Tag

Franchise Development
Franchise development leader reviewing 2025 franchise sales benchmarks on a dashboard

The 2025 Franchise Sales Index: Why the Strongest Brands Grow From the Inside Out

Key Takeaways

  • Across 460+ brands and three years of data, lead volume grew just 7% while lead-to-agreement conversion nearly doubled, from 0.76% in 2023 to 1.50% in 2025. Growth came from conversion, not spend.
  • High-engagement brands produced 1.9 times the net unit growth of low-engagement brands in 2025, up from 1.2 times a year earlier.
  • 8,379 units enter 2026 already sold but not opened. How brands manage that pipeline decides what actually opens.
  • Referrals from existing franchisees convert at 21 times the rate of internet leads.
  • The fastest-growing brands are not the ones with the biggest development budgets. They are the ones executing most consistently across conversion, engagement, and post-agreement support.

Three Years of Data, One Pattern: Execution Beats Expansion

The chief development officer at a 60-location brand opens the 2026 planning deck and sees the contradiction she has been trying to explain to her board. Lead spend is up. The pipeline looks full. The deal count barely moved.

She has done what the old playbook said to do. More portals, more broker relationships, more money at the top of the funnel.

The funnel got wider and the brand did not get bigger.

What she feels is harder to put in the deck. The board will read the flat number as a development problem, and the development problem will read as hers.

She spent the money. She ran the plays. The scoreboard did not move.

It should have. A brand that invests more in growth should grow. When effort and results stop tracking together, the instinct is to push harder on the same lever. The data says the lever itself has moved.

That contradiction is the story of the 2025 Franchise Sales Index, and the numbers say she is not alone.

The strongest brands in this dataset stopped trying to outspend each other on lead generation. They started getting more out of the leads, the franchisees, and the signed agreements they already had. The growth lever moved from the top of the funnel to the quality of execution underneath it.

What the 2025 Franchise Sales Index Measures

The Index is FranConnect’s annual benchmark for franchise development. It tracks how development teams convert leads, engage franchisees, and manage their pipeline from first inquiry to open unit.

This edition draws on three full years of behavioral data, 2023 through 2025. The scope:

  • 460+ franchise brands across Enterprise, Mid-Market, and SMB segments
  • Approximately 3.4 million leads
  • More than 33,000 signed franchise agreements
  • More than 178,000 locations across eight verticals

It is the largest behavioral dataset in franchise development.

Why Behavioral Data Beats Survey Data

These numbers are not survey responses. Nobody self-reported how fast they follow up or how engaged their franchisees feel.

The figures are pulled directly from platform activity: real leads, real follow-up timing, real training completion, real opening dates. That distinction matters. Survey data tells you what teams believe they do. Behavioral data tells you what they actually did.

Set against the broader franchise sector tracked by the International Franchise Association, it is the deepest behavioral view of development activity available.

When the behavior of 460+ brands points in the same direction for three straight years, that is a pattern worth planning around.

The Three-Year View

The 2025 edition is the first to put three full years of behavioral data side by side. The progression is the argument:

  • Lead volume: 991,000 (2023), 1,027,000 (2024), 1,062,000 (2025)
  • Lead-to-agreement conversion: 0.76% (2023), 0.96% (2024), 1.50% (2025)
  • Engagement gap, high versus low: 1.8 times (2023), 1.2 times (2024), 1.9 times (2025)

Lead volume grew at a modest pace. Conversion roughly doubled. The engagement gap narrowed briefly in 2024, then widened in 2025 to its highest level in three years.

The brands that invested in conversion efficiency and franchisee engagement outgrew their peers every year. What changed in 2025 is that the size of the advantage got bigger.

Finding One: Better Conversion, Not More Leads

From 2023 to 2025, total leads in the dataset grew by 7%. Over the same period, lead-to-agreement conversion went from 0.76% to 1.50%.

Leads rose 7%. Conversions rose 97%.

That is the single most important number in this report, because it rewrites where growth comes from. The brands that grew did not buy their way there. They converted their way there.

The Gap Between Volume and Conversion

The improvement reflects real operational change: faster follow-up, sharper qualification, and a better candidate experience from first contact to signed agreement.

Conversion still varies widely by vertical. QSR converts at 2.81% against a 1.50% baseline, while full-service restaurants sit at 0.44%.

