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Burger King Brand Ambassadors Spread Chain's Message

The fast-food restaurant chain brought business and community leaders together to help attract franchisees.

By David Farkas, Senior Editor -- Chain Leader, 7/1/2009

Burger King Corp. Ambassadors Summit
(From l.) Steve Rafferty, vice president of franchising and business development for Burger King Corp. with Dean Zuccarello, principal, The Cypress Group, and Manny Portuondo, director of franchising East for Burger King Corp.


Burger King's Brand Ambassadors

Barry Blum, attorney, Krass Monroe, a full-service law firm

Mike Deegan, National Franchise Sales, a franchise business brokerage firm

Linda Denny, president, Women's Business Enterprise National Council, a nonprofit representing independent businesses that are majority-owned by one or more women

Albert E. Dotson, chairman, 100 Black Men of America, a nonprofit promoting economic empowerment of the African-American community

George Herrera, president and CEO, Herrera-Cristina Group, a Hispanic-owned management and consulting firm

Michel D. Joblove, attorney, Genovese Joblove & Battista, P.A., a full-service law firm

Armand Kazandjian, attorney, Colas Moreira Kazandjian Zikovsky, a Canadian full-service law firm

Chris Kelleher, principal, Auspex Capital, an investment banking and financial advisory firm

Carmen Ortiz McGhee, president, The Marathon Club, a networking firm for minority business owners

Barry Papazian, attorney, Papazian Heisey Myers, a Toronto-based full-service law firm

Herbert Pinchuk, attorney Robinson Sheppard Shapiro, a Canadian full-service law firm

Chad Spaulding, Trinity Capital, LLC, an investment banking boutique

Dean Zuccarello, principal, The Cypress Group, an investment banking and strategic advisory firm

Burger King Corp. recently invited 13 people with ties to the fast-food restaurant chain to Miami headquarters to share company strategy during a daylong session. Franchise top brass laid out company growth plans, new products and marketing to the group, which included attorneys and business leaders with relationships to existing franchisees and minority communities.

It was the first time they had been formally brought together. "This was a group of folks who'd been influential in our system for some time, and we took this opportunity to formalize our communication with them," says host Steve Rafferty, Burger King vice president of franchising and business development, who dubbed the meeting the Brand Ambassadors Summit.

Its purpose was to help Burger King maintain and grow the franchise base. The company says 1,200 franchisees comprise 90 percent of the system--or roughly 10,000 units--in 74 countries. The company controls 1,400 stores.

Help, We Need Somebody

One of Rafferty's jobs is finding buyers for the 200 franchised units that come up for sale annually. He says his staff handles much of that, but "our thought process was to augment and expand our efforts."

It's not surprising he's looking for help. Given the credit crunch, existing and potential franchisees are finding it difficult to finance franchise deals. "Good deals are getting done; few, but they are getting done," Bernie Siegel, founder and chairman of Siegel Financial Group, told operators in a seminar at the National Restaurant Association Restaurant Hotel-Motel Show in Chicago in May.

Rafferty agrees deals have slowed yet "transactional activity" hasn't completely ground to a halt. So he is inviting lenders to a meeting at headquarters in June. He'll again lay out the company's strategy, he adds.

Franchise consultant and former Stevi B's CEO Jordon Krolick thinks it's crucial for franchisors to reach out to business leaders outside the company. "Maybe it will work, maybe it won't. What's exciting is that Burger King is trying a new idea," he says.

Hooking Up

Relationships play a key role in recruiting franchisees. "They invited me because of my relationship with franchisees," says former Burger King attorney and franchise expert Barry Blum, now with Minneapolis-based law firm Krass Monroe.

"If a businessperson in the Asian community is familiar with someone who's looking for an opportunity like ours, that person can make a clear connection. Burger King and the franchisee benefits," Rafferty maintains.

Burger King spokeswoman Denise Wilson won't disclose how many minority franchisees already operate Burger Kings or the number the chain intends to franchise to minorities, including women.

Blum recalls that the meeting wasn't focused solely on diversity recruitment. "Burger King wanted to make sure they're communicating their message, and that they are top of mind should someone reach out to us," he says.

Says Rafferty: "Frankly, we don't control the flow of transactions. But we want to be ready with qualified franchisees."

 

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