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FRANCHISES ARE GIVING VETERANS A BREAK -- Almost
300 businesses provide financial benefits to
honorably
discharged veterans looking to open a franchise.

For more about veterans and franchise
opportunities, use the VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=franchise+franchises&op=or
Story here...
http://www.usatoday.com/money
/smallbusiness/2008-03-03-veterans-franchises_N.htm
Story below:
-------------------------
Franchises give veterans a break
By Erin Kutz, USA TODAY
On a typical weekday, Jason Dethier puts his
5-year-old daughter on the school bus and watches his two younger children
at home, while his wife, Marka, leads fitness classes for bouncing
toddlers at the Rolly Pollies gym franchise they opened three months ago.
At lunchtime, they switch roles.
Their lives might have taken a different course if not for a magazine
story they ran across last summer when they were interviewing for
corporate jobs ahead of their discharges from the Air Force. The story was
about two Navy veterans who had left corporate life to start Rolly Pollies,
a young company that was franchising gymnasiums and activity centers for
young children.
Article continues below:
(use left/right arrows in screen to view more videos)
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John Mann and Joseph Dondero had started the
first Rolly Pollies in Severna Park, Md., in 2002 and were looking for
entrepreneurs to take their concept to other communities.
"It looked like fun," Marka Dethier says. "We joked about how funny it
would be if we did this."
The Dethiers opened their Summerville, S.C., franchise in November, using
the year's salaries they received after taking buyouts from the Air Force
and a small loan, Marka says.
Rolly Pollies helped, too. The company actively recruits veterans to their
business by providing them a 15% discount off the regular $40,000
franchise fee. Veterans own five of the seven Rolly Pollies franchises
currently open, Mann says.
Rolly Pollies is just one of almost 300 businesses providing financial
benefits to honorably discharged veterans looking to open a franchise,
through the Veterans Transition Franchise Initiative, or VetFran. The
program is a collaboration of the International Franchise Association (IFA),
the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, the Small Business Administration
(SBA) and The Veterans Corp.
More than 1,000 veterans have opened franchises through the program, says
Terry Hill, vice president of communications for IFA. A typical VetFran
discount ranges from 15% to 25% off franchising fee costs. Total start-up
costs can run from $15,000 to millions of dollars, he says.
Variety of participants
VetFran companies offer assistance to recently discharged veterans as well
as those out of the armed services for decades. They include fitness
centers, repair services and restaurants, such as:
•UPS (UPS) and its Mail Boxes Etc. stores, which has opened the most
franchises through VetFran, 135.
•Pizza chain Little Caesar Enterprises, which offers the more moderate
$10,000 discount to all qualifying veterans, but gives a $68,000 break to
service-disabled veterans. Little Caesars founder Michael Ilitch created
that discount in honor of Robbie Doughty, an Army officer who lost both
legs while serving in Iraq, according to Little Caesars President David
Scrivano. Start-up costs for a Little Caesars franchise range from $50,000
to $150,000, according to VetFran's website.
•Aamco Transmissions, which takes $5,000 off the franchise fee of $31,500,
VetFran's website shows. Start-up costs for an Aamco franchise are
$60,000.
VetFran began during the 1991 Gulf War but ended about as quickly as the
war did, Hill says. It relaunched after the Sept. 11 attacks.
Most VetFran franchisees require additional financial assistance and loans
through agencies such as the SBA, Hill says. The SBA guarantees more than
$1 billion in small-business loans annually to veterans.
The average Rolly Pollies franchisee faces start-up costs of $75,000 to
$90,000, Mann says. The total investment required for a franchise can run
from $200,000 to $290,000.
The money from their military buyout and a loan were critical to get
started, Marka Dethier says. But they would have been less likely to open
the franchise without the $6,000 veterans discount, she says.
"We took one look at (Rolly Pollies) and thought this would be huge," she
says. "But this was scary for us because we were used to the steady income
and health care. … In the military, I could have a good day or a bad day,
and I'm going to get a paycheck."
While Rolly Pollies does not lend any direct financial aid once the
veterans' franchises are up and running, it will extend the 15% start-up
discount if a veteran wants to open a second franchise, Mann says.
Rolly Pollies' preference for military veteran franchisees is an extension
of the camaraderie experienced in the military, Mann says.
"The money helps, but it's also the mentality," he says. "We've got the
instant mutual respect for one another. They really trust that we're
looking out for them and that we're going to do everything in our power
for them to succeed."
Market for military values
The original VetFran program was founded by Donald Dwyer, the now-deceased
owner of several home-repair companies, who sought veterans for positions
in his companies because he valued the work ethic and management skills
they learned in military service. Last month, the company even created a
director of military development position to specifically target veterans
for recruitment.
"Sometimes it doesn't work out perfectly," says Dina Dwyer-Owens, Dwyer's
daughter and CEO of The Dwyer Group. "But veterans just really absorb
systems. We haven't had a big challenge with them."
Another Rolly Pollies franchisee, former Marine pilot Marty Fisher, opened
his Mooresville, N.C., franchise in July and expects the business to turn
its first profit this quarter. He has about 200 children enrolled in his
fitness programs.
The Dethiers haven't seen profits for their fitness center yet, but they
are just shy of covering all expenses, Jason says. They have about 100
children enrolled in their nine-week fitness classes; parents pay $13 a
week for each child.
The Dethiers hope their business will be profitable by the end of the
year, Jason says. For now, they're enjoying the family time they sought
with a return to civilian life.
"We're working more hours in aggregate," he says. "But the quality of time
spent with the children is a lot better. We can bring them to work if
necessary. It's a nice touch, something you can't do at a normal job."
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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