Get All Access for $5/mo

5 Things to Consider Before You Open More Locations Once your first business succeeds, it's easy to get complacent. Ask yourself what you should do next.

By Kyle Zagrodzky Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Shutterstock

There is no thrill quite like running a successful business—and no failure quite as painful as thinking you can replicate it, only to fall short and risk losing it all. Launching a single successful business is hard enough, but once you have proven your concept works, the allure of franchising dollars starts to pull too many business owners in a dangerous direction.

Opening more units can equal big bucks, but only if it's done right, and most business owners are so focused on the rewards that they lose sight of some of the pitfalls.

Still, you can't become a mogul unless you make a move, so how do you know if you're ready to take another bite out of the entrepreneurial apple and open another unit - or two, or three, or 40?

1. Ask yourself why you really want to expand.

Everyone reading this has natural drive. You want to do more, be more and have more. However, this same drive often steers people into bad places when it comes to assuming that another location is the solution to their need to grow.

Don't make the mistake of believing that more is always better or that more units will guarantee more profits. This isn't like Monopoly, where the first to open the most hotels slam dunks the game.

Every business is delicate, and a second location means you're spreading yourself thinner and opening yourself to double or triple the potential pitfalls. Before jumping into a second storefront, explore every option to satisfy that inner need to do more. You might find an easier, safer path to fulfillment that will protect everything you've worked for instead of put it at risk.

2. Never underestimate the power of the secret sauce.

Business owners often believe so deeply in their brand that they don't see how much they personally influence their store's success. When you try to duplicate a business, whether it's a franchise or a small storefront, you have to be ready to take on a completely different role.

Related: 9 Questions to Ask When Assessing a Market

If your first unit has been fueled largely by your personal touch, then spreading yourself too thin could mean both units suffer. Before growing, you have to ask yourself whether you have the right people in place to take over some of those key roles you've always managed, and whether you think you have the leadership skills to pass on the core magic of your secret sauce.

3. Are you absolutely confident in your first business?

Many times, the secret sauce includes all those small tasks and personal touches the owner contributes that employees may not even know how to replicate. Before you even consider opening a second business, you should reflect on your existing processes. How solid are they?

Related: How to Know When to Grow

Here's the basic test: If you were to go on vacation for a month overseas with little to no contact, would the business crumble? If you know in your gut that the entire thing would come crashing down in less than a week, your processes need a lot more work before you start opening doors to a new location.

Processes and operational protocols should be so smooth and streamlined that employees know exactly what to do and everything runs relatively well without your immediate presence. If that's not the case, a second location will stretch you too thin.

4. Put the right people in place before you make a move.

Being an outstanding single-unit business owner doesn't mean you will automatically ace being a multi-unit business owner. To open more units, you don't just need managers, who can help run each business, but you also need to hire all new staff positions, including everyone from the sales team to cleaning crews.

Related: Netflix to Continue to Look at an Entry Into China

A multi-unit business owner not only has to be ready and willing to step back at the right times but also has to be willing to train people to run the new units using the same proven systems as before. Being a multi-unit owner means you have to have a specific set of leadership and oversight skills, and even if you have them, you want to ask yourself if you'll actually be happy in a different role.

5. At some point you have to quit thinking, and pull the trigger.

If you've done all the homework, balanced the financials and still can't get rid of that nagging sense that you need to launch a new location, then sometimes you just have to go for it.

Being prepared is great, but overthinking can lead to stalling, and you don't want to wait so long that you miss an opportunity. If you're confident that you will enjoy a revised role, have the right people in place and know you can trust your financials, you might just have what it takes to build your own empire.

Kyle Zagrodzky

President of OsteoStrong Franchising, LLC

Kyle Zagrodzky is president of OsteoStrong, the health and wellness system that boosts bone and muscle strength in less than 10 minutes a week using scientifically proven osteogenic loading concepts. OsteoStrong introduced a new era in modern fitness and aging prevention two years ago and has since helped thousands of clients between ages 8 and 92 improve strength, balance, endurance and bone density. In 2014, the brand signed commitments with nine regional developers to launch 500 new locations across America.

 

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Side Hustle

This 20-Year-Old Student Started a Side Hustle With $400 — and It Earned $150,000 Over the Summer

Jacob Shaidle launched his barbecue cleaning business Shaidle Cleaning in 2021 when he was just 15.

Business News

Google Says It Won't Follow Amazon's Lead With a Return-to-Office Mandate — Yet

In a town hall, Google leaders told staff the current hybrid plan will stay in place.

Business News

Barbara Corcoran Says This Is the One Question to Ask Before Selling Your Home

Barbara Corcoran sold The Corcoran Group in 2001 for $66 million.

Starting a Business

This Ex-CIA Officer's Near-Death Experience Inspired Her to Start a Business That's Earning Over 8 Figures a Year: 'I Have a Higher Risk Tolerance Than Most'

Emily Hikade, founder and CEO of luxury sleepwear and home company Petite Plume, had an unconventional path to entrepreneurship.

Marketing

Why The 'Freeze to Death' Collaboration Between Liquid Death and Plunge Tubs Might Be The Collab of The Year — And What Entrepreneurs Can Learn From It

Edgy, unconventional and highly shareable content is why this might be one of the coolest brand collaborations of the year.

Life Hacks

5 Work Ethic Lessons Entrepreneurs Can Learn From Elite Athletes

If you want to learn the keys to success, champion athletes offer ideal lessons.