Get the Message
The real story on how national ad funds work for you.
By Devlin Smith
| June 01, 2003
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/franchises/franchisezone/viewpoint/article62406.html
Depending on how your franchise agreement is structured,
you're probably contributing a portion of your sales into a
national ad fund. This money is used for the development and
placement of advertising on a variety of media, sometimes both on
the national and local level.
There can be sticking points, though, between the franchisor and
franchisees over how that advertising money should be spent.
Locally, franchisee co-ops can disagree over these same issues.
Franchise Zone discussed some of these sticking points with Steve
O'Leary, chair and founder of O'Leary & Partners Corp.,
an Irvine, California, company that has helped franchises like
Century 21, Subway and Fantastic Sams establish and execute their
ad funds. Here, O'Leary addresses the impact of the Internet on
national advertising and reveals how franchisees and franchisors
can work together to ensure advertising programs succeed.
For a franchise that's regional and is starting to branch
out into other areas, would it still be beneficial for a franchisee
to be participating in this national ad fund if they're in
Washington and the franchise is concentrated mainly in the
Southeast?
This is a common problem. You're hitting a sticking point
with some franchisees and franchisors that don't have national
coverage. The franchisor, because of the way the agreement is
worded, actually decides to do national advertising, but
they're not located in enough markets to make it as valuable as
it could be for the local franchisees. We encourage the clients we
work with to establish a minimum level of market penetration around
the country--when that hits, it makes sense to go to national
advertising. Until then, the money is saved and spent in Charlotte
or in Baltimore; rather than going into a national ad, it's
spent locally in their market. Most franchisors also divide their
contribution into media placement percentage and production
percentage, so a certain amount of money is set aside for creating
materials, generally in the 15 to 20 percent category, and 80, 85
percent is spent in media placement. That delineation allows it to
be a local ad fund or a regional fund created for the benefit of
the franchisees.
What are franchisees in out-of-the-way places or untapped
markets allowed to do as far as local advertising?
There's usually no restriction. Some ad funds are cut and
split national and local and a certain amount of money
automatically flows back. Let's say the contribution is 5
percent of retail sales. One and a half percent could go local and
3 1/2 percent could go national. They would have the right to use
that on an individual market basis for their own store or on a
co-op basis with other stores in their area. Above and beyond the 5
percent, they can always spend whatever they want on an individual
basis, and the franchisor usually provides materials for them to do
that. Some people have a lot lower percentage than 5 percent, some
have fixed amounts, but there's usually that kind of division.
If it's a lower amount, it's usually all going to national
and none of it's being credited back locally.
Let's take an example of a franchise organization that has
50 franchises on the East Coast and one or two in five other
markets. If it's smart, it would return the advertising dollars
back to the franchisees with some sort of recommendation, or say,
"You must spend this in recognized mass media
advertising--direct mail, newspaper, radio, cable, rather than
urinal advertising." They'll put some sort of parameters
on where the funds must be spent to generate, based on their
experience, the best value for the dollar.
Preventing
Problems
Since franchises don't have a certain requirement for local
advertising, are there ever problems if, say, somebody in the
franchisee's region isn't putting forth the advertising
dollars locally but is benefiting from what another franchisee near
them is spending?
That's a challenge, because let's say we've got a
franchisee in Irvine and we've got one in San Clemente,
California. They're really not competing in the same business
area, but if I run a cable TV ad in Irvine, the franchisee in San
Clemente is going to get the benefit of the exposure, and he or she
isn't required to kick into the fund. That often deters some
franchisees from doing what might be in their best interest,
because they're not required to co-op their fund. That's
why there's usually a co-op provision once a certain number of
franchisees reach a certain threshold where the funds can benefit
from mass media. You try to establish and think that through, but
not every franchise agreement does that. So that problem occurs
and, unfortunately, often leads to acrimony between the two owners.
Or if they do do something together, they don't agree on what
the promotion should be. It's a fairly common problem,
especially for direct mail type incentive offers and things like
that--how do you agree on price, how do you share the space, how
often do you run the ad.
Is there anything the franchisees could do to resolve
that?
Unless it's in the franchise agreement, it can't really
be resolved. It would be hard to create a franchise agreement
universal enough to deal with local franchisee disputes. It's
easier for the franchisors to say, "Now that we've got 30
stores, we're going to put the money you're spending
locally into a co-op fund." There's some screeching and
hollering at that point, but generally after a while, franchisees
look back and say, "I could never have been on television on
my own, and now I can, through the power of franchising."
What can a franchisee do if they feel a national ad campaign
doesn't work for their market?
Just to take the franchisor's point of view for the moment,
everybody has their own opinion about what the message ought to be,
because it's advertising. We're all critics or born-again
copywriters who feel we know what's best. A lot of
[franchisees] see their market as being unique, so they don't
feel anything will work on a national basis. Contrary to that,
there are a lot of similarities of consumers across markets, and
often a well-thought-out advertising message can work if it has
some sort of adaptability to a local market. For example, a
franchise may have a national message, but franchisees can tag the
message with a promotional offer they've arranged with [local
vendors]. It's smart to have a common message, because
otherwise you have total disarray. But you've got to allow for
some local adaptability.
If an advertising campaign isn't working, how quickly can
the franchisees and the franchisor work together to try to
resurrect something or bring in a new campaign?
Most franchise organizations have some sort of advertising
council or advisory committee that makes changes, provides input or
even adaptations. Generally, they're not quick. It's not
like, "Hey, this promotion's not working, and we've
got to do something in the next two weeks." It's more
like, "That one didn't work, and here's why, so
we're not going to repeat that next year. Here are a couple of
ideas that worked in two or three other regions--maybe we ought to
turn these into a national promotion."
Net Presence
A lot of companies are starting to focus on Internet
advertising. Does Internet advertising take away from the power of
a national ad fund or add to it?
I'm not sure I'd agree with the statement that more
advertising co-ops are spending more money on the Internet.
It's rebounded slightly from a real low a couple of years ago,
and we're seeing some of the major advertisers doing more of
it, but it's probably less than 10 percent, maybe even less
than 5 percent of overall spending for most national advertisers,
so it's not a huge medium. Having said that, the advantages are
that it is pretty much a non-localized medium, and so from that
vantage, it's better than some vehicles like television or
radio that have local formats or local preferences by consumers.
You can do things on AOL or on Google or some of these major sites,
and the appeal is pretty universal to people who are heavy Internet
users.
Should franchisors have total control of the franchisees'
Internet presence?
We did a site for Sir Speedy. They had a problem in that a lot
of their franchisees had their own independent sites, and there was
no commonality. We created a system--sort of an umbrella
program--that all the individual sites fit under. It actually
facilitated more Internet commerce between different franchisees,
made it easier for them to trade business. One company wanted to
print something in another market and use their account with the
Sir Speedy in the local market. Part of that issue of site
development is the need for an umbrella concept that helps all the
franchisees and at the same time provides some localization or
individualization for them.
Are there restrictions within a franchise contract if a
franchisee did want to start a Web site?
Usually, most franchise agreements don't cover that category
unless they're a relatively new company or it's a new
franchise agreement. Since the Internet is somewhat of a new
phenomenon, a lot of agreements didn't deal with it as a
medium--you're seeing new agreements cover that. The typical
restrictions national advertisers place on any kind of advertising
is use of the trademark, and usually there are certain guidelines
provided. In fact, we've prepared national advertising
guideline books that our clients give to their franchisees about
how they must use certain things. Generally speaking, franchisors
don't try to limit the type of advertising; they try to direct
it by providing better materials. Most franchisors are trying to
encourage franchisees to spend more rather than restrict.
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