« Mortgage Fraud News | Main | Direct Selling Association's Position Against Truth in Advertising »

What can You Learn at Franchise Exhibitions?

The Thinking Man sculpture at Musée Rodin in Paris

Image via Wikipedia

Jason Gehrke, writing at his blog at Smart Company, has some interesting but incomplete ideas about getting value from attending a franchise trade show.

First, there is an interesting idea.

"Take your spouse/partner/significant other.

Even if one of you will be the driving force behind any future business investment, it is more than likely that the assets of BOTH of you will need to be staked to finance it, so the decision-making process should involve both of you from start to finish."

This is good advice.  Couples, even if one is going to be the silent financial partner, should discuss the opportunity in full.

But there is a catch.  See if you can spot it.  Jason also writes:

"Beware the glib sales pitch.

The smoother the pitch, the rougher the ride could be as a franchisee afterwards.

You are not buying a household appliance or some other low-value item that can be replaced under warranty if it doesn't work.

You are buying a business investment, a financial relationship with a business partner (the franchisor) for a number of years and which involves a contract full of obligations you must be prepared to accept.

Buying a franchise is not like buying a toaster or a fridge, so a different approach should apply.

If you feel the sales approach is too strong, then walk away."

I will absolutely guarantee you that if both husband and wife here a glib or smooth pitch, and one of them falls for it, it will be next to impossible for the other person to talk his or her partner out of the upcoming financial disaster.


In my experience, virtually every franchise fraud or business opportunity fraud, the individuals who were engaged by the lies had a very uneasy feeling about the opportunity - but were powerless to ignore it.

Zemanta Pixie

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.bizop.ca/MT-4.21-en/mt-tb.cgi/1668

Ads

Ratings

ABA Advertising Law Blogs

Law Blogs - Blog Top Sites Featured in Alltop

Recommended Reading

Ads

How to Subscribe

Privacy Policy

Subscribing allows you to be updated with either email or RSS, automatically and without having to return to the site. You will never have concerns about privacy or spam.

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

feed.jpg