My dad wants to put some of his money into a franchise...

Yeah, a liquor store would be nice. Even if you failed, it's not like you would lose too much money. Isn't it pretty tough getting a liquor license though?

My friend's family just sold their liquor store. Multiplier for a liquor store is 3 months; this means that the market only expects a liquor store to be in business for 3 years. You don't have any real competitive advantage and anyone can enter your market.

Best bet would be to open a boutique liquor store selling shit like expensive wines or whisky.
 


Subway has consistently outperformed McD's the past few years. The growth for them has been crazy.

Depending on the part of the country, looking into something that is Geographically restricted right now and has a huge following (Think WaWa in the northeast - the first one they opened in Orlando is crushing it right now) could be a good look.
 
Gees guys you are making it too hard.
Buy an established business with audited sales going back at least 3 years in the local market.
Find a local bank (okay that's the hard part) that will put up 50% of the purchase price, so you have a second set of eyeballs on the books.
There is always a guy somewhere with an established business that wants to retire. You just gotta find them.
 
Gees guys you are making it too hard.
Buy an established business with audited sales going back at least 3 years in the local market.
Find a local bank (okay that's the hard part) that will put up 50% of the purchase price, so you have a second set of eyeballs on the books.
There is always a guy somewhere with an established business that wants to retire. You just gotta find them.
Where would you find businesses for sale?
 
I keep shit simple, I would build a car wash. A good carwash is probably 500k to build, the land is whatever the land costs. The EPA wants the water collected and filtered, there is probably a cost for that every month. water bills probably are 1k a month or whatever.
 
I keep shit simple, I would build a car wash. A good carwash is probably 500k to build, the land is whatever the land costs. The EPA wants the water collected and filtered, there is probably a cost for that every month. water bills probably are 1k a month or whatever.

This. Plus you can launder money for your friends.
 
Start a church. If done properly, tax free cash cow!

Seriously though, you didn't provide anywhere near enough info to give decent suggestions. Where are you located -- population, demographics, etc. What's already around in terms of competition, any chance of it being located by a facility of some kind (eg. school, hospital, etc.)?
 
Any particular industries? And what's the location? Different stuff works well in different areas...

I have over a dozen large franchise chains as current clients plus quite a few as ex-clients, so I've learned a lot about the industry over the last several years. Profitability varies widely by industry and franchise chain, but here are a few things you might find useful:

-In-home care franchises have pretty high ROIs, on average. They provide non-medical care to people who aren't quite independent but who can live at home with a little extra help. You get much of the profit of nursing homes without the reputation problem or many of the ugly regulations. You also get to work with people who are of a slightly higher caliber than the average fast food employee.

-Research suggests that the larger brand names are the worst deals when it comes to restaurant franchises. I can't remember where I saw the study, but I'll come back and add it if I think of it. They tend to charge way more for their franchise fees and royalties because you're "getting a proven brand". Smaller regional franchises that have a name in their area are often better deals. The big name franchises generally work better for the larger franchisees. They're often private equity-backed, and they can negotiate better deals than your dad could as a one unit investor.

-SBA loan failure rate is a matter of public record, and you can find this info nicely organized by franchise. Note that this doesn't include non-SBA funding sources or any of the franchisees who bankrupt themselves to keep their businesses afloat.

-If your dad has an entrepreneurial personality, he probably shouldn't invest in a franchise. It's a formula where you carry out someone else's vision, not an entrepreneurial venture. On the other hand, they can be ok for people who don't mind a good amount of risk, generally modest returns, and a lot of work. He also shouldn't discount how crappy it can be to work, day in and day out, with minimum wage employees (depends on the type of franchise, of course).

There are franchises where they don't require you to be present in the day-to-day business, but a lot of people have told me those also have lower returns and lower success rates (on average). I don't have first-hand data on that, but it would make sense in cases where you're off-site but not big enough to have economies of scale and better negotiating power.

-Watch out for the "my friends all think this is a good idea" franchises. Frozen yogurt has been crazy hot for a few years now, but some areas have a shop on every other corner. Who knows if it will be so hot 5 years from now. If everyone's talking about it, there's a good chance the market is already getting kind of crowded. Full disclosure - I do franchisee lead gen for 3 major chains in this market. This has been one of the highest search volume franchise types for at least a couple years now. It's a good investment for some people, but don't go in with blind optimism and the assumption that it will always be this hot.

Overall, I would advise against franchise investments for MOST people and situations - especially if failure would mean financial ruin/delayed retirement. It works well for some people or the business model wouldn't still be around...but failure rates are high and a lot of people end up disillusioned and/or broke.

Also - I would skip the "franchise consultant" recommendation. Most of them are paid by the franchises to bring in highly qualified leads. Few, if any, are going to give an unbiased opinion.

TLDR - Just give Jon the money already. I'm sure it will find its way over there eventually.
 
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Any recommendations of what he should look at? Max $500k investment.

How about instead of funding something that may or may not work, why not fund something that can actually be his.

I don't know you so I don't know what kind of things you do but why not have him give you the 500K and you build a business online / offline whatever. With 500K you'll have more than enough to test out a few different product ideas and find one that works.

Obviously you need to be honest with yourself too. Can you actually be productive and get things done and not just blow torch his money. If you can then I'd say that's probably the best investment he can ever make.
 
Buy a good business at flippa that you can manage. Your dad as the owner and you will be drawing salary / splitting the profit with him.