Franchises - A proven Business System

Written by Ernie Horning


Franchises offerrepparttar first time business owner a proven and successful business opportunity. If you are looking to start your own business forrepparttar 103292 first time, franchises provide you withrepparttar 103293 greatest opportunity for success. When you purchase a franchise fromrepparttar 103294 "Franchisor", and become a "Franchisee", you are not only purchasing a business, but a complete business system. Franchises have over a 90% success rate, compared to about a 15% success rate for those indidviduals starting their own businesses from scratch. Franchises have spent years developing and modifying their systems of doing business, and they pass that "trail and error" knowledge on to their Franchisees. Initial training exists for every aspect ofrepparttar 103295 business, which can last anywhere from 1 to 2 weeks. Training usually takes place at one ofrepparttar 103296 franchises existing locations or their corporate office. Training may consist ofrepparttar 103297 day to day "hands-on" positions required to runrepparttar 103298 business, to marketing, hiring, purchasing, bookkeeping, management and supervisory techniques.

Assistance is available with "demographic" reports to aid in selectingrepparttar 103299 right location. Support is also available for lease negotiation and "build outs", if necessary. Pre-opening strategies and marketing materials for newspapers, print-ads, handouts, yellow page advertising, radio and even TV ads are are complete and professional.

5 Steps to Build Stronger Communication and Understanding

Written by Chris Anderson


You have permission to publish this article free of charge, as long asrepparttar resource box is included withrepparttar 103291 article. If you do run my article, a courtesy reply to sean@bizmanualz.com would be greatly appreciated. This article is 927 words long includingrepparttar 103292 resource box. Thanks for your interest.

Part Three of a Four-Part Series

Part One: Process Improvement

Part Two: Core Processes

Next Week: Six Sigma Tools

Did you know that you should always create a process map for every procedure or system of procedures that you develop? And did you know that, like a table of contents, this will create stronger communication and better understanding in your organization?

How do you do this?

Identify Core Processes

Last time, we followedrepparttar 103293 money trail and identified your business’ core processes. We discussed where to best start a change in one of those core processes. And we introducedrepparttar 103294 technique of producing a process map. So this week, let’s take a further look at how to create a process map – and see how it creates knowledge to benefit you and your organization.

Use Process Map as Communication Tool

A process map is a flow diagram ofrepparttar 103295 primary processes within an organization. It very specifically shows you both who and what is involved in a process, as well asrepparttar 103296 requirements for that process to be effective. The primary goal is to userepparttar 103297 map as a communication tool. It is to showrepparttar 103298 sequence of interactions ofrepparttar 103299 elements involved inrepparttar 103300 process. And so process maps are drawn and used by organizations to achieve several benefits:

•Increase process understanding •Clarify process boundaries, ownership and effectiveness measures •Identify process sequences •Isolate core processes, bottlenecks and opportunities for improvement •Clarifyrepparttar 103301 interaction of Customer, Supplier, Management and Operations processes •Provide a tool for training and discussion

In other words, a process map details what happens first, second and third in a process. It shows what happens in each step alongrepparttar 103302 way. And this is drawn in graphical form for easier communication and understanding.

This type of map showsrepparttar 103303 “big picture” of 10-20 core processes within an organization. The map also showsrepparttar 103304 critical elements within each section and its importance withinrepparttar 103305 whole system. And these sections, or bands, are what relaterepparttar 103306 processes to each other AND torepparttar 103307 outside suppliers and customers.

Link Suppliers and Customers

Although there are several ways to draw a process map,repparttar 103308 basic diagram is typically constructed in four bands. And these four bands link together Customers, Primary Processes, Secondary Processes and Suppliers.

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