Posts Tagged ‘Write’
Franchise operations manuals may seem daunting, especially for a company that has never written an operations manual before. Bewildered by the new business of franchising, with its legal requirements, franchise disclosure documents, operations manuals, training programs, etc., many companies delegate responsibility to a high-priced franchise consultant.
But using someone to write your franchise operations manual who knows literally nothing about your business, never makes any sense when everything is considered objectively. And, besides a hefty price tag of ,000 or more to write the manuals, using franchise consultants brings another, expensive result – legal risk. Here are some drafting tips and strategies from a recognized, international franchise expert.
Why Franchise Consultants Are Risky Business Paying someone who knows nothing about your business, and having them learn it from scratch at your expense is really just common sense. Using franchise consultants for what is a relatively easy and straightforward task has never made any sense – except to the franchise consultants who charge exorbitant amounts to write an operations manual. It’s one of those little franchise secrets that the consultants don’t ever mention or discuss.
Using a franchise consultant to write a franchise operations manual also carries legal risk. The principal legal risk comes from including inappropriate topics, chapters and policies that are commonly found in company-owned, chain operations manuals. If these are included, as they often are in franchise operations manuals, very significant franchise liability issues arise. Because the franchise consultants are not franchise attorneys or experts, they are entirely oblivious to this risk. They don’t know where the bullets come from in franchise litigation. As a testifying and consulting franchise expert, I routinely find franchise operations manuals drafted by franchise consultants and do-it-yourself manuals containing inappropriate chapters or topics. And, because they rely on boilerplate manuals used for other clients, where (hopefully) all instances of burgers, for example, are searched and replaced with tax returns, the end result is not only dangerous – it is also very mediocre. Giving a mediocre operations manual to a franchise owner who has invested hundreds of thousands (or in some cases millions) of dollars in your franchise model is definitely not the best way to start or ensure a smooth franchise relationship.
The Best Practice Approach To Drafting Franchise Operations Manuals Besides the expensive and legally risky approach there is another, best franchise practice approach based on almost three decades of writing, editing and reviewing hundreds of franchise operations manuals. The essence of this approach is also common sense – letting the true expert in your business write the manual. Typically that person is the founder of the business, or a small team of management personnel who know business operations inside and out. While a franchise expert should be involved in the process, the expert’s role should be limited to a planning and editing capacity.
Three Easy Steps For Drafting A Franchise Operations Manual The drafting process begins with planning and developing the Table of Contents for the franchise operations manual. This includes making sure all the appropriate chapters and topics are included, and the inappropriate ones are not. Knowledge of franchise management best practices is essential here, and that’s why a franchise expert’s input and planning is so important. Because most franchise operations manuals are incorporated by reference in the franchise agreement (which is a franchise industry best practice) the franchise contract is also reviewed. Some operations-specific information may be inadvertently included in the contract by the attorneys, which is not a good thing. This needs to be moved out or appropriately amended.
The second step is giving the person(s) within your company who have drafting responsibility samples of operations manual writing styles, guidelines and instructions. With these, they can begin drafting each chapter of the manual using their extensive operational knowledge of the day-to-day, week-to-week, etc. aspects of your business.
The third and final step is having the franchise expert review each chapter as it is drafted and comment on the professionalism and sufficiency of the chapters from a franchise industry best practices and franchise operator perspective.
Summary The first couple chapters are typically the hardest to draft, as you or your management personnel learn and apply operations manual drafting techniques under the guidance of a professional editor. But after that, it’s smooth sailing through the balance of the document. This approach produces a professional, easy to use and update franchise operations manual. It also ensures the most efficient use of resources and talent, and eliminates having to pay a franchise consultant ,000 or more for this relatively simple task. Whether or not a company ultimately franchises, the process of planning, documenting and implementing standardized operating procedures and systems via operations manuals, like blue chip franchise and non-franchised companies do, makes any firm operate more efficiently and competitively. In a franchise environment, it ensures consistent and uniform operations, helping personnel with different skills learn to perform tasks in a consistent manner throughout the franchise network. Finally, it’s important to realize the process of writing a franchise operations manual never stops. As the business model evolves, so must the operations manual – the ultimate reason why writing the manual yourself to begin with makes imminent common sense. As one franchise company executive observed “I found that not only was writing my own operations manual a cost savings; it was imperative.”
copyright 2008-2009, Kevin B. Murphy, B.S., M.B.A., J.D. – all rights reserved
For further information, visit the Franchise Foundations website
Tags: Affordable, Easy, Franchise, Manual, Manuals, Operations, Steps, Three, Write Posted in Franchise | No Comments »
We are all in the know when it comes to the sheer power and efficacy of online marketing through article publication. I’d even say that article marketing is the most potent and cost-effective internet advertising tactic that has been conceptualized since the dawn of the digital world.
The fact minus the fluff, if you’re operating an online Small Business Ideas venture, you have to use article marketing.
Nevertheless, one of the most asked questions I receive is this: how can I write an article?
This reveals that though most online businessmen realize that they have to use article marketing, not all of them are capable enough to write an internet-ready piece of informative work.
Therefore, I have prepared some easy-to-follow steps on how you can craft the most suitable article for internet marketing purposes.
1. Know the topic you want to discuss with your article.
2. Don’t settle for a general topic. Break it down to a more specific subject that people will be interested in. Just to illustrate, don’t settle for the broad subject of “dogs.” Try to determine a sub-topic that will capture the interest of the market you will be targeting. As is often the case, this sub-topic refers to a specific demand, like “dog training” for dog owners who are experiencing difficulty when it comes to living with their unruly canine companions, or “dog grooming” for cleanliness-compulsive dog owners who can’t live with the smell of their untidy canine friends. Try to determine a sub-topic that will win the imagination. This is critical. A lot of articles fail because they don’t serve a more tangible matter.
