Before you research any franchises, you should set three- and five-year goals. Goals must be both financial and ‘quality of life’ (or non-financial) in nature. Financial goals should take into account cash flow, savings, net worth, equity build-up and spendable income. Quality of life goals should consider lifestyle issues that are important to you, like having dinner at home three nights a week, being able to take vacations, attend soccer games, make a difference in the community, and so on.
Don’t overlook quality of life goals or you’re setting yourself up for dissatisfaction. Quality of life goals are more important than financial goals. Why? Because many people who invest in a franchise have already made a decent living in the past. Aside from earning a pay cheque however, they couldn’t find a compelling reason to go to work in the morning. Money alone wasn’t enough to keep them going, and money will not hold your interest long either. While you will have some minimum threshold of earnings which you won’t dare to venture below, once that threshold is exceeded, you will find that quality of life becomes the driver.
Virtually all franchisors have key performance criteria that help you and the franchisor to determine whether or not your business is winning. You will be taught how to track sales, labour costs, cost of sales, and other statistical measures. Franchisors design their business and support systems to help you structure your business to achieve these measures and monitor results.
Following the Money
However, we know of no franchisor who measures how many meals you’ve eaten with your children or how many of the kids’ soccer games you’ve attended. Franchisors measure your success by their definition, not yours. Most franchisors have no clue as to whether or not their ‘successful’ franchisees are living the life they originally desired when they invested in a franchise. Franchisors follow the money. And as we’ve already stated, money won’t hold your interest long.
Additionally, in order to secure loans, bank financing, financial support from your family, or other forms of financing, chances are you will need to write and submit a business plan or cash-flow projections to the parties from whom you’re seeking financing. In your plan you will detail the tactics and strategies you will execute to drive the sales, contain the costs, maximise the cash flow of your business, and repay your loan. To succeed in business, you have to generate money.
Imagine that you’re in business, money is tight and you are two months late on loan payments. The loan officer calls you to see what happened. You tell the loan officer that while you don’t have the money to pay the two instalments, you did attend all your kid’s soccer games this month. Most likely the loan officer will sarcastically reply, “Congratulations. I’m nominating you for parent of the year.
Where is my money?
Like banks, franchisors also want their money on time. They are as focused on achieving their own financial goals as you are on achieving your complete and total definition of success. We’re not saying this is right or wrong, it’s just the way it is. If you were to list and prioritise the many reasons you’re looking to start a franchise, where does ‘helping the franchisor exceed its corporate objectives’ show up on the list? So you want yours, the franchisor wants theirs, the bank wants theirs, and the world turns.
Defining Your Goals
It’s solely your responsibility to create a clear definition of the goals that define what winning looks like for you. Use your definition of winning as your criteria to compare various franchise opportunities. The franchise where you have the highest probability of attaining both your financial and quality of life goals is the franchise you make an investment in.
It’s easy to lose sight of your goals. Prospective franchisees often get caught up in their perceptions of the problems and challenges of the business rather than whether or not the franchise can help them achieve their objectives with a high degree of probability.
For instance, you may be investigating a residential home-cleaning business and from talking to franchisees you hear there is a high employee turnover. Afraid that you might get stuck cleaning houses, you think, “I didn’t go to college so I can clean toilets and vacuum carpets.” Your knee-jerk reaction is to dismiss the opportunity. However, whether or not there’s employee turnover isn’t the real issue at hand. Given employee turnover, your focal point should be whether or not you can still achieve your goals with a high degree of probability.
Dig Deeper
Goal-focused prospective franchisees will dig deeper and ask questions such as:
- What are the franchisor’s hiring and retention strategies?
- What is the impact of turnover on the business?
- How long does it take to find replacement help?
- What training programmes are in place to train replacement labour?
- How long does it take a new hire to become productive?
Every franchise has its unique challenges to overcome. Franchisors either have proven systems and a demonstrated track record for overcoming these challenges or they don’t. Dismiss those who don’t. Investigate those who do by asking questions like the ones above.
Creating Your Goals
Clear goals, whether financial or quality of life in nature, must pass the SMART test.
Specific
Goals need to be clearly articulated and written down. ‘Making a lot of money’ isn’t specific. Making R800 000 is specific. ‘Having more control over time’ is not specific. ‘Going to ten of my son’s soccer games and ten of my daughter’s dance recitals this year’ is specific.
Measurable
You have to be able to create a tracking system; a method of keeping score. This lets you know whether or not you are on track and whether you’ve achieved your goals. If your goal is to make R800 000 by the end of the year, on 30 June, you should have earned R400 000 or you may not be on track. On 31 December, you’ve either hit your income goals or you haven’t. It isn’t open to opinion or speculation.
Using the previous example, if you attend 11 soccer games, you’ve won. If you only went to six, you fell short. It isn’t open to interpretation or opinion.
Attainable
Goals must be considered both possible and worthwhile pursuits, or you won’t be motivated to achieve them. For instance, you may say your goal is to make R4 million a year, but if you have never made more than R400 000 a year, you may not really see this goal as possible and may not take aggressive steps toward achieving it. As a franchisee you may experience a 20% increase in sales, but if you think it’s going to take working 90 to 100 hours a week to achieve that goal, you may not consider it a worthwhile pursuit. And you won’t be motivated to hit this goal.
Realistic Timetable
Goals have to have a deadline, a ‘by when’ date. Goals without a deadline don’t inspire commitment. It’s human nature not to take action on anything you wish to achieve some day. Think of how long you have thought about starting a franchise. Have you set a deadline as to when you will open? If not, other more urgent activities will take precedence and your dream will be pushed further and further back.
If you don’t have a deadline as to when you are going to start, then you may have a good intention, but you don’t have a plan or a goal. A wise man once said, ‘The road to hell is paved with good intentions.’ Good intentions don’t make a difference; committed action does. You will never be called forward into committed action without a specific, measurable, attainable, and time-limited goal that’s worthy of being achieved. Activities with deadlines attached to them grab your attention and create a sense of urgency and action. For instance, you know you have to get your taxes done by 15 April. If your goal is to get your taxes done on time, 14 April will be a very productive day for you!
Goals with deadlines that are too far out also don’t inspire action. Think about something in your life that you wish will occur within the next 20 years. Are you taking action now? Think about when you bought your home. Did you think, ‘here is where I’m going to live for the next 30 years!’ or did you think, ‘this home is ideal for now.’ You aren’t wired to think more than three to seven years out. Goals with extended timelines are as useless as goals that you want to achieve ‘some day’ because they don’t inspire action. Consider setting long-term goals with a three- to five-year time limit. l