The direction of travel matters more than the absolute figure. Brands that moved the number worked the funnel differently rather than funding it harder.

We dig into the mechanics of that shift, including where leads die and how speed-to-lead changes the math, in a companion analysis on franchise lead conversion.

Finding Two: The Engagement-Growth Multiplier

Across 309 brands with complete engagement data, the brands that invested in field operations, franchisee training, and content platforms consistently outgrew the ones that did not.

That pattern held in 2023. It held in 2024. In 2025, it got stronger.

High-engagement brands produced 1.9 times the net unit growth of low-engagement brands. A year earlier, that multiple was 1.2 times.

The gap is widening, not closing.

What a 1.9x Multiple Means in Practice

A high-engagement brand targeting 100 net new units produces the same output as a low-engagement brand targeting 190.

That is a different kind of return than most development budgets are built around. The investment in field visits, training, and content does not just support compliance. It compounds into demand. Customers using unified operational systems have seen an 18% increase in average unit economics, which is the kind of unit-level strength that turns existing franchisees into a growth engine rather than a maintenance cost.

The widening gap also tells you when engagement matters most. 2024 was a strong year for franchise development across the board, and low-engagement brands rode that market momentum to nearly keep pace, which is why the multiple compressed to 1.2 times. In 2025, conditions softened, and the brands that had not invested in engagement felt it. The gap widened back out to 1.9 times.

Engagement matters most when you cannot rely on the market to do the work for you.

Engagement is also a leading indicator, not a trailing one. The brands with strong engagement numbers today are the ones whose growth numbers will look good in next year’s report. We unpack the four signals that make up engagement, and how engaged franchisees become advocates, in a dedicated piece on the engagement multiplier.

Finding Three: The SBNO Pipeline Nobody Manages

SBNO stands for sold but not opened: units where a franchise agreement is signed but the location has not yet opened.

Across the dataset, 8,379 units enter 2026 already in the SBNO pipeline. Every one of them is revenue that has been sold but not yet realized.

Why SBNO Concentration Hits Small Brands Hardest

The pipeline looks very different depending on brand size. Enterprise brands carry the most units in absolute terms, but the concentration runs the other way:

  • Enterprise (300+ units): 5,564 units in pipeline, 3.8% of active system
  • Mid-Market (75 to 300 units): 1,948 units, 7.7% of active system
  • SMB (under 75 units): 867 units, 13.3% of active system

For an enterprise brand, 3.8% in pre-open status is manageable. For an SMB brand, 13.3% means a meaningful share of projected growth is sitting in limbo, waiting on build-out, permitting, training, or franchisee readiness.

The brands that open more of that pipeline are not lucky. They are engaged. We cover how post-agreement support drives a 48% difference in opening rates in a separate analysis of the SBNO pipeline.

Where Leads Actually Get Lost

Most franchise leads die in silence, not in rejection.

Ranked by relative volume, the top reasons leads are closed and lost are:

  • Unresponsive: the lead responded once, was never reached, or stopped responding
  • Not interested: active disqualification by the candidate
  • Financial qualification: not financially qualified, or financing unavailable
  • Territory unavailable: no open territory in the candidate’s market
  • Bad contact information

Here is the encouraging part. No-response losses fell 30% from 2023 to 2025.

That decline is a direct fingerprint of process maturity. Brands are closing the gap between inquiry and first contact, and the data rewards them for it.

Consider what a single unresponsive lead actually costs. You lose the candidate. You lose the months of portal spend that delivered them.

You also lose the franchisee that candidate might have become, the unit they would have opened, and the referral that unit would have generated three years on. One slow follow-up does not cost one lead. It costs the compounding chain that lead would have started.

Decades of research on lead response timing point the same way: the faster the first contact, the better the odds of qualifying the lead. Speed-to-lead remains the cheapest conversion lever in franchise development, and most brands still leave it on the table.

Your Highest-Converting Lead Source Is Already in Your System

When you rank lead sources by conversion rate, the order surprises most development teams.

  • Internal network (existing franchisees, referrals, development prospecting): 18.9%
  • Trade show: 13.5%
  • Brokers: 3.9%
  • Internet: 0.9%
  • Franchise website: 0.6%

Referrals from existing franchisees convert at 21 times the rate of internet leads.

This is where development and operations stop being separate departments. Franchisees who are well-supported and meeting brand standards refer better candidates and represent the brand positively in their markets.

