Two-thirds of the franchises currently operating in Australia wonโt exist in 10 years time.
Thatโs the view of Howard Bellin, a long-time franchise consultant and the founder of IF International, who believes Australiaโs franchise sector is continuing to attract โmany people that should never have been in franchisingโ.
Part of this industry consolidation will come from the big franchisors slimming down their operations in the face of ongoing financial losses, or getting out of the franchising game altogether. According to the 2016 Franchising Australia report, there are around 79,000 business units operating as franchises across Australia.
One of the nationโs largest franchisors, Retail Food Group, announced up to 200 store closures amid big losses last week. According to Bellin, and other franchising experts, the move is another major blow to a sector that small business owners should be trained to approach with extreme care in future.
The troubled ASX-listed food business has been subject to several claims over the past year that its franchisees have been left flailing, unable to turn a profit after signing on to well-known brands like Brumbyโs and Gloria Jeans.
On Friday, the company told shareholders it had posted a statutory half-year loss after tax of $87.8 million and was planning to close up to 200 outlets across its store network.
Speaking to The Australian, the companyโs managing director Andre Nell said about a third of these closures would be company-operated sites, meaning a significant number of franchisees could also be caught up in negotiating an exit from their businesses.
The news came just days before a Fair Work Ombudsmanโs report into fuel seller Caltex revealed 76% of the companyโs sites that had been investigated were found not to be compliant with workplace law. Ombudsman Natalie James said given the findings of her office, she was โnot surprisedโ the company had told shareholders last week it planned to exit the franchise game for good.
The vast array of news stories emerging about the risks of signing on to franchise models reveals the significant deficiencies in the regulation of Australiaโs system, says Bellin.
He believes that unlike in the United States, where franchisors who โdo the wrong thingโ tend to face swift legal action against them, the local ecosystem has placed an unfair burden on franchisees to pay legal fees in order to enter disputes with franchisors.
He says this means there is โvery little disincentiveโ for franchise operators to avoid treating franchisees unfairly, and also means franchisors are able to charge franchisees a range of additional fees for marketing, maintenance and equipment within a business.
Taken together, these factors will produce significant consolidation across the sector, he predicts, although he admits the negative news stories are unlikely to dissuade some prospective franchisees in the long-run.
โYou know the old story, thereโs a sucker born every minute, and there are still just a lot of franchises out there, that people ought not to buy [but do],โ he says.
What can be done?
Thereโs been plenty of debate about the best way to regulate the franchise sector going forward, but Bellin says for those determined to buy into the space, they should look for two key elements: a unique product and tight controls from head office.
โYou never ever read a bad thing about McDonaldโs, for example,โ he says.
โWhat do they have that others donโt? Good control.โ
Bellin says that strong franchise models, like McDonaldโs, have a unique service proposition and are able to โcontrol in the franchisee what they can controlโ, meaning they have strict guidelines and informed managers that โknow what theyโre doingโ.
These types of businesses will continue to be successful, he says, while there may be less hope for those franchise models without a unique value proposition.
Aside from giving more powers to regulators, Bellin believes establishing a new franchising body that accepts members based on their ability to prove โethicalโ standards would weed out poor performers quickly.
โHave only the big companies able to join, and have them pass a bunch of ethics tests first,โ he says.