew how profitable [the opportunity] could be.”

The hardest part of being founder/CEO: “Besides deciding which of the 40 beers we have on tap to take home at night? Getting my employees to do things the way I want them. Much of my staff gets paid $7.25 an hour, and it’s hard to get them to care–it’s just myself and a general manager babysitting and making sure the 60 or so kids we have working there are doing things right.”

Source: Scott Douglas
8 little-known franchises making millions

Ted Arnoldus, Unishippers

Ted Arnoldus, who left the Fortune 500 world for a position at Unishippers–which creates custom shipping and logistics solutions for businesses–helped double the business’ sales over five years. In 2009 Arnoldus found an opportunity to be his own boss: He approached a Unishippers owner in Salt Lake City, bought a majority stake of the business and moved his family to Utah. To increase sales at his new post, Arnoldus focused on increasing his firm’s small-package revenue stream, a less volatile market than pallet shipping and freight. He also leveraged his “wish list” sales strategy, where he would meet one one one with his clients and close each meeting by asking them if they knew anyone on his “wish list” of corporations that he could reach out to in order to persuade them to move their business to Unishippers.

Landing Larry H. Miller Automotive Operations–whose parent company owns the Utah Jazz–helped get Arnoldus’ sales to where they are today: $5 million, up from $700,000, when he bought 80 percent of the business five years ago.

How he pulled together start-up capital: (Unishippers charges a one-time franchise fee of $30,000 for a new location, or $7,200 times the size of the territory for an existing franchise.) “I had some of my own money, and I also had two IRAs and a 401(k). Now I don’t hold any security accounts–they’re 100 percent invested in Unishippers.”

The hardest part of being founder/CEO: “Staying focused on what the business actually needs from me and learning to delegate noncritical functions. I could sit down and reorganize a filing cabinet, but [more importantly] I have to be the guardian of the culture and run the sales side–that’s the one piece I can’t outsource.”

Source: Ted Arnoldus

Source: Gilbert Brothers Hardware

Dan, Mike and Rick Gilbert, Sears Hometown and Outlet Stores

Sears may be on the wrong side of the retail industry as a publicly traded company, but it’s been good to the Gilbert brothers as a franchise model. (Sears Hometown and Outlet Stores, which separated from Sears Holdings in 2012, has four store formats: Three are franchises, and one is dealer-owned.)

Dan Gilbert turned a casual conversation with a sales association into a $32 million-a-year business for him and his brothers. Sales are up 43 percent since they bought their first store after that conversation in their hometown of Downers Grove, Illinois, last May. The brothers say their strategy of hiring employees who knew how to fix most hardware problems—unlike the staff at competitors’ stores—is key.

“A guy would bring in his lawn mower that wouldn’t start. Rather than sending it out for repair, we’d take it in the back and fix it, knowing that at some point he’d be back to buy the $3,000 fridge,” said Gilbert.

Sears approached the brothers about buying other stores, and within a year they bought 13, negotiating with Sears to lower the down payments. All are located within a three-hour drive from their flagship so the brothers can regularly visit all the stores “and be home before dinnertime,” said Gilbert.

How they pulled together start-up capital: (Sears charges a franchise fee that ranges from $3,375 to $94,500.) For the first store, the brothers had enough in savings between them to buy it. They use profits from existing stores for down payments on new locations, then Sears helps finance the rest of the cost.

The hardest part of being founder/CEO: “I think for Rick and I, it was the realization that you can love tools and love hardware and want to be in the store doing stuff, but as a businessman, there’s so much more to do. We didn’t have a good grasp on that part of it. Insurance, workman’s compensation, hiring and firing people—that kind of stuff was a real challenge for me.”

Source: Gilbert Brothers Hardware

Damien Sanchez, Mosquito Squad

For Damien Sanchez, accepting a job as a career firefighter in suburban Washington, D.C., in 2006 was about escaping California, where he had worked for 10 years as a wildland firefighter for the federal government. It also gave him a chance to make a smart “moonlighting” investment.

“I had just sold my house at the top of the market in California; I had some money,” said Sanchez, 36, who figured that the timing of shifts afforded by his new day job—he often has a few days off in a row—could work well with running a side business.

A friend was looking to buy a Mosquito Squad franchise. After researching the opportunity, he decided that the swampy terrain of northern Virginia, where “there is no part of the day where there’s not a mosquito biting,” made sense. So in 2008 Sanchez ordered a second cell phone, a new pickup truck and a five-by-five storage unit for his launch.

The first year, when it was just himself spraying lawns, he made less than $100,000. After struggling a bit with expansion decisions—debating spending capital on office/sales staff versus another fieldworker—Sanchez’s business more than doubled the second year. By the fourth year, after having hired enough fieldworkers to focus more on managing the company, he hit $1 million in sales for the first time.

Today, Sanchez’s Mosquito Squad has 15 trucks, 25 employees and is on track to hit $2.5 million in revenue by the end of the year.

How he pulled together start-up capital: (Mosquito Squad charges an initial franchise fee of $25,000.) Living off his full-time firefighter salary, Sanchez used money from the sale of his California home to finance his launch.