The same engagement investment that drives operational performance also shapes the quality of your referral pipeline. The connection between how well you support current franchisees and how efficiently you grow is direct, and it shows in how the best brands maintain brand standards as they scale.

The Real Frontier: Profitability and Retention on the Units You Have

Read the three findings together and a single message emerges. The growth advantage in franchising is moving away from how many units you can add and toward how well the units you already have perform.

Better conversion produces better-fit franchisees. Better engagement produces more profitable, more loyal ones. Better post-agreement support turns signed agreements into open, revenue-generating locations.

None of that is a top-of-funnel story. It is a unit-level story.

From Adding Units to Strengthening Units

For a development leader, the shift changes what a strong year looks like:

  • Growth is measured by units that open and perform, not just agreements that get signed
  • The development budget is judged on conversion quality and franchisee fit, not lead volume
  • Operations and development share one scoreboard, because referrals and openings live at the intersection

What This Means for 2026 Planning

The brands pulling ahead are not the ones with the biggest budgets. They are the ones executing most consistently across conversion, engagement, and post-agreement support. That is a discipline question before it is a spending question, and it is the same discipline behind the shift from reactive to proactive operational management.

The chief development officer staring at her flat deal count does not need a bigger lead budget. She needs to convert better, engage deeper, and open faster. The 2025 Index says the brands that do are the ones that grow.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Franchise Sales Index?

The Franchise Sales Index is FranConnect’s annual benchmark for franchise development. It tracks how development teams convert leads, engage franchisees, and manage their pipeline. The 2025 edition draws on three full years of behavioral data, 2023 through 2025, across 460+ franchise brands, approximately 3.4 million leads, and more than 33,000 signed agreements.

What is a good franchise lead-to-agreement conversion rate in 2025?

The 2025 industry baseline in the Index is 1.50%, up from 0.76% in 2023. Conversion varies significantly by vertical: QSR leads at 2.81%, while full-service restaurants sit at 0.44%. The most useful benchmark is your own vertical’s rate, not the overall average, because consumer demand, capital accessibility, and operator pool depth all shape the number.

Why did franchise conversion double while lead volume stayed flat?

Conversion roughly doubled because brands improved how they worked the leads they already had. The data points to faster follow-up, sharper qualification, and a better candidate experience. No-response losses, the single most common reason leads die, fell 30% over the three-year period, which reflects brands closing the gap between inquiry and first contact.

What does SBNO mean in franchising?

SBNO stands for sold but not opened. It refers to units where a franchise agreement has been signed but the location has not yet opened. Across the 2025 dataset, 8,379 units enter 2026 in the SBNO pipeline. The pipeline is most concentrated at smaller brands, where 13.3% of the active system is pre-open, compared with 3.8% at enterprise brands.

Two women interview with each other over coffee

Questions to Ask During an Interview Between a Franchisor and a Franchisee

Relationships are crucial to starting any successful franchise. During the initial interview with a franchisee, you want to learn about their business approach. After all, this person will be your partner for the foreseeable future.

Like a traditional job interview, this discussion should be a two-way street. The franchisor and franchisee should evaluate each other to determine if they would be a good fit. To help you make this decision, we’ve compiled some hard-hitting franchise interview questions and answers.

Questions a Franchisor Should Ask a Franchisee

First, here are questions for a franchisor to ask a franchisee. Your job as a franchisor is to determine whether this person will likely succeed in operating a unit for your franchise. While the criteria will look different for everyone, these questions can help you zero in.

1. Why Does This Type of Franchise Interest You?

When someone wants to be a franchisee, they often have multiple franchisors in mind. This question can reveal their passion for a specific industry or brand. Maybe they’ve eaten at your restaurant since childhood or see a potential unmet demand for your services. Excitement and genuine interest often rub off on other people and can help the franchisee network, hire passionate employees, and represent the brand well.

2. Where Do You Plan on Opening This Franchise?

Depending on how your franchise handles location planning, your franchisee may already have a spot in mind — bonus points if it’s in their hometown. A franchisee can lean on existing connections and possibly even a local reputation by opening a location in their community. If they’ve already found a location, they’ve simplified part of your job so you can maximize sales with a unit that hits the ground running.

3. Have You Ever Served in a Leadership or Management Position?

While franchise experience isn’t always necessary, some leadership or management skills will help. The franchisee will have many employees reporting to them, even if they hire a manager to handle day-to-day operations. Understanding this responsibility and the unique dynamics of management is crucial.

