Home > Terms > English (EN) > franchises

franchises

Often taken as the demise of American identity local and regional, franchises also represent an economic negotiation of individual aspirations and cultural expectations.

Behind McDonald’s, Holiday Inn motel rooms, many gas stations, camera stores, florists and weight-loss centers there is both a tested plan and an individual entrepreneur striving for success while meeting the franchiser’s (and customers’) demands for uniformity.

Franchises offer dreams of independence and wealth, although they also may lock owners and families into work as self-exploitative and struggling momand-pop stores.

Franchising involves a “parent” company which negotiates an agreement with an individual owner to market products and services, as well as reputation. This entails both an initial fee (and establishment costs) and an ongoing relationship through royalties.

Franchising also entails negotiation not only of appropriate buyers, but also of sites, localizations and business relations, which may include more direct co-ownership.

Early franchise arrangements in place by the 1920s included automobile dealerships, soft-drink bottlers and service stations, which accounted for 75 percent of franchise income in the 1990s. These include franchise empires of chains within chains. In the postwar period, new opportunities in fast food and motels, responding to new lives built around cars, highways and suburbia, spurred renewed interest in franchises. Franchises soon turned to cities, smaller towns and increasing diversity within shopping centers and malls, while Century 21, founded in 1972, has revolutionized real-estate sales through interconnected offices nationwide.

Franchise sales in 1999 reached 11,000 billion, and franchises employed 8 million people—as many as the automobile industry Despite the commitments under which owners operate, however, their failure rate is significantly lower than the failure rate for independent businesses (8 percent for franchises in their first five years as opposed to 77 percent for independent businesses).

Among the most common franchises encountered by Americans are many fast-food services, convenience stores, home-care stores, motels, real estate, clothing, athletic wear, computers and travel. Franchises cater to varying class demands, although issues of racial opportunity in ownership as well as service have erupted as public issues, most notably with the food chain Denny’s. This model has also allowed for both the extension of American forms and products abroad and imitation by other chains in Europe, Asia and Latin America.

0
Collect to Blossary

Member comments

You have to log in to post to discussions.

Terms in the News

Billy Morgan

Sports; Snowboarding

The British snowboarder Billy Morgan has landed the sport’s first ever 1800 quadruple cork. The rider, who represented Great Britain in the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, was in Livigno, Italy, when he achieved the man-oeuvre. It involves flipping four times, while body also spins with five complete rotations on a sideways or downward-facing axis. The trick ...

Marzieh Afkham

Broadcasting & receiving; News

Marzieh Afkham, who is the country’s first foreign ministry spokeswoman, will head a mission in east Asia, the state news agency reported. It is not clear to which country she will be posted as her appointment has yet to be announced officially. Afkham will only be the second female ambassador Iran has had. Under the last shah’s rule, Mehrangiz Dolatshahi, a ...

Weekly Packet

Language; Online services; Slang; Internet

Weekly Packet or "Paquete Semanal" as it is known in Cuba is a term used by Cubans to describe the information that is gathered from the internet outside of Cuba and saved onto hard drives to be transported into Cuba itself. Weekly Packets are then sold to Cuban's without internet access, allowing them to obtain information just days - and sometimes hours - after it ...

Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB)

Banking; Investment banking

The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) is an international financial institution established to address the need in Asia for infrastructure development. According to the Asian Development Bank, Asia needs $800 billion each year for roads, ports, power plants or other infrastructure projects before 2020. Originally proposed by China in 2013, a signing ...

Spartan

Online services; Internet

Spartan is the codename given to the new Microsoft Windows 10 browser that will replace Microsoft Windows Internet Explorer. The new browser will be built from the ground up and disregard any code from the IE platform. It has a new rendering engine that is built to be compatible with how the web is written today. The name Spartan is named after the ...

Featured Terms

esb
  • 0

    Terms

  • 0

    Blossaries

  • 15

    Followers

Industry/Domain: Music Category: Bands

Delafé y Las Flores Azules

Delafé y Las Flores Azules is a band of music from Barcelona (Spain). In its origins (2002) was called Facto Delafé y Las Flores Azules and it had ...

Contributor

Featured blossaries

Leaf vegetables

Category: Food   1 19 Terms

iPhone 6

Category: Technology   7 42 Terms