Franchise Update Magazine Issue IV, 2016 | Page 44

BY KERRY PIPES Shopping for IMPROVEMENT Mystery shoppers find many brands doing better, but there’s still a long way to go for many others F ranchisee recruitment is the cornerstone of any successful brand. It must be done right. It requires the right team, the right information, the right prospects, and the right follow-up. There must be a proven process in place that is followed and continually improved. But amazingly, year after year, franchise brands continue to fumble the fundamentals. Whether it’s providing incorrect or outdated information on a website or the lack of a quick (or any) telephone response, among other problems, many franchise development teams are still in dire need of improvement, according to this year’s mystery shopping results. Every franchise brand that registered to attend this year’s Franchise Leadership & Development Conference (FLDC) by late July was mystery shopped by “qualified prospects” who phoned in and completed online applications. In total, 165 brands were evaluated and the results were, once again, a bit shaky. Franchise Update Media’s Therese Thilgen, along with “prospects” Art Coley, CEO at CGI, and Maureen DiStefano, franchise consultant, presented the survey results at the annual conference in Atlanta in late September. The other mystery shoppers and researchers were Jenny Langfeld, COO at CGI; Eric Stites, CEO of Franchise Business Review; Keith Gerson, president and chief client advocate at FranConnect; and Jeff Lefler, CEO of FranchiseGrade.com. Each brand was evaluated based on their telephone query response, website query response, website 42 best practices, franchisee satisfaction, and FDD scoring. This year we went directly to the researchers for their methodology and perspective on what they discovered in analyzing franchise recruitment procedures and systems, and how they presented themselves to prospects both online and on the phone. Here are their insights. Telephone Mystery Shopping T BY ART COLEY & JENNY LANGFELD he mission was simple. Franchise Update commissioned us to place calls to the 165 franchise brands registered for the Franchise Leadership & Development Conference. We were to pose as unqualified leads looking for information. Art “Dudley Pennington” and Jenny “Amy Pettit” divided up the list and began calling. Here’s a look at the process used and the results. Three-step process: • Part I: Go to franchise main website and get a phone number. • Part II: Place a call requesting to learn more about the brand. Either talk live with representative or leave a message. • Part III: Follow up calls to the brands that returned our call within 24 hours. Then gather up data and results and present findings. Part I “I’d like to speak to someone with ________ franchise. I’m going to visit the website to get a phone number.” The action was to find the phone number for inquiries to call when looking for franchising information. If it took more than three clicks on each of the prospective websites to find a phone number, that franchisor was immediately eliminated from the mystery shop list. We ended up with 87 brands to call. This means that 48 percent of the brands were eliminated because they either did not have a phone number on their website or it took more than three clicks to find it. Part II “Now that I have a phone number for ________ franchise, I’m going to call and either talk to someone or leave a message for a franchise representative to call me back.” Of the 165 brands, 87 (52%) got a call. We wanted to learn more about the brand. We connected live with 35 of the 87 brands (40%) on the initial call. We left messages with the other 52 brands asking for a call back so we could learn more. Twenty-eight of the 52 brands called back within 24 hours. If a brand called back after 24 hours, their file on the mystery shop was closed. During the first call with the brands 18 asked us for our name and email address, 7 asked for Franchiseupdate ISS U E IV, 2 0 1 6 fu4_grow_mystery(42-46).indd 42 11/8/16 2:37 PM