
If you’ve ever dined at an Outback Steakhouse, you’ve probably tasted its popular appetizer, the Bloomin’ Onion. But did you know that Outback is a franchise? It’s part of the Bloomin’ Brands restaurant family, which also includes Bonefish Grill, Carrabba’s Italian Grill and Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse.
With more than 100,000 employees, and 1,500 restaurants in the U.S. and 19 other countries, Bloomin’ Brands is one of the world’s largest casual dining companies. And as you can imagine, in an industry where turnover averages nearly 70%, educating employees across this franchise network is no easy task.
Franchise Training By The Numbers
Although Bloomin’ Brands is larger than most franchising companies, it faces a universal franchise training challenge. Let’s start with some quick math. On average, each franchisee employs about 60 people in a variety of roles:
- Front-of-the-house employees – servers, hosts, bartenders
- Back-of-the-house employees – cooks, prep staff, bussers, dishwashers
- Administrative staff – marketing, catering, finance
- Leadership – franchise owner, regional manager and general manager
In addition, another 1000 Bloomin’ Brands corporate employees are involved in centralized operations and executive management, finance and human resources, sales and marketing and other business functions.
Franchises like Bloomin’ Brands must train their corporate employees and also ensure that individual franchise units receive the education and support they need to run a successful business. This includes managers, as well as front-line employees who are integral to the customer experience.
In short, effective training is a franchise business imperative. Why? For any franchise model to succeed, its customer experience must be consistent. For Outback Steakhouse, this ensures that when diners eat at any location around the world, they’ll enjoy the same delicious steak and Bloomin’ Onion, exactly the way they like it.
Now, multiply those training requirements by four brands — each with its own unique concepts, menus and business processes. Suddenly, the complexity of this learning challenge becomes mind-numbing for any large franchise, not to mention a smaller one.
Of course, franchisees face formidable challenges, too. These entrepreneurs invest heavily upfront to purchase a franchise. (For example, Outback requires a franchise fee of $10,000 and $500,000 in startup costs, with an estimated total investment of $1.6 million.) Franchisees expect a reasonable ROI, so the strength of a franchise training and support package is a key factor when choosing a partner.
How Learning Systems Support Franchise Training
One of the best ways franchises can leverage a franchisee’s investment is by relying on a specialized learning management system (LMS) to deliver training at scale. As I’ve noted in the past, an LMS is not a one-size-fits-all commodity. Historically, learning systems were designed for internal workforce compliance training and performance management. But over the past decade, the dawn of cloud computing has opened the door to hundreds of solutions that serve the specialized needs of external learning audiences.
Franchise training is actually a hybrid model, combining some functionality from both employee-focused and extended enterprise learning systems. For example, extended enterprise features make it possible to segment learners across multiple dimensions (brands, roles, geographies) for easy access to the most relevant, timely instructional content.
What kind of benefits do franchise businesses gain by relying on a specialized franchise training solution? These four advantages immediately come to mind:
1) Brand Consistency
Successful brands are built on multiple elements — quality, service and customer experience. But a brand is only as strong as its weakest link. Consistency is the thread that ties these critical elements together. When an established franchise entrusts a new, untested organization with its reputation, a well-designed training program, backed by an “always on” LMS, can be highly effective for onboarding as well as ongoing education. This ensures that new franchise units consistently deliver on the brand promise while accelerating their path to profitability.
2) Compliance
Global businesses in every sector must grapple with laws and regulations in their respective jurisdictions. This challenge is magnified for franchises where employees work in hundreds or even thousands of locations with unique regulations — even across county lines. Alcohol service laws are a good example. In the U.S., local jurisdictions can regulate alcohol age requirements, even at the municipal level. An extended enterprise LMS reduces the risk of regulatory non-compliance by delivering targeted, time-sensitive training that addresses specific, local requirements.
3) Employee Engagement and Retention
Employees are strongly motivated by knowing that employers value their contributions and care about their professional development. From the moment a new hire walks in a franchisee’s door, an LMS can reinforce the employee experience by supporting onboarding, ongoing training, knowledge sharing and performance support. Also, franchise units can create personalized learning paths that reflect employees’ desired skills and competencies.