The hardest part of being founder/CEO: “Knowing what’s needed at each stage of the business. When you’re under $100,000 in sales, it’s all about hard work, but the second stage, it’s all about marketing. Knowing how to manage that and when and where to make those transitions, which can be very bumpy, is tough.”

Source: Michelle Bryson

Michelle Bryson and Heidi Duffy, Camp Bow Wow

Americans spent $55.7 billion on their pets in 2013, according to the American Pet Products Association. Buying a business that caters to dog owners seemed like a good idea to Michelle Bryson, an entrepreneur, and Heidi Duffy, who previously worked in the veterinary science pharmaceutical research industry.

“Even during the economic downturn, the pet industry wasn’t suffering,” said Duffy, who pooled her savings with longtime friend Bryson in 2009 to license the Camp Bow Wow name and infrastructure. (Camp Bow Wow helps new franchisees design and build their doggie day-care centers using its patented corral systems.) “And housing dogs in play areas that are social instead of kenneling them was something that, as dog owners, attracted us,” Duffy said.

The company, which hosts 50 dogs on slow days and 150 a day during peak summer months, has pulled in about $1 million in sales each year it has been in business. Catering to dog owners who work long hours and Jersey Shore vacationers, Bryson, 49, and Duffy, 53, grow their firm via constant grassroots marketing. A staffer attends five to seven petcentric networking events a week, they hold dog-awareness seminars in schools, and they target places like real estate offices and cleaning-service headquarters, where they’re likely to connect with people who need to place their dogs for the day.

How they pulled together start-up capital: (Camp Bow Wow charges a one-time licensing fee of $50,000, plus an ongoing royalty and marketing fee.) They pooled their savings and applied for an SBA loan. “It wasn’t a hard process—we knew exactly what we needed to do,” said Bryson.

The hardest part of being founder/CEO: “Handling so many employees,” said Duffy. “It’s very physical; you’re not just playing with dogs all day long, you’re feeding and cleaning—the most grueling part of the job. Monitoring the large volume of dogs we have here every day isn’t easy, either.”

Source: Michelle Bryson

Could Franchising Be A Solution For You?

Many of today’s successful entrepreneurs found new careers in new industries by becoming franchisees. In many instances, they’ve done it in the Green Industry. Beyond that scenario, many contractors have found that signing on with a franchise has allowed them to efficiently grow and/or diversify their existing businesses.

Of course, becoming part of a franchise is not for everyone. There are also stories of  contractors who’d tried it, only to realize later that they’d rather just be on their own. That’s a decision the individual contractor must make.

If you’ve ever thought about franchising, consider the below pros and cons, based largely on talking points found on the International Franchising Association’s website. Then, see our listing of “Hot Green Industry Franchises” after that.

Pros

Owning a franchise allows you to go into business for yourself, but not by yourself. In other words, you maintain your independence (at least to a certain degree), but also have the marketing and administrative support of a franchise.

A franchise provides an established product or service which may already enjoy widespread name recognition. This gives the franchisee the benefits of a pre-sold customer base which would ordinarily takes years to establish.

A franchise can increase your chance of business success because you are associating with proven products and methods.

Franchises may offer consumers the attraction of a certain level of quality and consistency because it is mandated by the franchise agreement.

Cons

The franchisee is not completely independent. Franchisees are required to operate their businesses according to the procedures and restrictions set forth by the franchisor in the franchisee agreement. For example, a given franchise may cater to a specific type of clientele. If you want to pursue a different market segment in any significant way, this could pose a conflict. Additionally, the restrictions usually include the products or services which can be offered, pricing and geographic territory.

In addition to the initial franchise fee, franchisees must pay ongoing royalties and advertising fees. The bottom line is that becoming a franchisee is going to cost you money. You simply have to decide if that cost will be recouped by increased customers, sales, productivity, cost savings and profits.

A damaged brand image can result if other franchisees are performing poorly or the franchisor runs into problems. In other words, you might be a fabulous contractor with incredible attention to detail, discipline and service skills. But if your franchise gets a bad rep, you could pay the price. Is that the time to sign off the franchise agreement and start a franchise of your own? Food for thought!

The term (duration) of a franchise agreement is usually limited and the franchisee may have little or no say about the terms of a termination. So you also want to determine how much control you have over the agreement. If you want to expand, what are your chances? What if you want to cancel? And what if the franchise wants to cancel you? Understand going in how these scenarios might play out.

Green is one of today’s HOT business ideas. Check out some of these Green Industry franchises that might be able to help you grow your business.

Hot Green Industry Franchises

U.S. Lawns – Systems and infrastructure to build a commercial grounds care business

Lawn Doctor – Advanced technology in the lawn care industry

Outdoor Lighting Perspectives – Shed some lighting on a near $800 million industry

Weed Man – Regional sub-franchisors help provide unparalleled lawn care support

NaturaLawn of America – Environmentally responsible lawn care for 26 years

Mosquito Squad – Eliminate mosquitoes and ticks

Renew Crew – Cleaning and protecting exterior surfaces of all kinds

Archadeck – Capitalize on the outdoor-living movement

The Franchise Mall (www.thefranchisemall.com) has thousands of franchise ideas and FREE consultation. Please check it out. http://www.thefranchisemall.com/request/

Comments and why not to cut them off.

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