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Whether You’re Selling or Buying a Franchise You Need to Consider an Important Fact

Guest post by: Ed Teixeira

Article Overview: Franchisors planning their franchise sales strategy for the short term need to recognize the impact that unemployment rates have on purchasing power. Those individuals looking to purchase a franchise would be well served to know the employment situation in a territory they are considering.

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Whether You’re Selling or Buying a Franchise You Need to Consider an Important Fact

In areas with higher than normal unemployment rates there is an impact on spending. This change on how and where people spend their money affects everything from durable goods to restaurants. In the case of necessary purchases the impact may be diminished. However, when people have less money to spend, it will have a negative effect on businesses and services. Since most economic experts predict that the U.S. economy won't see a sustained recovery until the end of 2011, franchisors and prospective franchisors should be aware of unemployment data for particular States and markets.

Following is a snapshot of unemployment data sorted by State and Metropolitan Statistical Areas from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. High Unemployment States:

State Unemployment September, 2010

Nevada 14.4%

Michigan 13.0%

California 12.4%

Florida 11.9%

Rhode Island 11.5%

South Carolina 11.0%

Oregon 10.6%

Kentucky 10.1%

Indiana 10.1%

Georgia 10.0%

Arizona 9.7%

States with Lower Unemployment:

Nebraska 4.6%

New Hampshire 5.5%

Kansas 6.6%

Virginia 6.8%

Minnesota 7.0%

Maryland 7.5%

Utah 7.5%

Wisconsin 7.8%

Texas 8.1%

New York 8.3%

Lets zero in on a smaller area:

A Metropolitan Statistical Area is a geographic entity defined by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for use by Federal statistical agencies in collecting, tabulating, and publishing Federal statistics. A metro area contains a core urban area of 50,000 or more population, and a micro area contains an urban core of at least 10,000 (but less than 50,000) population. Each metro consists of one or more counties and includes the counties containing the core urban area, as well as any adjacent counties that have a high degree of social and economic integration (as measured by commuting to work) with the urban core. There are 372 MSAs.

The following table shows the unemployment rates for some large and more recognizable MSA's:

MSA U/E Rate

Washington-Alexandria-DC-VA-MD-WV 5.9%

Albany-Schenectady- Troy NY 6.6%

Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI 6.7%

Austin-Round Rock-San Marcos, Texas 6.8%

Boston-Cambridge-Quincy, Mass 7.3%

Dallas-Ft.Worth-Arlington, Texas 7.9%

Columbus, Ohio 8.2%

New York-Northern NJ- Long Island, NY-NJ-PA 8.5%

Phoenix-Mesa-Glendale, AZ 8.9%

LA-Long Beach-Santa Ana, CA 11.8%

For a complete list of all areas visit the website for Bureau of Labor Statistics

You can use to data to help make decisions regarding franchise sales, future growth or in the case you're considering to franchise in a specific area.

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Home > Franchises > Ed Teixeira > Whether Youre Selling or Buying a Franchise You Need to Consider an Important Fact >
Article Tags: buying a franchise, employment situation, franchise sales, sales strategy, unemployment rates

About the Author: Ed Teixeira
RSS for Ed's articles - Visit Ed's website

Ed Teixeira is a franchise expert with over 32 years in the franchise industry. During his career, Ed has operated franchise companies in diverse industries. He has conducted franchise transactions in Asia, Europe and South America. Ed is the author of "Franchising From The Inside Out" and has spoken on the subject of franchising in the United States and overseas. Ed is currently the President of FranchiseKnowHow,LLC which operates a website that publishes newsletters for franchisees and franchisors.He also provides consulting services. FKH is located  in Stonybrook, NY. www.franchiseknowhow.com Ed can be contacted at 631-246-5782 and at franchiseknowhow@yahoo.com.

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