franchising

Financing

Why there are so many big franchise disputes right now

This week’s episode of the RB podcast “A Deeper Dive” features restaurant consultant John Gordon, talking about franchise disputes at McDonald’s, Subway and 7-Eleven.

Marketing

Yum Brands and the University of Louisville start a franchising education program

The Yum Center for Global Franchise Excellence will focus on recruiting and educating people of color and women on franchising.

The dispute is the latest one between a franchisor and its operators over hours requirements as restaurants struggle to maintain staff.

The chain is giving operators whose agreements come up for renewal a choice: Accept new terms more favorable to the company or pay a 10% royalty rate.

McDonald’s, Subway and 7-Eleven, three of the biggest franchises in the world, are facing major disputes with their operators. RB's The Bottom Line takes a look at all three.

The Chicago-based burger giant is enjoying strong sales. But franchisee unrest and discrimination lawsuits is marring that success, says RB's The Bottom Line.

Three quarters of operators surveyed by the company’s franchisee association said they would support legal action against the company over $70 million in technology fees.

Many of the sandwich chain’s operators are simply waiting for their leases to end so they can walk away, some operators say. RB’s The Bottom Line examines why.

A group of operators is asking the company’s shareholders to cut its franchise fees to 4.5% from 8%. Its royalties are higher than other sandwich chains.

The operators say graveyard sales barely cover the staffing cost. It's the latest indication of a shortage of workers hurting operations.

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