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Is It Smart to Buy a Franchise Right Out of College?

The one word answer is no. Our expert explains why.
Posted by Jeff Elgin | December 13, 2004
URL: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/75034

Lately, many young entrepreneurs have become interested in the idea of buying a franchise right out of college. Though this idea might sound appealing on the surface, unless you have other factors in your favor besides a college degree, I wouldn't recommend it. I've seen both franchisors and franchisees try this in the past with very mixed success rates.

Three to five years ago, a number of franchise companies were experimenting with the idea of marketing franchises to recent college graduates (with parents typically providing the financing). But in today's marketplace, strong franchise companies aren't showing much interest in recruiting new franchisees from the pool of recent graduates.

Why the change? The previous attempts to turn recent college graduates into franchisees failed for two main reasons:

  1. Abandonment. Franchisors found that young franchisees with no "skin in the game" in terms of personal cash investment were far more likely to give up whenever the going got tough and move on to something else. The parents were left owning a business they didn't want and expecting the franchise company to get them out of the situation.
  2. Employee Management. The simple fact is that most recent college graduates don't have any experience recruiting and retaining good employees. This is the single most important factor for success in most business-format franchise businesses. Everyone makes mistakes learning how to hire and manage effectively, but the franchisors were used to new franchisees who had already learned many of these lessons. Recent college graduates, meanwhile, were learning as they went along, and the mistakes had a negative impact on the business.

Still, if you're absolutely determined to buy a franchise right out of college, these points may help you gain a franchisor's acceptance:

These are tough, but significant, questions. The simple fact is that you can greatly increase your chances of success in franchising by starting early and working hard to address these issues. If the points listed above seem like chores, chances are, franchising's not for you. But if you see this list as exciting steps to true business success, you may just have what it takes to be a franchisee.

Jeff Elgin has almost 20 years of experience franchising, both as a franchisee and a senior franchise company executive. He's currently the CEO of FranChoice Inc., a company that provides free consulting to consumers looking for a franchise that best meets their needs.