
Spend enough time around franchising and certain conversations inevitably surface. We discuss the responsibilities of franchisors. We debate support. We analyze training. We examine brand standards, marketing programs, innovation, communication, leadership, and the countless ways franchisors can better serve their franchisees. These are important discussions and, frankly, they should be. The success of any franchise system depends heavily upon the franchisor’s ability to build, maintain, and continuously improve the framework upon which the system operates.
A franchisor carries significant responsibilities. It must protect and strengthen the brand while continually refining the systems that support it. It must communicate openly and transparently. It must invest in technology, marketing, operational improvements, and future growth. It must provide meaningful support while maintaining consistency throughout the system. Perhaps most importantly, it must present the franchise opportunity honestly and accurately before a prospective franchisee ever signs an agreement.
I firmly believe franchisors should do everything reasonably possible to help franchisees succeed. The strongest franchisors are never satisfied with simply maintaining the status quo. They are constantly searching for ways to improve training, strengthen unit economics, enhance operational support, increase brand awareness, and create greater value for franchisees. They understand that their success is directly tied to the success of the people who have invested in their brand.
Yet despite all the attention devoted to franchisor responsibilities, there is another side of the franchise relationship that often receives far less attention.
What responsibility does the franchisee have to his or her own success?
This is not a question intended to assign blame or excuse franchisors when they fail to meet their obligations. Nor is it intended to dismiss legitimate concerns franchisees may have regarding support, leadership, or system performance. Rather, it is a question that goes to the very heart of what franchising has always been: an interdependent relationship.
Recently, I came across an image depicting three puzzle pieces in a sales equation. One represented the seller. Another represented the buyer . The piece in the middle represented success. What struck me was not simply the symbolism of the individual pieces, but rather the reality that none of them could fulfill their purpose alone. Success was not attached to either the seller or the buyer independently. Instead, it existed only when all of the pieces were properly aligned and connected.
Perhaps that is one of the best representations of franchising itself.
Too often, discussions about franchise success become focused on one side of the relationship. When performance exceeds expectations, the system is praised. When results disappoint, fingers are pointed. Yet the reality is far more nuanced. The franchise relationship has always been, or should always be, interdependent. Neither party succeeds in isolation. Neither party bears sole responsibility for outcomes. Like puzzle pieces designed to fit together, both the franchisor and franchisee must fulfill their respective roles if success is to be achieved.
One party provides the framework. The other executes it.
That may sound simplistic, but it is an important distinction. Franchise systems can provide operating procedures, training programs, brand recognition, marketing resources, vendor relationships, technology platforms, and years of accumulated experience. What they cannot provide is personal commitment. They cannot provide leadership. They cannot provide discipline, determination, accountability, or execution. Those responsibilities belong to the franchisee.
One of the more interesting realities within franchising is that two franchisees can operate under the exact same brand, within similar markets, receive identical training, utilize the same systems, and have access to the same support resources, yet achieve dramatically different results. Certainly there are variables that influence performance, but at some point we must acknowledge that the system itself is rarely the sole determining factor.
The franchise agreement does not sell success. It provides access to an opportunity.
Unfortunately, some individuals enter franchising believing they are purchasing certainty. In reality, they are purchasing a framework designed to improve the likelihood of success. The framework may be proven. The systems may be effective. The support may be exceptional. Yet none of those things eliminate the need for ownership.
The most successful franchisees tend to view themselves as business owners first and franchisees second. They understand that while the franchisor has responsibilities, ownership carries responsibilities as well. They recognize that challenges are inevitable and that obstacles are part of the journey. Labor shortages will occur. Competition will intensify. Consumer preferences will evolve. Economic cycles will create uncertainty. Markets will change.
When faced with those challenges, some operators immediately begin searching for external explanations. Others begin by asking a different question: What can I do better?
That simple shift in mindset often makes all the difference.
Successful franchisees understand that leadership begins with them. They invest in their people because they know that employees ultimately define the customer experience. They focus on culture because they recognize that culture influences everything from employee retention to customer loyalty. They know their numbers. They understand profitability. They pay attention to the details that drive performance rather than simply focusing on top-line revenue.
They also understand that while national brand awareness is valuable, local engagement remains critical. The franchisor may create awareness, but franchisees build relationships. They become active within their communities. They connect with local organizations, schools, charities, chambers of commerce, and neighboring businesses. They understand that customers are not simply buying products and services. They are supporting businesses they know, trust, and respect.
The strongest franchisees also embrace continuous learning. They attend conferences. They participate in training programs. They engage with fellow franchisees. They seek new ideas and different perspectives. They remain curious long after they have achieved success because they understand that growth requires a willingness to keep learning.
Ironically, some franchisees who expect their franchisor to continually improve are resistant to improving themselves. Yet personal growth and business growth are often inseparable. The best operators understand this. They recognize that improving leadership skills, communication abilities, financial acumen, and operational discipline often produces far greater returns than waiting for someone else to solve their problems.
There is also the matter of system compliance, a topic that has generated its share of debate throughout the franchise community. Healthy franchise systems should welcome constructive feedback and encourage franchisee input. Great ideas can come from anywhere within an organization. However, successful franchisees also understand that systems, standards, and procedures typically exist for a reason. They are often the product of years of testing, refinement, mistakes, lessons learned, and best practices. Rather than immediately looking for shortcuts, they focus on mastering the system before attempting to improve it.
Returning to the puzzle analogy, alignment is every bit as important as connection. Puzzle pieces may be positioned next to one another, but unless they are properly aligned, they will never connect. The same can be said of franchising. A franchisor can provide support, but if a franchisee refuses to engage, the relationship cannot reach its potential. A franchisee can work tirelessly, but if the franchisor fails to invest in the system, growth becomes increasingly difficult. Success requires both sides moving in the same direction, pursuing the same objectives, and honoring their respective responsibilities.
Perhaps most importantly, successful franchisees accept responsibility for outcomes. They do not expect the franchisor to carry the entire burden of success. They understand that training does not replace execution. Support does not replace leadership. Marketing does not replace community engagement. Brand awareness does not replace customer experience.
Likewise, successful franchisors understand that collecting royalties is not the finish line. Their responsibility is to continually improve the systems, tools, resources, and support necessary to help franchisees maximize their opportunities. When both parties embrace accountability, the relationship becomes far more productive and the likelihood of success increases substantially.
The strongest franchise systems are built when both parties remain committed to a common objective. The franchisor continually improves the system while the franchisee continually improves the execution of that system. The franchisor invests in the future of the brand while the franchisee invests in the future of the business. Neither views success as someone else’s responsibility because both understand that success exists in the space where their efforts intersect.
Perhaps it is time we spend as much energy discussing franchisee responsibilities as we do franchisor responsibilities. Not because one matters more than the other, but because neither succeeds without the other. Franchising has always been built upon shared goals, shared accountability, and shared success.
What are your thoughts? Have we become so focused on the responsibilities of franchisors that we sometimes overlook the responsibilities of franchisees? Has the conversation become too one-sided? What role should personal accountability, leadership, commitment, and execution play in the discussion surrounding franchise success? I encourage franchisors, franchisees, consultants, suppliers, attorneys, and franchise professionals throughout the industry to share their perspectives. Franchising has always been built upon relationships, collaboration, and mutual success. Like the puzzle pieces that inspired this article, success is achieved not when one piece stands alone, but when all of the pieces come together in alignment. This is a conversation worth having…










You must be logged in to post a comment.