3. Because the sub-topic should indicate a need, your article should share a solution. However, depending on the usage of your article, the answer you will discuss will vary. To illustrate, if you’re going to use the article to market a Small Business Ideas, practice restraint on the answer you will share. Your aim, in such a case, is to provide the impression that you are an expert in the field, and entice your readers to consider what you have to offer. Keep this in mind throughout the writing process.
4. Create a title that is easy to understand and at the same time is exciting. Internet users will visit your article if they will be hooked by its title. If not, no one will get to read what you have prepared.
5. Remember that each article has 3 fundamental parts: the opening, the body, and the conclusion. The introduction will state to your audience what your article is all about. You can deliver a surprising fact, a gut-wrenching statistic, or a humorous anecdote to shake your readers into knowing that yes, the author is the a true expert in the field. The body will explore the message you wish to share, of course. And the conclusion will review the problem, the given solution, as well as interject some calls to action (i.e. click my link) if applicable.
6. What is the right length for articles of this nature? I’d say that 300 to 750 words would be perfect. This will allow you to get your Small Business Ideas message out.
Tags: Article, Business, Ideas, Small, Write Posted in Business Ideas | No Comments »
Franchise operations manuals may seem daunting, especially for a company that has never written an operations manual before. Bewildered by the new business of franchising, with its legal requirements, franchise disclosure documents, operations manuals, training programs, etc., many companies delegate responsibility to a high-priced franchise consultant.
But using someone to write your franchise operations manual who knows literally nothing about your business, never makes any sense when everything is considered objectively. And, besides a hefty price tag of $20,000 or more to write the manuals, using franchise consultants brings another, expensive result – legal risk. Here are some drafting tips and strategies from a recognized, international franchise expert.Why Franchise Consultants Are Risky BusinessPaying someone who knows nothing about your business, and having them learn it from scratch at your expense is really just common sense. Using franchise consultants for what is a relatively easy and straightforward task has never made any sense – except to the franchise consultants who charge exorbitant amounts to write an operations manual. It’s one of those little franchise secrets that the consultants don’t ever mention or discuss.Using a franchise consultant to write a franchise operations manual also carries legal risk. The principal legal risk comes from including inappropriate topics, chapters and policies that are commonly found in company-owned, chain operations manuals. If these are included, as they often are in franchise operations manuals, very significant franchise liability issues arise. Because the franchise consultants are not franchise attorneys or experts, they are entirely oblivious to this risk. They don’t know where the bullets come from in franchise litigation. As a testifying and consulting franchise expert, I routinely find franchise operations manuals drafted by franchise consultants and do-it-yourself manuals containing inappropriate chapters or topics. And, because they rely on boilerplate manuals used for other clients, where (hopefully) all instances of burgers, for example, are searched and replaced with tax returns, the end result is not only dangerous – it is also very mediocre. Giving a mediocre operations manual to a franchise owner who has invested hundreds of thousands (or in some cases millions) of dollars in your franchise model is definitely not the best way to start or ensure a smooth franchise relationship.The Best Practice Approach To Drafting Franchise Operations ManualsBesides the expensive and legally risky approach there is another, best franchise practice approach based on almost three decades of writing, editing and reviewing hundreds of franchise operations manuals. The essence of this approach is also common sense – letting the true expert in your business write the manual. Typically that person is the founder of the business, or a small team of management personnel who know business operations inside and out. While a franchise expert should be involved in the process, the expert’s role should be limited to a planning and editing capacity.Three Easy Steps For Drafting A Franchise Operations ManualThe drafting process begins with planning and developing the Table of Contents for the franchise operations manual. This includes making sure all the appropriate chapters and topics are included, and the inappropriate ones are not. Knowledge of franchise management best practices is essential here, and that’s why a franchise expert’s input and planning is so important. Because most franchise operations manuals are incorporated by reference in the franchise agreement (which is a franchise industry best practice) the franchise contract is also reviewed. Some operations-specific information may be inadvertently included in the contract by the attorneys, which is not a good thing. This needs to be moved out or appropriately amended.The second step is giving the person(s) within your company who have drafting responsibility samples of operations manual writing styles, guidelines and instructions. With these, they can begin drafting each chapter of the manual using their extensive operational knowledge of the day-to-day, week-to-week, etc. aspects of your business.The third and final step is having the franchise expert review each chapter as it is drafted and comment on the professionalism and sufficiency of the chapters from a franchise industry best practices and franchise operator perspective. SummaryThe first couple chapters are typically the hardest to draft, as you or your management personnel learn and apply operations manual drafting techniques under the guidance of a professional editor. But after that, it’s smooth sailing through the balance of the document. This approach produces a professional, easy to use and update franchise operations manual. It also ensures the most efficient use of resources and talent, and eliminates having to pay a franchise consultant $20,000 or more for this relatively simple task. Whether or not a company ultimately franchises, the process of planning, documenting and implementing standardized operating procedures and systems via operations manuals, like blue chip franchise and non-franchised companies do, makes any firm operate more efficiently and competitively. In a franchise environment, it ensures consistent and uniform operations, helping personnel with different skills learn to perform tasks in a consistent manner throughout the franchise network. Finally, it’s important to realize the process of writing a franchise operations manual never stops. As the business model evolves, so must the operations manual – the ultimate reason why writing the manual yourself to begin with makes imminent common sense. As one franchise company executive observed “I found that not only was writing my own operations manual a cost savings; it was imperative.”
copyright 2008-2009, Kevin B. Murphy, B.S., M.B.A., J.D. – all rights reserved
For further information, visit the Franchise Foundations website
Tags: Affordable, Easy, Franchise, Manual, Manuals, Operations, Steps, Three, Write Posted in Franchise | No Comments »
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