Hard work, traditional Scottish garb and a squeegee can take a
business far, but ramping up a fast-growing franchise like Men In Kilts
is not without challenges.
In a piece
last May, we introduced you to the Vancouver business, known for work
crews who wear kilts as they climb ladders to wash windows and clean
gutters.
A 24-year-old Nicholas Brand started the business back in 2002,
finding that he attracted customers and attention when he wore a
hand-sewn kilt on the job. He and a partner franchised it in 2006, and
in 2009, Tressa Wood, a veteran of successful Vancouver-based franchisor
1-800-Got-Junk, came on board as CEO.
The business has ambitious plans to be in every major metro market in
the U.S. and Canada by 2017 – although so far it's got just six
franchises underway. The company, though, recently joined forces with
one of Canada's largest window-washers, which will now convert to the
Men In Kilts brand, and expects a 300 percent increase in system-wide
revenue this year.
But all that said, the journey so far has been "extremely
challenging," according to Wood. "Our internal motto for the past 2
years has been: ‘Men In Kilts will be a huge North American success.
Failure is not an option.'"
So, what sort of challenges has Men In Kilts encountered so far? Wood didn't mind acknowledging them.
"We've had cash problems, we've had partnership conflicts, we've had
doubters call us a joke, we've had partners get scared, spouses get
scared, we've gone months without paychecks, we've had deals come close
then fall apart at the last minute, we had six months with no office to
work from, we've had operational challenges around our expansion into
colder markets, and the list goes on and on," she says.
On days when she would be in the "holy crap what did I get myself
into" stage, she says she would remind herself: "There is a solution.
Figure it out." She'd then laser-focus on the most critical issue, and
make that a priority. "It's daunting, but you have to focus on the right
thing at the right time or you're on your way down."
It helps, she adds, to "only do business with people with integrity
and who… have aligned goals and aren't in it for their own self-interest
to the detriment of others."
And it's important to be that way as a company too, she says. Men In
Kilts recently had a deal fall apart with a franchisee who had paid his
fees and was in his first start-up week. But devastating personal
medical issues arose, and the franchisee could no longer finance the
business, she said.
"He didn't ask for his fees back and -- in spite of the fact we could
have really used the money and had already invested a ton of time and
money -- I decided [to] refund his money," she says. "Simply because it
was the right thing to do, not because I had to."
For other early-stage franchises, Wood (via email) offered a few tips:
- "Keep your eye every single dollar that goes in and goes out. You have to micromanage the &%$# out of your budget."
- "Find the right partner if you need to bring someone else in as an
investor; not just people with money, but people who bring franchising
experience or the network you need. "
- "Get creative, stay focused, try not to take on debt for the first year or two. That's a key. Keep your debt to an absolute minimum for the first few years until you figure things out or you'll invest in the wrong areas."
Men In Kilts says it now has an infrastructure in place in terms of a
centralized sales center, technology and training programs. "It's been
tough getting to where we are, no doubt," Wood says. But, "we're ready
to go big. Phew!"
SOURCE: www.entrepreneur.com
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