Entrepreneurialism Information

Franchises - Emotional Fulfillment - Control Your Destiny


Does A Franchise Meet Your Needs?

When you think of becoming a businessperson by making the transition from employee to Franchisee, you don't generally think in terms of emotional fulfillment. However, in reality, the evaluation of emotional factors should play a significant role in making that final decision to join the world of the capitalist, or remain in the realm of employee.

Of course, every analysis should include the standard of comparing risk to return. It should include income projections, and cash flows. It should include the analysis of financing avenues, site selection alternatives, and many other objective criteria to lead to a final decision about becoming an entrepreneur. The course of due diligence should be driven by a systematic approach to each of these items.

However, in the end, assuming the objective criteria have been ticked off your list in a satisfactory fashion, it should boil down to emotional fulfillment. After all, we all have a right to be happy. That particular statement "we all have a right to be happy" has changed the course of my life on several occasions. It was one of those statements that was passed casually by an acquaintance over dinner one evening, and ignored by everyone at the table, except it hit me right in the heart. It stuck to me like red on a stop sign. As a result, I have made many important life decisions based on emotional criteria, in addition to objective criteria. If it doesn't pass muster on both fronts then I look for a better course.

There are many employment situations that can meet your emotional needs, wants and desires. Of course, there are also many that do not, and cannot. A full examination of emotional criteria should include the analysis of several items, with the ultimate goal of determining whether your needs can be met by a job, or whether it is more likely they can be met by your own business.

Control Your Own Destiny

The degree of priority that this particular criterion holds for an individual is probably the single most important factor to consider before making the decision to strike out on your own. Just how important is it that you control day-to-day decisions about what you do, and where you do it. How important is it to you to know that you have ultimate control over whether you stay or whether you go at some point.

The reality is that it's not really possible to control your own destiny with a job. Even the most important CEO's must answer to the Board of Directors. In more traditional circumstances, when and where you travel, when you get promoted, how much you earn, and how long you keep your job are items that are simply not in your control. The boss, and his boss, and her boss, control those things. As we have seen, bosses change, as do Boards, and status quo is sent for a topsy-turvy spin. When, and if, those things happen, are generally not in the control of an employee.

As we have seen in recent years, decades really, right-sizing, down-sizing, out-sourcing, and severance packages are the norm of the employment world. The importance of these items, including the degree of control you require over them, should help guide you to your own comfort zone. In addition to a systematic approach to the objective items in making a decision to become an entrepreneur on your own, or to become a Franchisee in a good system, these emotional factors should be ticked off the list as well. Are you satisfied where you are? Can you achieve your goals and dreams in your current situation? Are you more likely to satisfy the need to control your results with your own business? How important is each criteria to you?

Did you have to travel over your son's birthday? Did you have an expense disallowed unfairly? Is the likelihood high or low of the bronze (as opposed to golden) parachute at age 53, with a low chance of a comparable position in the job market? Did you get passed over for a promotion, did you have to work overtime through the Christmas holidays, did you miss your daughter's volleyball tournament because you couldn't get off early on Friday? If these things eat at you, perhaps a change in course is due. If you accept that these things go with the territory of employment, then change may not be necessary.

Of course, as you progress up the ladder of promotion, you gain some additional autonomy for these types of issues. However, you must also try to determine if that next rung also carries an additional risk of termination at some point.

On the other hand, will being in the business you are evaluating help solve the problems that are important to you? Will your business cause the same travel issues? Will the time demands, or strange hours of being a businessperson, be an advantage or disadvantage?

Evaluate these items honestly, and with as much empirical evidence as you can gather, along with the other control issues that matter to you. Then determine which situation meets your goals more appropriately. And determine how important that is to you. Then it's time to move on to the next evaluation criteria.

If you always use the "I deserve to be happy" test with each criterion, and try to determine which scenario is most likely to get you closest to that goal, then you will know which column to tick. If you execute this exercise in a systematic fashion along with a systematic evaluation to the objective criteria, it will help to provide clarity for you in the decision-making process.

The exercise should then be repeated for a whole host of other emotional factors such as financial independence, day-to-day motivation, building an asset of value, appreciation for efforts, fair remuneration for results generated, free time for family & friends, community respect, recognition of achievements, and several others.

The bottom line is you've got to look at ROI, cash flow, the system of support, the value of building a brand, the marketplace, and all of the other objective criteria needed to make a proper decision. However, in addition, you also need to examine what you want out of life, and whether a Franchise will help you get there.

Dennis Schooley B.B.A., C.A.

Dennis Schooley is the Founder of Schooley Mitchell Telecom Consultants, a Professional Services Franchise Company. He writes for publication, as well as for http://schooleymitchell.blogging.com and http://franchises.blogging.com, in the subject areas of Franchising and Technology for the Layman. http://www.schooleymitchell.com


MORE RESOURCES:

CEO of Pininfarina, company that designs Ferraris, dies in ...
New Brunswick Business Journal, Canada - 5 hours ago
"Italy, Turin and the entire Fiat Group have lost a symbol of entrepreneurialism, a man who carried on, and introduced innovations to, the work of his ...


NEWS UPDATE: Olympic-style bid for foreign investment
Money Management, Australia - 15 hours ago
... Bowen said Australians must forgo the world’s lowest tax rate in return for “a system that supports us and that encourages entrepreneurialism”. ...


Retire early Get in shape Buy your dream house Run your own ...
Success Magazine, NY - Jul 28, 2008
I refer to it as social entrepreneurialism. I spoke at the UN this past summer [2007] with a group of young people from all over the world on social ...


UK startups under heavy regulatory burden
SMEweb, UK - Jul 30, 2008
The majority of those surveyed (92%) believe that excessive red tape hinders entrepreneurialism in the UK. The majority of those surveyed (84%) believe that ...


Attacking the stupidity of unfettered gun ownership
Casa Grande Valley Newspapers, AZ - Jul 24, 2008
Most American ingenuity and entrepreneurialism is spent figuring out how to get $30 million bonuses from companies the bonusees have just run into the ...


As with drugs, so with traffic: laissez faire beats nanny state ...
Business Report, South Africa - Jul 28, 2008
I enjoyed Quentin Wray's invocation of drug entrepreneurialism in praise of unsubsidised, unprotected and unregulated wealth creation ("Drug crime shows ...


Entrepreneurial women of colour up for awards
Women in Technology, UK - Jul 25, 2008
... will be among the prizes on offer when the winners are announced on November 20th, during Enterprise Week, a national celebration of entrepreneurialism. ...


Should we penalise firms that price-fix?
nebusiness.co.uk, UK - Jul 22, 2008
And if a company was to capture, say, 80% of its market, shouldn’t we be celebrating the management’s shrewd entrepreneurialism rather than sending for the ...


MLive.com

Shifts in power: Organizations & generations
MLive.com, MI - Jul 30, 2008
Terry Duperon is president of Duperon Corp. in Saginaw and a speaker, author and educator on innovation and entrepreneurialism.


Brits Head Online to Beat the Credit Crunch
MarketWatch - Jul 30, 2008
The spirit of entrepreneurialism has never been stronger than it is now in the UK with programs such as The Apprentice and Dragons Den. ...

Entrepreneurialism - Google News

Good Credit Loans | home | site map | School Bus Clothing | Florida Pool Heating
© 2006