4. Do You Have Experience in the Industry This Franchise Falls Into?

Part of the appeal of a franchise is that the franchisee doesn’t need to build from the ground up. They benefit from the existing brand and any training or support you can offer. Still, you will want to know if they have experience that will help them in the role, like work in the industry, a business degree, or employment at a similar business.

5. Have You Ever Been a Franchisee Before? If So, for What Franchise?

Some franchisees have previously owned a franchise unit, so it’s worth asking about. They may be familiar with the structure and primed to dive in. If the franchisee had an unsuccessful experience with a franchise, ask about what they learned. Failure is often the best teacher, so don’t count them out.

Open Locations Faster

6. What Makes You a Good Fit for This Franchise?

Like most jobs, your franchisee needs to be a good fit with your franchise’s values and beliefs. Someone who embodies your franchise brand can help you succeed. If they align with the company, you will likely find a better working relationship, too.

Helpful features of franchise management software

Questions a Franchisee Should Ask a Franchisor

If you’re on the other side of the table and looking for questions to ask when franchising, you’ll also need to ensure the franchisor is a good fit. You’ll invest a lot in this partnership, so make sure it’s mutually beneficial and aligns with your goals. Here are some examples of what to ask when buying a franchise.

1. What Are Your Royalties and Fees?

This first question to ask a franchisor before buying will significantly affect your finances. Franchises can have wildly different royalty and fee structures, so make sure you understand your ongoing and startup costs. Royalties are typically a percentage of your revenue, while initial franchise fees cover startup costs like licensing and support staff. Ask about other ongoing fees, such as tech support or marketing.

2. What Type of Technology or Software Do You Use?

The technology behind a franchise can significantly impact your day-to-day operations. From point-of-sale systems to accounting software, ask about what you can expect. One of the most impactful programs for the franchisee is the franchise management system. This platform determines how you interact with the franchisor and manage your unit. Here are some helpful features of franchise management software.

  • Reporting tools to help you meet your goals
  • Communication with franchisors
  • Employee training resources
  • Guidance for the franchise’s brand, values, marketing, etc.
  • Payment processing and calculations for royalties and fees

If your franchisor doesn’t have a franchise management platform yet, FranConnect has various features to help you and your franchisor succeed.

3. What Goes Into the Location Selection Process?

Some franchisors already have locations selected or retain the right of final approval. Others are a little more relaxed. Talk to your potential franchisor about their approach. You may be able to choose your location or get help from to find one.

Another valuable topic to discuss is how the franchise manages territories. If you open a location and the franchisor allows someone else to open another right down the road, the second location could threaten your success. Many franchisors offer exclusive territories to protect you from these situations.

4. Do You Offer Ongoing Support and Training?

One question to ask a franchisor before buying is what kind of support you can expect. Some franchises are more hands-on than others. If you’re new to franchising, a supportive franchisor might be preferable to one that gives you more freedom.

Consider areas like training, marketing, and tech support. Look for a franchisor who offers assistance that aligns with your comfort level.

5. Can You Give an Estimate to the Total Investment Needed to Open a Franchise?

We already mentioned initial franchise fees, which are only part of the startup costs. Other expenses might include:

  • Real estate purchases or renovations
  • Professional services, such as lawyers and contractors
  • Equipment, furniture, and supplies for general operations
  • Insurance, including workers’ compensation, property and auto insurance

Ask the franchisor for a ballpark estimate of what you can expect.

Use FranConnect to Manage Your Franchise

Whether you’re a franchisor or a potential franchisee, the right technology can significantly affect your experience. FranConnect offers various franchise management tools, from training resources to payment processing and reporting.

Request A Demo

Before you dive into your next partnership, consider how FranConnect can set you up for success. Request a demo to see it in action or call us toll-free at 844-336-1017 for more information.

A young woman wearing red lipstick works on a laptop

How Businesses Can Benefit From Using Business Analytics

Understanding your company’s performance is vital for business owners since it helps them make critical decisions for the future. That’s where business analytics comes in. Business analytics provide detailed insights that make it easier to measure your company’s performance, establish actionable steps to achieve your business goals and solve reoccurring problems within your business. This post will explain how data analytics helps your business expand and thrive in a competitive market.

