From YourSITE.com
Franchises - Emotional Fulfillment – The Challenge
By Dennis Schooley, BBA, CA
Jul 12, 2006, 13:18
Does A Franchise Meet Your Needs?
Do you look forward to Friday afternoon or Monday
morning? Perhaps that’s the true litmus test of happiness. If you’re thinking
about the fact that there’s only one day to go before the weekend, when you
just got back from lunch on Wednesday, it may be time for a change. Maybe your
day-to-day activities simply aren’t all that fulfilling. Maybe you’re in a rut,
and it feels like you have to crawl up the side of the Chrysler building to get
out.
I seem to carry a certain amount of guilt on weekends
because I’m always looking forward to Monday morning. I know the next challenge
resides there.
Although I certainly enjoy my leisure time, it seems that
I’m always looking for the next opportunity to rev up, and meet the next
challenge of being in business. It is my belief that the vast majority of us,
all members of the same realm of humanity, miss the opportunity of feeling that
motivation in our work.
On average, each of us gets about 3 billion heartbeats.
We all have to determine what to do with them. If you’re suffering through 35
to 40 hours a week in a job that offers no challenge, perhaps alternatives need
to be examined. Perhaps that’s a lot of blood being pumped nowhere.
Now that’s not to say that many jobs don’t offer that
challenge. Many of society’s best producers are employed, and through that
employment, they help their companies achieve great things. If that’s you, then
these humble thoughts don’t address your situation.
On the other hand, if it seems like it’s just past a
million o’clock, and it’s really just before your morning break on Tuesday,
then it’s probably time for a re-think. Speaking of breaks, I think the last
formal break I took was in 1977. I find that breaks aren’t as much fun as the
business at hand, so why bother? Now that’s got to have some psychoanalysts
seeking me out to slather some wisdom on me like cocoa butter on a sunburn.
That’s the price of loving what you do.
If you are examining alternatives for yourself, and
you’re evaluating a Franchise opportunity, there are many objective factors to
evaluate. In a previous article about ‘Control of Your Destiny’, I discussed
the fact that every analysis should include the standard of comparing risk to
return. It should include income projections, and cash flows. It should include
the analysis of financing avenues, site selection alternatives, and many other objective
criteria to lead to a final decision about becoming an entrepreneur. The course
of due diligence should be driven by a systematic approach to each of these
items.
However, emotional fulfillment must also be evaluated if
you truly wish to make the right decision for yourself. If you have a need to
face challenge, as well as growth in your day, you must determine if your job
can, or will, provide that challenge. Then determine if a Franchise can meet
your need.
In the book titled ‘Trevayne’ by Jonathon Ryder, who is
widely held to be a pseudonym for Robert Ludlum, the main character, of the
same name as the title, said; “I can’t imagine being dead before I’m
President”. Sorry to ruin the book for you if you haven’t read it, but he made
it. Is there a challenge that you need to meet before there is no more
opportunity?
That’s really the question isn’t it? Put in a much
bleaker tone, in a song called ‘Where Am I Going’, Gino Vannelli said “Every
breath I take is farther from youth and closer to death.” Whoa, that makes me
think I shouldn’t be sleeping so much! It also makes me feel that I don’t want
the birch leaves falling on me before I find fulfillment.
Being a true follower of Adam Smith, I can’t imagine
waking up without the drive to provide some type of supply, in order to meet a
market demand.
That’s my self-worth. That’s my reason for clouding a
mirror. That’s why I believe in the credo we have in our business that ‘Good is
the Enemy of Great’.
In your analysis of a Franchise opportunity, determine if
it will provide the challenge that you wish was already in your life. If not,
then don’t do it. Compare your current situation to the situation you can
create for yourself. Some of the related questions include:
- Do you have a
general feeling of self-satisfaction?
- Are you happy
when you go home at night?
- Are you able
to progress up the ladder?
- Are you
increasing your knowledge and skills each day?
- Are you
growing or static?
- Is there
challenge in your life?
- Are you
respected for what you do?
- Are you
mapping a course to reach your goals, dreams, and desires?
Each question should be answered systematically from the
perspective of the job you’re in, the job you could be in, and the business
opportunity you are evaluating, to determine which is most likely to get you in
flight towards the place you want to be.
If you have trouble shifting your seat to the upright
position for take off every morning, you should probably see if there’s a
better flight crew to help get you where you really want to go. Perhaps a
Franchise is the answer, and perhaps it’s not. However, until you ask these
tough questions, and answer them with conviction, you won’t know whether you
have the possibility of leaping out of that rut, and over the Chrysler building
in a single bound.
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Your Bio: Dennis Schooley is the Founder of Schooley
Mitchell Telecom Consultants, a Professional Services Franchise Company. He
writes for publication, as well as for schooleymitchell.blogging.com and
franchises.blogging.com, in the subject areas of Franchising, and Technology
for the Layman. http://www.schooleymitchell.com,
888-311-6477, dschooley@schooleymitchell.com.
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