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Below is an in-depth analysis and side-by-side comparison of The Yellow Balloon vs Hair Cuttery including start-up costs and fees, business experience requirements, training & support and financing options.
Start-Up Costs and Fees |
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Investment | $55,000 - $103,500 | $120,500 - $283,000 |
Franchise Fee | $25,000 | $15,000 - $25,000 |
Royalty Fee | 4% | 4.5-5% |
Advertising Fee | - | - |
Year Founded | 1983 | 1974 |
Year Franchised | 2000 | 2004 |
Term Of Agreement | 5 years | 10 years |
Term Of Agreement | 5 years | 10 years |
Renewal Fee | $2.5K | 25% of franchise fee |
Business Experience Requirements |
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Experience | - | |
Financing Options |
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In-House/3rd Party | In-House/3rd Party | |
Franchise Fees | Yes/No | No/Yes |
Start-up Costs | No/No | No/Yes |
Equipment | No/No | No/Yes |
Inventory | No/No | No/No |
Receivables | No/No | No/No |
Payroll | No/No | No/No |
Training & Support |
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Training | - | - |
Support | Newsletter, Meetings, Toll-free phone line, Grand opening, Internet, Security/safety procedures, Field operations/evaluations, Purchasing cooperatives | - |
Marketing | Co-op advertising, Ad slicks, National media, Regional advertising | - |
Operations |
Number of employees needed to run franchised unit: 6 Absentee ownership of franchise is allowed. | - |
Expansion Plans |
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US Expansion | - | - |
Canada Expansion | No | No |
International Expansion | No | No |
Nadia Pidgeon opened her first The Yellow Balloon children's hair salon in 1976 near UCLA and a second location five years later near Universal Studios, serving the children of celebrities, like Warren Beatty, and child stars, like the Olsen Twins. The company began franchising in 2000.
Each The Yellow Balloon salon caters to kids, featuring mini-arcades and toy boxes, and offering young customers balloons, cookies and popcorn. To commemorate a baby's first haircut, parents are given a framed photo, certificate and lock of hair. Adults can also have their hair cut at The Yellow Balloon.
NO LONGER FRANCHISING
For franchisees that enter into a
Development Agreement for the establishment of multiple SALONS, the initial
franchise fee is as follows:
*
First SALON $25,000
*
Second to Fifth SALON $20,000
*
Sixth or more SALONS $15,000
The fee for the first SALON is paid
to us when you sign the Development Agreement. The fees for the additional
SALONS are paid when you sign the Franchise Agreement for each SALON.
In addition to the initial franchise
fee for each SALON, you must also pay us, when you sign the Development
Agreement, a multiple unit development fee of $5,000 multiplied by the number
of SALONS to be developed under the Development Schedule.
For illustrative purposes only, if
you enter into a Development Agreement for ten SALONS, the initial ''franchise
fee and development fee payable to us at the time you enter into the agreements
will be as follows:
Initial Franchise Fee $25,000
Units Two through Ten $45.000 (9 x $5,000)
Total Fees Due $70.000
Multiple unit franchisees can expect
to have additional capital and operating expenses which single unit franchisees
may or may not incur. For example, we may provide our multi-SALON franchisees a
continuing royalty credit of V2 of one percent. To qualify for this credit you
will likely require an office, training capabilities, multi-unit management and
other support personnel. We have not included these additional costs in the
above projections as they will likely not occur with the opening of your first
SALON, nor are they reasonably estimated due to the uniqueness of each
multi-SALON franchisee''s independent business determinations.
Unless otherwise noted above, all of
the above fees are uniform and none of the above fees are refundable to you.