From Zero to Hero
Even the best franchisor has to start somewhere. Subway king Fred DeLuca reflects on 25 years of franchise success.
This is the 12th year
Subway has claimed the top spot on Entrepreneur's Franchise 500®, and company
founder Fred DeLuca is taking the time to reflect on how both his
company and franchising as a whole have changed over the past 25
years. Ranked No. 219 on our first Franchise 500® listing,
with 134 franchises in operation, Subway has grown and by press
time expects to have 20,000 franchises in more than 70 countries.
It's truly a testament to the power of franchising. "When
I look back at it, it was the only way we could've grown to
become a national chain," says DeLuca. "And so I have
very excellent thoughts about franchising and working with
franchisees from around the country. A lot of really talented
people all over want to own their own businesses, and the franchise
concept really helps them bring a recognized name to their
town." When Entrepreneur published the first Franchise 500®
in March 1980, DeLuca's company was still very new to
franchising. Though he founded his company in 1965, he'd only
been franchising since 1974. "We didn't really know the
franchising business, and it's [a very] different business from
the store operations business," he says. "Just because we
knew how to run stores didn't mean we knew how to run a
franchising company-at that point, we were in the beginning stages
of learning how to be a franchisor." Learning the franchising business was a continual process, says
DeLuca. He recalls the early days of attending meetings with the
larger franchise community: "When we started franchising, I
didn't even quite realize there was a franchising
community." He soaked up a lot of knowledge from the more
experienced franchisors at those meetings, and he says, in general,
he and his franchise system were welcomed and accepted by the
franchise community. He learned that the objectives of the bigger
franchisors were very different from those of the smaller ones-and
Subway was definitely one of the smaller ones at the time. Content Continues Below
In the early days, for example, DeLuca remembers how much time
and money went into creating franchise disclosure documents for
each state. So DeLuca wanted to discuss with his fellow franchisors
the possibility of creating a uniform disclosure document for all
the states. When he went to the meeting, the others were less than
enthusiastic. "One of the guys pulled me aside and said,
'Fred, let me tell you how it works here. To send somebody to
this committee meeting costs money-only the bigger companies send
people. These disclosure documents cost a lot of money to prepare,
but the big companies aren't so worried about it, because
they've got big budgets. They've got other items that are
important to them,'" recalls DeLuca, laughing. "So
while the community has always been very welcoming and helpful to
franchisors of all sizes, depending on the size and maturity of the
company, they have different things that are important to
them." The franchising community continues to be very welcoming, no
doubt because of franchisors like DeLuca. "Now, as a big
franchisor, I really enjoy going to the meetings and talking to the
new guys and helping them out," he says. And the diversity of
franchise opportunities encourages an even greater sense of
community. "If you went to a meeting and everybody was your
competitor, you'd perhaps clam up a bit," he says,
"but because there's such a diverse list of industries
involved in franchising, everybody seems very welcoming and
helpful."
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