Franchising Sentiment Falls as Concerns Grow
Franchising Sentiment Falls as Concerns for Franchisees Esculates
The July quarter New Zealand Franchising Confidence Index finds positive but falling sentiment across many key franchising indicators. The second Franchising Confidence Index, undertaken by Franchize Consultants, finds falling franchisor net sentiment across many key franchising indicators. In particular, the survey finds substantial decreases in sentiment associated with general business conditions, availability of suitable staff, availability of suitable locations, sales levels per franchisee, operating costs per franchisee, franchisee profitability levels, and franchisor growth prospects. Franchisors and service providers share considerable concern for franchisee operating costs.
Franchisors are
positive about forthcoming general business conditions (net
32%). This represents a fall from the net 39% found in
the April 2010 survey. This fall compares with falls in
other business confidence surveys, including the BNZ
Confidence Survey (falling from 42% in March to 26% in June)
and the National Bank Business Outlook Survey (falling from
50% in April to 40% in June). Comparatively, service
provider sentiment for general business conditions is
considerably more positive. A net 62% of service providers
expect conditions to be better over the next 12 months
(compared with 36% in the previous survey).
Franchisors are still positive about
forthcoming growth prospects for their organisations (net
48%), compared with service providers perspective for
franchisors generally (net 32%).
A
worrying net 6% of franchisors expect access to financing to
deteriorate over the coming year. Service providers are
marginally more optimistic (net 12% positive). This finding
demonstrates access to finance (a key franchising
constraint) continues to trouble the franchise sector.
Franchisors are, on balance, positive
about forthcoming access to suitable franchisees (net 14%)
and staff (net 16%) – two important growth drivers .
Service providers are also more buoyant regarding franchisee
and staff recruitment with a net 31% and 27%, respectively.
Both franchisors and service providers register falls in
confidence pertaining to availability of suitable staff –
another important growth constraint.
Franchisors (net 34%) and service
providers (net 31%) are still positive, but register
considerable falls in confidence levels for finding good
locations – where
applicable.
Franchisors register a
considerable drop in sentiment for franchisee sales levels
(dropping to a net 36% from 59%). Service providers were
consistent at a net 27%, compared to 28% in
April.
Worryingly franchisors (net -29%),
and service providers (net -46%), expect franchisee
operating costs to be higher over the next 12 months.
Comparatively, franchisors are positive,
albeit less so, about franchisee profitability with a net
16% (compared to 41% in April) expecting franchisee
profitability to improve. This drop in sentiment is
alarming. Service providers expect further deterioration
(with a net -15% compared with -12% in April) in franchisee
profitability over the coming year.
Franchisors
and service providers, alike, are less confident about the
year ahead for franchisors and franchisees than they were in
April. Moreover, both groups reveal falling (and worrying)
sentiment across a number of key franchising performance
indicators. Franchisors and associated franchisees are
finding trading difficult – exacerbated by increasing
competition, falling business and consumer confidence and
spending, cheaper imports, rising costs and falling margins.
As the comments indicate sales levels are challenging for many systems across retail and service sectors. However there are exceptions, including retail grocery, freight, travel and computer repair examples. Comments are typified by one service provider who notes “[c]onditions should get no better but also no worse. It's a matter of continuing to ‘hang on’...”
Overall, conditions again remain tough for franchisors and franchisees alike.
ENDS