4) Cost Savings and Efficiency
Any franchise organization that still delivers training to hundreds of locations via printed manuals or CDs is not only wasting money, but is also missing the ability to track and measure the business impact of training. A modern LMS streamlines content development and delivery, while eliminating print production and distribution costs. Also, rather than wondering if training is actually being used, franchisors can track how often and how deeply franchisee employees engage with content. What’s more, they can analyze individual and unit-level performance, to determine related business impact.
Conclusion
Much like the Bloomin’ Onion itself, the franchise business model is multi-layered and complex. Although franchisors and franchisees work together toward mutual profit, franchisors are ultimately responsible for delivering the knowledge, tools and best practices franchise units need to succeed.
What else is essential to know about the connection between training and franchise success, and the role of specialized learning systems in making this model work? We’re exploring this topic in more detail over the next month. So I invite you to join our email list, or register for our March 21st webinar featuring training experts from Hooters and Dairy Queen, and we’ll peel back more layers surrounding the challenge of franchise learning.
Thanks for reading!
Want more insights? Replay this webinar:
Franchise Performance and the Modern LMS
How can training innovation elevate franchise business performance? Learn from real-world examples!
Training plays a central role in the world’s most successful franchise organizations. But what does it take to deliver effective learning programs to a network of independent partners?
Join John Leh, CEO and Lead Analyst at Talented Learning as he hosts a special panel discussion with franchise learning experts:
- Trista Kimber, Director of Training & Design at Hooters of America
- Christine Shanks, LMS Administrator at International Dairy Queen
In this dynamic one-hour session, you’ll get practical, proven advice about training best practices that lead to franchise business success. For example, you’ll learn how to:
- Balance your organization’s learning objectives with those of franchisees
- Leverage your LMS as a marketing and demand generation tool to recruit new partners
- Engage learners in onboarding and ongoing experiences that ensure compliance
- Streamline content development, delivery and other operational tasks
- Identify key LMS features that drive franchise partner performance
- Measure learning progress and tie metrics to business results
Feature photo credit: Ume-y via Flickr
Share This Post
Related Posts
10 Ways to Drive Revenue with an Extended Enterprise LMS
To deliver and manage this kind of training, it's wise to invest in an extended enterprise LMS -- a learning management system designed specifically for this purpose.
Top 10 LMS Demonstrators in the World
In my estimation they do most everything right -- prepare, understand business needs, know their solution at all levels, engage the audience, tell great stories and win.
Crowd Wisdom Review
The implementation team includes subject matter experts, project managers, learning technologists, project consultants, trainers, account executives, executive sponsors and data integration/migration specialists.
LMS Sales Stories: Dispatch from the Front Lines For Vendors
You can’t do too much research on your prospect, their business and their industry before and while engaging in the sales cycle -- the more you know, the better chance you differentiate from the competition.
The Important LMS Differences In Compliance, Continuing Ed and Selling CEUs
Individuals are ultimately responsible to know their own ongoing continuing education requirements, take the required training, maintain ongoing proof of completion and submit to appropriate accreditation body to maintain their license or certification.
Under the Hood of Complex CEU Management
With each incremental accrediting jurisdiction the problem compounds and becomes so complicated that many organizations can’t use a commercially available LMS to manage CEUs but rather are forced to cobble together spreadsheets, home-grown custom systems, specialized commercial CE trackers and manual processes to bridge the gap, connect the data and ensure compliance.
Intro to the Continuing Education Admin Nightmare
In the accounting industry, most accounting firms set up a National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA) license and grant continuing professional education (CPE) credit based on the NASBA standards, rather than maintain the complex CPE rules of each state
LinkedIn Learning and Workforce Development: Connecting Skills and Jobs
The emphasis on the bridging “Skills Gap” has put new life into workforce development programs globally -- and no matter what size of a population you’re targeting, in a modern world, an online platform and delivery option has to be considered – gone are the days of just meeting with a counselor to develop a plan and then sit in a classroom.
Buying a Learning System? 110+ LMS Acronyms You Should Know
I concluded that it will take too long to teach 700+ LMS vendors the new anti-acronym trick and the easiest path would be to create a living, one-sentence, non-techie dictionary of LMS acronyms for learning systems buyers.



















FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL