Black people need to start learning how to make and sell Pizza.

Luken

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im going to cali just for this, whos down?

7 Ways to Turn Your Franchise Into a Multiunit Franchise Empire


7 Ways to Turn Your Franchise Into a Multiunit Franchise Empire
He went from one, to five, to 25 pizza franchises; and you can, too

by Jeffrey McKinney Posted: May 9, 2017

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(Image: Courtesy of Leo Thomas)


Armed with 32 years of experience in the restaurant industry, Leo Thomas became a multiunit franchisee. Since opening his first Marco’s Pizza in January 2014, a fast-casual restaurant franchise, Thomas now owns five Marco’s Pizza locations in Riverside County, California.

(Image: Google Street View)


The Fast Growth of Franchise Entrepreneurs


Currently, Thomas has a development agreement to open another 25 stores in both Riverside and Orange County by 2024, which includes those he presently owns and other franchisees that operate in his franchise territory. Along with his business partner Anil Yadav, Thomas owns Marco’s Pizza locations, in addition to 74 T.G.I. Friday’s restaurants located in six midwestern states as well as in Florida.

Thomas joins a list of entrepreneurs who are opting to be among the fastest growing group in the franchise industry—multiunit franchisees. As of the first quarter of 2017, there were 43,797 multiunit franchisees, owning more than 217,170 units in the U.S., reports FRANdata, a franchise advisory firm in Arlington, Virginia. Some 19% of total franchisors are multiunit owners, and 54% total franchise units are owned by multiunit operators.

“We see franchisors encouraging their current franchisees to keep growing, because multiunit franchisees have the infrastructure, financing, and experience to open additional units faster and more efficiently than newcomers,” says Anya Nowakowski, a FRANdata senior research analyst, in an email to BLACK ENTERPRISE. “We also see a growing number of multiunit owners diversifying their business by owning multiple brands across different business types.”

Thomas also says he became a multiunit franchisor, because they typically can make more money than a single-unit franchise.



The Fruits of Hard Labor


Becoming his own boss was not easy for Thomas, who spoke with BLACK ENTERPRISE about his franchise business. He had to tap into about $400,000 in savings he earned while in the corporate world to open the first store, and buy his franchise territory.

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(Image: Courtesy of Leo Thomas)


Thomas obtained bank loans to open subsequent stores, relying on other streams of income to live on, such as being a church pastor and restaurant consulting. He labored hard to develop the necessary skill-set to position himself as a multiunit franchisee, with a resume that includes working at McDonald’s, Starbucks, Boston Market, and Denny’s. While working at the last three restaurant chains, Thomas gained financial acumen, which included overseeing new store development, reading profit and loss statements, and managing thousands of employees.

“That background is still helping me build a portfolio of stores today,” he says. “It helps me understand the dynamic of the business [that] I eventually invested my money in.”

One of the perks of running your own business, Thomas claims, is that you get to be in charge, which inevitably reduces the chance of being laid-off in a corporate downsizing. He adds that being a multiunit operator offers the opportunity to build a legacy, and ultimately create generational wealth for your family.



Challenges of Running Multiunit Franchisees


Yet there are pitfalls; Thomas says one is your entire livelihood is tied to the business. For instance, he says money that people have saved for retirement, vacations, or other purposes now may need to be used to help fund the business.

“That means you have to push extremely hard to make sure the business is viable and profitable,” Thomas says. According to Thomas, it took about two years before his Marco’s Pizza locations become profitable.

“The key to making money in the restaurant industry is picking the right concept; having a thorough, detailed business plan; and good site selection,” Thomas says.

Although Thomas would not disclose revenue for his Marco’s Pizza locations, as of December 2016, Marco’s Pizza reportedly had annual system-wide sales of $500 million, with nearly 800 locations, making it one of the nation’s fastest growing pizza chains. According to Thomas, the average Marco’s unit had 2016 revenue of nearly $700,000.

