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What Are the Most Successful Business Services Franchises?

We look at franchise growth and continuity rates to find the business services brands that consistently succeed.

Business services franchises offer professional services to commercial and other business customers. "B2B" franchises tend to offer a little more consistency and resiliancy compared to consumer facing businesses, but like all franchises, there are many great options, and some less than great options. On this page we surface the franchises that most consistently perform by analyzing five-year franchise continuity trends to find the franchises that are growing with the minimum of franchise unit closures. More on our methodology.

# 1

The UPS Store

This ubiquitous franchise brand is quickly becoming a staple, and provides a wide array of business services at their retail locations.

  • Five-Year Continuity Rate: 99.34%
  • Average Unit Revenue: $709,713
  • Average Initial Investment: $362,150
  • Cash Required: $75,000

# 2

Two Men and a Truck

Catering to both consumers and commercial clients, this business has been operating successfully since 1989.

  • Five-Year Continuity Rate: 98.68%
  • Average Unit Revenue: $3,269,399
  • Average Initial Investment: $305,300
  • Cash Required: $80,000

# 3

FASTSIGNS

This franchise is a leader in providing signs, graphic design, and marketing services to businesses.

  • Five-Year Continuity Rate: 98.53%
  • Average Unit Revenue: $998,231
  • Average Initial Investment: $275,325
  • Cash Required: $80,000

# 4

Hommati

This unique franchise helps real estate agents create better listings by providing hi-tech solutions like 3D walkthroughs and drone video.

  • Five-Year Continuity Rate: 98.38%
  • Average Unit Revenue: $77,712
  • Average Initial Investment: $72,244
  • Cash required: $70,000

# 5

Minuteman Press

One of the most well known brands in digital printing and graphics, this business services franchise has a long history of consistent success.

  • Five-Year Continuity Rate: 97.54%
  • Average Unit Revenue: $681,570
  • Average Initial Investment: $190,279
  • Cash Required: $50,000

# 6

Real Property Management

This property management business has been franchising since 2006 and continues to grow year after year.

  • Five-Year Continuity Rate: 97.10%
  • Average Unit Revenue: $1,090,804
  • Average Initial Investment: $178,968
  • Cash Required: $150,000

# 7

Junk King

Servicing both businesses and consumers, this franchise offers a powerful marketing platform and call center to deliver customers.

  • Five-Year Continuity Rate: 96.79%
  • Average Unit Revenue: $758,880
  • Average Initial Investment: $136,650
  • Cash Required: $50,000

# 8

iTrip

This vacation rental and property management company is riding the vacation rental wave and quickly grabbing market share.

  • Five-Year Continuity Rate: 96.65%
  • Average Unit Revenue: $2,611,626
  • Average Initial Investment: $130,000
  • Cash Required: $50,000

# 9

Team Logic IT

Team Logic provides managed IT services and consulting for businesses without sufficient in-house IT staff.

  • Five-Year Continuity Rate: 96.57%
  • Average Unit Revenue: $587,470
  • Average Initial Investment: $129,654
  • Cash Required: $50,000

# 10

CMIT Solutions

CMIT is a leading provider of IT services and their aim is to help business owners increase their profits through the use of technology.

  • Five-Year Continuity Rate: 96.26%
  • Average Unit Revenue: $437,644
  • Average Initial Investment: $128,450
  • Cash Required: $150,000

# 11

Signarama

This franchise boasts over 25 years of experience in signs, graphics, and banners and services businesses from 700 locations in 65 countries.

  • Five-Year Continuity Rate: 96.26%
  • Average Unit Revenue: $798,517
  • Average Initial Investment: $280,424
  • Cash Required: $60,000

# 12

Redbox+

Redbox+ combines roll-off dumpsters and portable toilets for construction sites, and this model is proving to be a success.

  • Five-Year Continuity Rate: 96.02%
  • Average Unit Revenue: $479,611
  • Average Initial Investment: $649,956
  • Cash Required: $250,000
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Our Methodology

Measuring the success of a franchise brand often centers on its unit growth, where the number of franchise units are tracked over time to understand how often new franchisees enter the market. Unit growth rates are a great way to determine how well a franchise business performs, because the best franchise businesses will consistently grow over time as new business owners open franchise units in their own markets. But growth rate is only part of the story - we also want to consider how many existing franchise units continue operating each year.

Consistently opening new franchise units is a great sign of a successful franchise business, but potential franchise owners also need to know that these units continue to be successful over time. So, we start our analysis with franchise brands that have above average growth rate, less than $1MM average initial investment, and at least 100 franchise units, then analyze each brand's continuity rate.

What Is "Continuity Rate"?

Continuity rate refers to the percentage of existing franchise units that continue to operate each year. A sign of a successful franchise system, consistently high continuity rates mean very few, if any, franchisees wind up closing their business.

How Do We Measure It?

We start with data from the Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD) that franchisors are legally obligated to publish. Each franchise brand must disclose annually how many franchise units were opened, and how many were closed. More specifically, every franchise must disclose how many units were:

  • "Terminated" – Franchise agreements terminated by the franchisor before the end of the term, without any compensation made to the franchisee.
  • "Not Renewed" – Franchise agreements not renewed at the end of the term.
  • "Ceased" – Franchise units that ceased operations for any reason other than the above two.
  • "Reacquired" – Franchise units that transferred ownership from the franchisee to the corporate franchisor.

In each of these cases, the franchisee elected to discontinue operating the franchise unit. There are many reasons a franchisee may choose to end their franchise contract, but generally profitable enterprises will continue to operate, though they may be sold between franchisees. Closing, or transferring to the franchisor may indicate poor performance or an inability to sell to another franchisee.

In the Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD), Item 20 delves into the franchisor’s historical and current data on franchise outlets and franchisee information, including terminated agreements, non-renewals, ceased operations, and reacquired units.

We measure continuity rates by analyzing each franchise brands unit metrics over the past five full years, from 2018 through 2022. We start with the number of operating units at the beginning of each year, then deduct those that closed for any of the above reasons. The result is divided by the total number of franchise units to get a ratio or percentage:

(Total Units – Closed Units) / Total Units = Continuity Rate

We calculate continuity rate for each of the past five years, then take a weighted average to arrive at average annual continuity rate. Franchise brands are ranked by the average, and in the case of a tie, 5-year growth rate is the tie breaker.

Why Exclude Capital Intensive Franchises?

We limit our analysis to those franchises with an average initial investment under $1,000,000. Franchises with very high capital requirements tend to have far longer time horizons, and close at very low rates unless the time frame is expanded to decades. As such, our list would skew towards franchises that are out of reach to most franchise investors.

Why It's Important

When evaluating franchises, unusually high closure rates (low continuity rates) are typically a red flag, and potential indicator of poor performance by the franchisor, franchisees, or both. Franchises with higher continuity rates can help assure potential franchisees that the system is effective, and that the franchisor is diligent about selecting new franchisees that will be a good fit for the business.

Evaluating franchise opportunities is a complex process, but the bottom line is an effective, profitable franchise system will grow, and its franchisees will continue to operate them. To learn more about researching franchises, see our Franchise Learning Center.

Want to see more available franchises? See our Franchise Directory.

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