Week 1: Biscuit Belly & The Coder School
Fast casual brunch & a low investment education franchise
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To franchise fans,
Welcome to the first edition of Franchise Breakdowns. To those who have been subscribed and patiently waiting for the last few weeks, thank you!
This newsletter will be an evolving product, with the goal of breaking down promising young franchises, and eventually enabling entrepreneurs interested in franchising to connect with one another.
Today’s edition contains Biscuit Belly, a fast-casual brunch franchise, and The Coder School, an education franchise that teaches kids aged 7-18 how to code.
Biscuit Belly’s first corporate location opened in 2019, but it already has a fantastic brand and strong early backing from multi-unit operators. I’m convinced that if IHOP could reinvent itself, it would try to be Biscuit Belly.
The Coder School has a low investment profile for a retail franchise, a clear niche it’s targeting, and healthy growth since it started franchising in 2015. Education franchises in general fared okay during covid as they were able to pivot to online classes, and The Coder School was no different.
On to the breakdowns👇
LEGAL DISCLAIMER: DO NOT CONSIDER ANYTHING WRITTEN AS INVESTMENT ADVICE. IF YOU DECIDE TO PURCHASE A FRANCHISE, YOU MUST DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH. FRANCHISES, LIKE ANY INVESTMENT, CAN RESULT IN LOSING ALL YOUR MONEY.
Biscuit Belly
Background
Headquartered in Louisville, Kentucky
First corporate owned restaurant opened in June 2019
Serves breakfast + lunch, alcohol, and is typically in 2,800 - 3,000 sq ft facilities
Number of Units
4 locations open (3 corporate, one franchised)
15 units in development across Georgia, Alabama, Kentucky, and Tennessee
Fees, Expenses (2020 FDD)
Franchise Fee: $30,000
Royalty: 5% of gross revenue for first 2 years, 6% there on after
Brand Promotion Fund: 0.75% of gross revenue, ability to increase up to 4%
Initial Investment (2020 FDD)
$641,500 - $991,000
Leasehold improvements make up $250k - $400k of the range
Furniture, fixtures, and equipment make up $250k - $300k of the range
The above range includes your franchise fee and $40k - 60k of working capital for your first 3 months of operations
Financial Performance (2020 FDD)
The FDD shows financials for the 3 corporate owned locations. Location 1 opened June ‘19, while the 2nd and 3rd opened in 2020 and thus were heavily impacted by covid.
With that in mind, the financials I’ve provided below are only based on pre-covid performance, specifically highlighting the first location’s performance from June 2019 - January 2020. It is my belief that these numbers are a more significant indicator of it’s potential performance, as covid and associated lockdowns are not a permanent circumstance.
*Prime costs: Includes COGS, management salaries, hourly wages, and payroll taxes
**Rent was NOT provided, but I priced it at $30/sq ft at 3,200 sq ft to provide us with a conservative model
The Wolf’s Take 🍟
The average monthly operating income I calculated of $37,586 has just about all expenses accounted for (including my own estimate of a high priced rent), but does not include local marketing and any small miscellaneous expenses.
To keep the model conservative (I’d rather underestimate potential income and be pleasantly surprised than disappointed), let’s pretend the operating income is $30,000/month after local marketing and miscellaneous expenses are accounted for.
This means Biscuit Belly was on pace to drop $360,000 to the bottom line in its first 12 months if it weren’t for covid. That’s a healthy profit and would put you on pace to earn the maximum full investment back within 3 years.
The first franchisees they’ve signed are sophisticated multi-unit operators who operate other brands like KFC, Five Guys, Long John Silver’s, and more. The fact that owners of powerhouse brands have jumped in early on Biscuit Belly lends a lot of credibility to them, and for me makes it a brand to watch.
Recent Press
Twitter Watch 👀
Every Friday I tweet out the financials and profitability of a widely known franchise. Two week’s ago, that was Dominos:
I did another one this past Friday covering Auntie Anne’s. Feel free to follow me via the link below if these threads interest you:
https://twitter.com/franchisewolf
The Coder School
Background
Franchising since 2015
Founded in 2014 in Palo Alto, California
Teaches kids aged 7-18 basic coding languages, and progresses to expert topics like 3D, AI, data analysis, and more
Number of Units
47 open and operating as of 2020
Source: Entrpreneur.com
Fees, Expenses (2020 FDD)
Franchise fee: $29,950
Royalty: 5% of gross sales
National Brand Fund: 1% of gross sales
Initial Investment (2020 FDD)
$72,250 - $150,650
The above range includes your franchise fee and $5k - $20k of working capital for your first 3 months of operations
Financial Performance (2020 FDD)
The below financials from The Coder School’s FDD is represented from 21 locations that were open for the full 12 months in 2019.
The Wolf’s Take 🍟
The average EBITDA of $82,176 per school is solid, given that it could mean earning 50% of your initial investment back annually once fully ramped.
There is room to the upside as well, with the highest performing location bringing in $234k of EBITDA, which of course is a fantastic return
This is a smaller investment as far as retail franchises go, and obviously $80,000 in profit on a single location won’t make you rich. But it’s still early days for The Coder School, and buying out a large territory could yield plenty of profit if you think of what multiple locations at scale can produce.
At 47 locations open at the end of 2020, there is still plenty of room for expansion. We know from franchises like Mathnasium (1,000+ locations nationwide) that education brands have a high ceiling for unit volume.
With the demand for digital products and services increasing every day, coding is a skill that will likely be needed for years to come.
Recent Press
That’s it for this week’s Franchise Breakdowns. Feel free to reply with any questions or feedback, or leave a comment. If someone sent this your way and you haven’t subscribed yet, you can also do that below. Thanks and see you next week!
NOTICE REGARDING FRANCHISE INFORMATION
The Wolf of Franchises does NOT guarantee the financial performance of any franchise mentioned. The decision to purchase a licensed affiliate or franchise must be based on your own independent research. The Wolf of Franchises is not liable for any representation made by an affiliate, associate, marketing material, or Franchise Disclosure Document of a franchise with respect to real estate, financial, operations, or marketing performance of the business being acquired.
This information is not intended as an offer to sell, or the solicitation of an offer to buy, a franchise. It is for informational purposes only, and any financial data and/or projections is clearly based upon information provided by franchises in their respective Franchise Disclosure Document. The offer of a franchise can only be made through the delivery of a franchise disclosure document, from a certified seller of the brand, which The Wolf of Franchises makes no claim to be. Do not consider any information here as a guarantee of financial performance. The Wolf of Franchises has no affiliation or relationship of any kind with any of the brands covered in this newsletter, but simply provides data that is publicly available online or in Franchise Disclosure Documents.
All data from Franchise Disclosure Document’s is based on past performance, and if you were to purchase a franchise covered in the Wolf of Franchises newsletter, it is entirely possible that you lose your entire investment and go bankrupt.