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(Image: Courtesy of Leo Thomas)


Tips on Becoming a Multiunit Franchise Mogul


Thomas offered tips to consider before becoming a multiunit franchise. They include:

  1. Examine if you have the capital to finance the opening of several stores versus operating one.
  2. Have the proper amount of money stashed away. For instance, if you need $5,000 per month to live on, make sure you have 18 to 24 months of that monthly income saved.
  3. Ensure that the franchisor will allow you to open multiple stores. Some franchise brands limit how many stores can be opened.
  4. Get in writing from the franchisor how many stores you can open, as a multiunit franchisee during a specific time-frame. Make sure you have exclusive rights as multiunit franchisee for a specific territory, preventing other franchisees from expanding into the area without your permission.
  5. Make sure you are passionate about operating a multiunit franchise, and make sure you understand the different tiers of running a business. Those may include hiring people, managing new store development, and understanding profit margins. The more knowledge and understanding you have of the industry you plan to invest in, the greater the chance for success.
  6. Perform due diligence and thorough research before buying into a franchise. Also, visit locations, talk to customers, and check with existing franchisees about their experience with a brand.
  7. Partner with someone whose strengths complement your weaknesses. If you’re strong in finance, but not knowledgeable about operations, find a good operator to partner with to help run the business.
 
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You guys don't think. Business is about explioting aspects of life that individuals do not want to do themselves or simplifying a process. Unless you have a service or product that does that it makes no sense to invest capital into a venture It will fail and you will lose money.
 

BrandonBanks

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Ralph2k said:
]These people arent getting rich brehs. And they work all day all week all night. Pizza is shyt money. Dream higher.

:mjpls:Are you even black? Why you trying to discourage nikkas from owning franchises and practicing group economics?

And they are making more money than you think. You think these Indians who own these businesses (and passing them on) are making less than the average nikka who works at your local Foot Locker or Wal Mart? Really nikka? Ok breh. I rather OWN the Subway than work in it under some cac or Asian. If your "dreams" don't extend farther than working crap jobs for cac employers then fine, good for you, but some of us rather OWN something. Then put my friends and family on. I've already done that, but I'd never tell other nikkas not to.

Nikkas think making it is trying to find a "job" making 60k-100k a year working for a white person. But these koreans, indians arabs etc aren't impressed by that and there's a reason why. They trying to OWN some shyt. Not just be an employee to another race. google what the average asian american income is right now, compared to the average african american income. You don't think the difference has anything to do with the amount of businesses they own? And don't get mad at me nikka, get mad at Google

Keep trying to downplay the importance of ownership brehs.

We're trying to build businesses, not Jordan collections, stop being an embarrassment.

Fortunately it's coming to a point where clown nikkas with no business acumen are starting to be viewed and treated like the cowardly idiots they really are, even by bytches. Being a dumb, backwards nikka isn't cool anymore, all it leads to is crying about child support eating up your check and complaining about your cac boss.

Any nikka trying to downplay businesses should post a screenshot of their Bank account. It's always the nikkas with $500 to their name and no assets, trying to downplay ownership. Just stick to collecting J's breh, let other nikkas discuss franchises
 

BrandonBanks

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Theres a mexican spot in my neighborhood owned by the Chinese. They got one of the best burritos I ever tasted.

Black people have been conditioned to believe that, if they're gonna start a business they have to...

1) sell 'black' things

2) sell it to other blacks

fukk that. We need to start culturally appropriating and selling everything to everybody. Just like everyone else.

:wow:Exactly
 
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This Philly Chef Is Opening a Pizza Shop to Provide Jobs for Ex-Offenders


Chef-Activist Kurt Evans Will Staff His Upcoming Pizzeria With Ex-Offenders
Inspired by South Philly Barbacoa’s activism, the Philly chef wants to help former prisoners reenter the community and find work after incarceration
by Rachel Vigoda@RachelVigoda Sep 14, 2018, 11:23am EDT
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Kurt Evans at a Cooking for the Culture collaborative dinner at South
Kenneth St. George
Chef Kurt Evans is taking the idea behind his End Mass Incarceration dinner series several steps further with Down North, his upcoming North Philly pizza shop. The restaurant, at 28th and Lehigh in the city’s Strawberry Mansion section, will employ ex-offenders in a move to help former prisoners reenter the community and find work. He hopes it have it up and running in mid-November.

