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Below is an in-depth analysis and side-by-side comparison of Music Go Round vs Beat The Bookstore including start-up costs and fees, business experience requirements, training & support and financing options.
Start-Up Costs and Fees |
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Investment | $294,900 - $366,900 | $138,850 - $348,050 |
Franchise Fee | $15,000 - $25,000 | N/A |
Royalty Fee | 3% | - |
Advertising Fee | - | - |
Year Founded | 1986 | - |
Year Franchised | 1994 | - |
Term Of Agreement | 10 years | - |
Term Of Agreement | 10 years | - |
Renewal Fee | $5K | - |
Business Experience Requirements |
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Experience | - | |
Financing Options |
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In-House/3rd Party | In-House/3rd Party | |
Franchise Fees | No/No | -/- |
Start-up Costs | No/No | -/- |
Equipment | No/Yes | -/- |
Inventory | No/No | -/- |
Receivables | No/No | -/- |
Payroll | 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, Regional advertising | - |
Operations |
10% of all franchisees own more than one unit Number of employees needed to run franchised unit: 3 Absentee ownership of franchise is NOT allowed. (95% of current franchisees are owner/operators) | - |
Expansion Plans |
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US Expansion | - | - |
Canada Expansion | No | - |
International Expansion | No | - |
In 1986, Bill Shell opened Hi Tech Consignments Inc., a Minneapolis-area buyer and seller of new and used musical instruments, gear and equipment. Seven years later, after the company was purchased by Winmark (formerly Grow Biz), it changed its name to Music Go Round. Music Go Round stores buy, sell, trade and consign new and used musical products. Winmark also franchises Once Upon A Child, Plato's Closet, and Play It Again Sports. Fill in form below for free consultation.
When our first store opened, it created a wild excitement amongst
students as they flooded our store. They sold their used books to us and
bought new ones and on their way out, they took plenty of our business
cards and distributed around the campus.
Professors went ahead to inform students about our cheap book sales,
parking shuttle drivers did their bit over the PA system, the campus
help desk directed the students to us and passed out our business cards.
Even the employees of the campus bookstore came in to buy from us and
sell their textbooks as well.