Building On The Success Of Others
By Art Gib
Entrepreneurs of small business take big risks in starting up a company form scratch. With few if any customers at the opening of the venture, many small business owners find it difficult to keep up on the monthly expenses and administrative costs associated with running a small business. Even with a business plan in mind and Small Business Association loans to back the venture the first few years for a fledgling business are the toughest and most trying. Many people have great ideas and start out excited to go out to work in the morning, only to face the heartache of facing mounting equipment costs to keep abreast of technology and inventory that has to moved in order to pay the outstanding balances to the suppliers. Owning a small business and making it profitable is a difficult thing to do, perhaps that is why 90 percent of businesses fail in the first year.
For the entrepreneur that has a sense of adventure and is concerned about the risks of running a small business there is hope. Many successful people have traveled the same path on their way to financial freedom. Many of those people learned the hard way how not to conduct business before they discovered the secret to their success. Many of these people now run multi national corporations and have shared their success stories with others. Some have even gone out of their way to help other people start up in the same industry with the same products and outlined the keys to developing a successful business.
We refer to these types of businesses as franchises. A franchise is the off shoot of a successful business that gives step by step instructions to the formulas that made the original business a tremendous success. Businesses all over the world have witnesses enormous success through franchising their businesses to entrepreneurs that were ready, willing and able to take over the reigns of success and open up a business under the name a tutelage of a successful corporation.
The fast food industry is a prime example of franchise operations that continue to feed the success of the parent company. People that own a franchise become partners with the parent company and pay them a percentage of the profits for allowing them to share in the branded success of the corporation. The small business operator that starts a franchise in a new market has the backing of the parent company to help guide them to success in the crucial first year of business and keep them moving forward to their future financial goals.
About The Author
Mrs. Fields cookie franchise (http://www.mrsfieldsfranchise.com) is one of the most beloved and consistently popular brands in America. Art Gib is a freelance writer.