Evans, a sous chef at South, the restaurant and jazz club on North Broad, was originally inspired by the activism of South Philly Barbacoa’s Cristina Martinez and Ben Miller. After getting national attention for chef Martinez’s lamb tacos, the couple started using their platform to advocate for immigrant rights and bring light to issues faced by undocumented workers. Martinez, a Mexican immigrant who will be featured on the next season of Netflix’s Chef’s Table, is undocumented.

Evans got involved in Martinez and Miller’s Right to Work dinners, which sparked the idea for his own food-fueled community project. His End Mass Incarceration series raises money for programs like Books Through Bars while fostering discussion about the criminal justice system. The Farmacy in University City hosted the first dinner in January 2018. The second was at Martinez and Miller’s El Compadre — a sister spot to South Philly Barbacoa.

“Working with Ben and Cristina, seeing them fight for immigrants’ rights and undocumented workers, inspired me,” Evans says.

Recently, a friend of Evans who owns the building at 2804 W. Lehigh Avenue, on the same block as the Free Library’s Widener branch, approached Evans about reopening a defunct pizza shop on the first floor and giving it a community-minded component. The proposal was a good fit for the chef: He had made it a point to hire ex-offenders at his now-closed Route 23 Cafe on Germantown Avenue.

“I wanted to make that a priority, bringing people who were formerly incarcerated back into the community, back into the workforce,” Evans says. “Cooking is a skill a lot of people have, and can pick up. At Route 23, people would come in with decent skills, and then as the months went on they picked up how to work in a kitchen. They learned different techniques.”

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Down North at 28th and Lehigh
Kurt Evans
Evans has no plans to leave his current position at South, so he needed someone to run Down North. Through Cooks Who Care, he met Alencia Smith, a chef who was formerly incarcerated, and brought her on board to operate the new restaurant. They’re working with the nonprofit Philabundance to select staff.

Gregory Headen, who went to culinary school after prison, was in Stephen Starr’s and Georges Perrier’s orbits at top Philly kitchens before joining Evans at South. He’s offered to teach kitchen skills to Down North employees. Craig Russell of Talk, the new Rittenhouse restaurant from the Marigold Kitchen team, also asked to get involved. “A lot of chefs are offering their support,” Evans says.

Since the Down North location was previously a pizza shop, Evans doesn’t have to put in too much work to make it usable again. He plans to open the restaurant in November, with a straightforward menu of pies, wings, fries, and shakes. “We want it to be affordable for the community. We’re next to Widener Library — we want kids from the neighborhood who are coming to the library and doing their homework to be able to afford it,” he says.

The name is a nod to local slang. “No matter where you are in Philly, even if you’re in South Philly, if you’re headed to North Philly we say, ‘down north,’” says Evans, who grew up around 46th and Woodland. “It’s like, ‘I’m about to go down north real quick.’”

The next End Mass Incarceration dinner is October 28 at Win Win Coffee Bar (931 Spring Garden Street). With chef Elijah Milligan, Evans also puts together Cooking for the Culture, a collaborative dinner series that highlights talented black chefs in Philly. The next Cooking for the Culture installment is October 1 at Fine Palate (231 S. 15th Street).
 

unit321

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Think about it. go to every spot with minorities in your city and theres an ethnic pizza spot. ive never seen a black pizza spot in my life. indians, hispanics, various other asians and all ensemble of whites make and sell pizza that we buy from them.

Pizza stores would create wealth, networking and a place to launder money in a lot of our communities.

Im just saying, it sounds absurd but its little things like this that put people ahead:yeshrug::ehh:
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Forget pizza, open a bakery to sell cakes.
This dude was caking, but they weren't good at cooking the books.

Court documents also say that from 2012 to 2014, Norvell and Johnson reported a combined adjusted gross income of $157,916. During that same period, they deposited $926,854, including $338,860 in cash, into nearly a dozen bank accounts, including one offshore account located in Curaҫao. From January 2011 through August 2015 the couple deposited $468,500 in cash into their accounts.
Cake shop owner sentenced for cocaine distribution, money laundering

He did the crime, he's doing the time.
 
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