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Franchise and Business Opportunities
Want to be your own boss? A franchise or business opportunity may sound
appealing, especially if you have limited resources or business experience.
However, you could lose a significant amount of money if you don't investigate a
business carefully before you buy. The Federal Trade Commission's Franchise and
Business Opportunity Rule requires franchise and business opportunity sellers to
give you specific information to help you make an informed decision.
Use the FTC Rule
A franchise or business opportunity seller must give you a detailed
disclosure document at least 10 business days before you pay any money or
legally commit yourself to a purchase. You can use these disclosures to compare
a particular business with others you may be considering or simply for
information. The disclosure document includes:
- names, addresses, and telephone numbers of at least 10 previous purchasers
who live closest to you;
- a fully audited financial statement of the seller;
- background and experience of the business's key executives;
- cost of starting and maintaining the business; and
- the responsibilities you and the seller will have to each other once
you've invested in the opportunity.
If the seller doesn't give you a disclosure document, ask why. Verify the
explanation with an attorney, a business advisor or the FTC by calling its
toll-free helpline at 1-877-FTC-HELP (877-382-4357). Even if the business is not
legally required to provide a disclosure document, you still may want one for
your own information.
Get All the Facts
Before you buy a business:
- Study the disclosure document and proposed contract carefully.
- Interview current owners in person. (They should be listed in the
disclosure document.) Visiting them in person may help you identify any that
are "shills" — people paid to give favorable reports. Don't rely on a list of
references selected by the company because it may contain shills. Ask owners
and operators how the information in the disclosure document matches their
experiences with the company.
- Investigate claims about your potential earnings. Some companies may claim
that you'll earn a certain income or that existing franchisees or business
opportunity purchasers earn a certain amount. Companies making earnings
representations must provide you with the written basis for their claims. Be
suspicious of any company that does not show you in writing how it computed
its earnings claims.
- Sellers also must tell you in writing the number and percentage of owners who
have done as well as they claim you will. Keep in mind that broad sales claims
about successful areas of business — "Be a part of our $4 billion industry,"
for example — may have no bearing on your likelihood of success. Also,
recognize that once you buy the business, you may be competing with franchise
owners or independent business people with more experience than you.
- Shop around. Compare franchises with other business opportunities. Some
companies may offer benefits not available from the first company you
considered. The Franchise Opportunities Handbook, published annually by the
U.S. Department of Commerce, describes more than 1,400 companies that offer
franchises. Contact those that interest you. Request their disclosure
documents and compare their offerings.
- Listen carefully to the sales presentation. Some sales tactics should signal
caution. For example, if you are pressured to sign immediately "because prices
will go up tomorrow," or "another buyer wants this deal," slow down. A seller
with a good offer doesn't use high-pressure tactics. Under the FTC rule, the
seller must wait at least 10 business days after giving you the required
documents before accepting your money or signature on an agreement. Be wary if
the salesperson makes the job sound too easy. The thought of "easy money" may
be appealing, but success generally requires hard work.
- Get the seller's promises in writing. Any oral promises you get from a
salesperson should be written into the contract you sign. If the salesperson
says one thing but the contract says nothing about it or says something
different, it's the contract that counts. If a seller balks at putting oral
promises in writing, be alert to potential problems and consider doing
business with another firm.
- Consider getting professional advice. Ask a lawyer, accountant, or business
advisor to read the disclosure document and proposed contract. The money and
time you spend on professional assistance, and research — such as phone calls
to current owners — could save you from a bad investment decision.
The FTC works for the consumer to prevent fraudulent, deceptive and unfair
business practices in the marketplace and to provide information to help
consumers spot, stop, and avoid them. To file a complaint or to get free
information on consumer issues, visit www.ftc.gov or call toll-free,
1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. The FTC enters Internet,
telemarketing, identity theft, and other fraud-related complaints into
Consumer Sentinel, a secure, online database available to hundreds of civil
and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.
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