What Is Business Analytics?

Business analytics is a method of interpreting data to find valuable performance patterns and insights. Examples of business analytics tools and techniques include machine learning, predictive analytics, and natural language processing. These tools transform data analytics into usable insights to determine your website’s performance. You can use these insights to make decisions and improve your marketing strategies to reach more people.

Analytic tools need clear and accessible data to provide real-time, accurate business analytics. Several tools and cloud storage software platforms exist to access and process your vital data to provide valuable business insights.

How Can Businesses Benefit From Using Analytics?

Identifying patterns and trends in your business data helps you find ways to change your business practices for a more favorable outcome. Here are a few specific benefits of business analytics:

Improve Customer Insights

Your goal as a business is to improve your customers’ experience when they use your products or services. However, it may be challenging to enhance their experience if you know how they feel. Business analytics tools analyze data to create detailed customer profiles, allowing you to understand individuals’ behavior to provide tailored services to meet their unique needs and preferences.

Track KPIs

Key performance indicators (KPIs) are quantifiable measurements that evaluate your company’s long-term performance and can determine your strategic, financial, and operational achievements compared to other companies in the same industry. Business analytics track your company’s performance metrics by collecting data and converting it into measurable insights you can display on charts and dashboards.

Simplify Decision-Making

As a business owner, you have many decisions to make every day. Business analytics can provide insights that guide you in making informed decisions. Business analytic tools use predictive analytics to suggest the best responses to changes in your business. These tools can use sales data to determine the chance of success, helping you decide on your company’s right course of action.

Request A Demo

Mitigate Business Risks

You are likely no stranger to business risks. Legal liabilities, employee safety, and delayed deliveries are just some risks your business may experience. Business analytics models can evaluate business data, such as your location, product demands, and current inventory, to predict potential risks and allow you to prevent them. Business analytics can also help you recover from setbacks by recommending a suitable solution.

Enhance Data Security

In addition to mitigating risks, business analytics tools can also identify security vulnerabilities and help you protect your data. Some data analytics models can use information from previous data breaches to strengthen security and prevent recurrence. Investing in business analytics solutions will help you protect your company’s sensitive information and maintain compliance with privacy regulations.

How Can FranConnect Benefit Your Business?

At FranConnect, we offer analytics solutions for franchises and multi-location businesses. FranConnect’s Analytics includes a catalog of pre-built analytics to provide your company’s development, operations, and finance teams with valuable insights that streamline decision-making. We use scorecards, benchmarks, and dashboards to represent your company’s performance, allowing you to increase profitability and strengthen your brand.

FranConnect’s Analytics catalog has a user-friendly design to ensure you get the most out of our tool. We have optimized the catalog’s dashboard and scorecard to be mobile-friendly so you can access your data no matter where you are. Experience all the benefits of business analytics with our comprehensive and innovative solutions.

Contact FranConnect for Analytics Software You Can Trust

Would you like to know more about FranConnect’s Analytics and other catalog solutions coming soon? Our experts are happy to assist you with a tailored solution to expand your units. Feel free to request a demo or contact us directly to speak to a member of our sales team.

A cartoon hand holds a magnet that attracts customers

3 Keys to Attract a Qualified Audience for Your Franchise Development Process

Whether you are a growing franchise or managing a multi- brand, large corporation, you need to spend your time on what matters. You know technology can help you be more efficient and effective, but there are also old-school principles which are important to master.

(more…)

A man uses a calculator in a car dealership

Automotive Franchises: Sample Objectives and Key Results (OKR)

Automotive franchises make a significant impact on the economy. According to IBISWorld, there are 263,000 auto mechanic businesses running in the U.S., with industry employment counting over 500,000. Although the changing landscape is affecting these businesses, they are still making a meaningful contribution to the economy.

(more…)

A man's hand next to digitized stats

10 Ways to Leverage Unit-Level Performance Data for Franchise Growth

With constant change the only certainty, harnessing the power of data for growth amid shrinking resources and shifting consumer behavior is critical for franchise brands of all sizes. Advanced point-of-sale and customer relationship systems offer franchisors the digital footprints to engage, garner feedback, track trends, try new products, and create unmatched customer experiences. Analytic data, swiftly served up, can also be a powerful ally to predict the success of local marketing and franchise development tactics and drive growth-focused operations and franchise relations decisions.

(more…)

1 2 3 7