The 3 Biggest Franchise Development Challenges for 2021

The best part of franchise events for us are the ideas people share at the roundtables –something we’ve been missing over the past year with live events canceled. But, in true franchising fashion, franchise executives quickly adapted to virtual peer groups and roundtables to keep collaboration going. Twice a month, FBR invites franchise leaders to our own roundtables to help folks continue networking. And since not everyone has the chance to join, we thought we would share the common themes being discussed in 2021.

With the pandemic came a jump in people out of jobs and access to cheap money. Many brands are experiencing full pipelines that led to faster growth in 2020 and 2021 than in 2019, but others are struggling to find candidates to continue growing the brand. Either way, sales is still a complex balance of education, relationship building, and moving people through your process.

Here are some of the challenges we tackled:

1) Finding quality candidates

Whether digitally or at expos, the consensus is that franchisors are seeing fewer leads in the pipeline, but higher quality in the connection rate and conversations. But everyone needs more leads to build those pipelines, so here’s where folks are focusing their efforts:

2) Creating brand awareness and differentiation

Some franchise brands are trying to expand in areas where they aren’t as well-known, while others are in a popular segment of franchising with strong competition for candidates. These are some of the tactics they’re using:

3) Responding to longer deal lengths

Everyone has been dealt a lot of change this past year, and it’s understandable this could make candidates more cautious or thoughtful about big decisions – like investing in a franchise. It’s your job to help educate them, to work through whether they are the right fit for your brand and you are the right fit for them, while at the same time balancing that with your quota for 2021. Here’s are some of the ideas franchisors shared to shorten the sales cycle:

Editor’s Note: This article originally appeared as a blog on Franchise Business Review’s website and is republished here with permission.

Courtney Stillings is Senior Client Consultant and Michelle Rowan is President & COO of Franchise Business Review.

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