Business

What is the private franchise? It’s nothing someone made up

The Federal Trade Commission has an obligation to the general public, its stated mission of consumer education, and to the over-regulated franchise industry and small business operators running Biz Ops to separate the two business models by way of legal definition. . Any failure to fully separate them will trigger further problems in the future and will cause the current rule review process to continue, without any formalization for decades.

This, of course, is good for the lawyers who make money off of these ambiguities for trials and great for Federal Trade Commission tenure and job security. Some also realize that it could allow for additional government employee travel budgets during these rulemaking processes on taxpayers’ money. It would also prompt more wait time, “let’s think about this,” coffee breaks on multiple floors of the Federal Trade Commission’s fully furnished 1970s desk-style setting. However, it is not good for consumers or the industry and creates an uneven playing field on the one hand and complex barriers to entry for start-up entrepreneurs with regional dominance and efficiencies, which lend themselves well to the franchise business model. for the other. This is because Biz Op MLM sellers pretend to be similar to franchise businesses, by using terms like ‘Private Franchise’ in their presentation.

These MLM businesses are sold in coffee shops and public presentations, which would send chills down the spine of any franchise executive or actual franchisor. So what is a real franchisor? What is the private franchise? What is a Business Opportunity? What is an MLM business? What is a hybrid or cross of any of these combinations? How the hell, in simple terms, can the Federal Trade Commission explain this to us, so that we can explain the differences to consumers when asked? Where on the Federal Trade Commission website is there a place that describes all of them and the possible variations? Due to the introduction of the term “Private Franchise” in the interval between the 1999 comments and the 2004 evaluations of possible definition revisions by the Federal Trade Commission, it appears that the real world definition landscape is hyperspacing the franchise rule definition updates in the wonderful world of bureaucracy. We should not delude ourselves into thinking that the latest FTC report or any subsequent changes will change anything in the real market in terms of the amount of; non-existent fraud events in franchises. The number of franchise fraud cases is basically zero according to the Federal Trade Commission’s own statements to Congress. However, the MLM crowd is manipulated by not using the word franchise and that misrepresentation is hurting consumers. Think about it.

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