The Perfect Franchise

theperfectfranchise

Join Kris Simonich and Andrea Floyd, two veteran professionals from The Perfect Franchise, as they take you into the world of franchising. A Perfect Show for aspiring entrepreneurs and franchise enthusiasts, this podcast offers practical advice, real success stories and expert guidance on how to navigate the franchise industry.

  1. 16h ago

    "Build-A-Bear for Adults" — The Viral Sensory Brand That Snagged a Spot in Macy’s Herald Square

    What happens when you take the systemized flow of a high-volume cafeteria and apply it to experiential retail? In this episode of the Perfect Franchise podcast, Kris and Andrea dive into the beautiful, structured chaos of Mess Hall with Founder and Chief Chaos Officer Emily Bargeron. Emily pulls back the curtain on her fascinating entrepreneurial pivot, moving from seasonal fashion logistics and grueling restaurant health codes into a high-margin, ultra-low overhead custom accessory empire. Discover how Mess Hall redefined the shopping experience by replacing typical racks with a faux-cafeteria model. Customers grab a real tray, pick an accessory (such as hats, tote bags, or journals), and slap on proprietary, high-quality "sticker" patches. It’s an interactive memory-builder that thrives on high-traffic bachelorette parties, family vacations, and corporate off-sites. If you're looking for an asset-light brick-and-mortar business that runs on just 1 or 2 employees and can be managed completely semi-absentee, this visual masterclass is a must-watch. 👉 In this episode, we explore: The Mess Hall Blueprint: What M.E.S.S. actually stands for (Memorable Experiences, Systemized for Success). The 250 Sq. Ft. Secret Sauce: How to turn prime, expensive tourist real estate into a hyper-profitable, fast-moving assembly line. The Customer as the Labor: How moving the patch placement into the hands of the consumer keeps employee overhead jaw-droppingly low. The Localized Scrapbook Effect: How regional specific patches turn a simple accessory into a "not-tacky souvenir." Systemizing the Creative: How Emily sets up multi-unit managers so operators can step away for months at a time without performance dips. 📌 Narrative Highlights The Chief Chaos Officer: Emily breaks down her transition from traditional fashion lines to food service, explaining how the extreme operational pain points of both worlds birthed a totally custom retail concept. Designing the Flow: The fascinating psychology behind giving a customer a cafeteria tray to naturally control group pacing, reduce clutter, and secure an organized pathway to the register. Souvenirs for Bookworms & Bachelorettes: Andrea shares her personal experience designing a custom 4th of July Cape Cod hat, highlighting how the brand taps into inside jokes, professions, and landmarks. The In-House Supply Chain Moat: Emily explains how corporate acts as the sole manufacturer of the proprietary peel-and-stick patch lines, simplifying the inventory and order systems for franchisees via "The Hub." Thunderbolt to New York City: A sneak peek inside their 6,000 sq. ft. training facility where fake macaroni and cheese and custom regional displays are engineered alongside rigorous operational SOPs. The Next Wave of Retail: Andrea notes why experiential retail is gaining defensive market power against online shopping and AI automation, primarily because humans crave tangible, offline memories with loved ones. True retail disruption isn’t about just selling a better product; it’s about creating an unforgettable core memory. Mess Hall has cracked the code on highly optimized, creative multi-unit franchises that break the rules of high employee overhead. If you are a community-minded leader or an investor looking for a simplified, joyful business model to scale across high-traffic markets, let's talk.    Visit theperfectfranchise.com and click on "Let's Talk" to match your investment vision with our portfolio.   📌 Stay Connected:  Visit our website: www.theperfectfranchise.com  Kris Simonich: LinkedIn | Email: kris@theperfectfranchise.com  Andrea Floyd: LinkedIn | Email: andrea@theperfectfranchise.com   Emily Bargeron: https://www.linkedin.com/in/emily-bargeron-designer/ Mess Hall: https://ownamesshall.com/   Produced by The Perfect Franchise

    18 min
  2. May 25

    "They Want It Now" The Supply Chain Secret Behind the 2-Hour Hair Extension Transformation

    What happens when you cut out 90% of a traditional salon’s menu and master just one highly lucrative service? In this episode of the Perfect Franchise podcast, Kris and Andrea sit down with Scott and Katy Cotten, the visionaries behind Dakota London. With nearly three decades of industry experience, Katy and Scott realized that hair extensions were being treated as a disorganized, slow "add-on" service in traditional salons. Clients were forced to wait weeks for third-party hair shipments, endure grueling 4-hour appointments, and face massive sticker shock at the register. Discover how Dakota London completely re-engineered the client experience—slashing appointment times in half, controlling their own supply chain, and introducing a revolutionary "Insta-Quote" tool that boasts a mind-blowing 90% closing rate. Whether you are an expert operator or a male investor who doesn't know a thing about hair, the metrics of this compact, asset-heavy, recurring revenue machine speak for themselves. 👉 In this episode, we explore: The Specialty Shift: Why doing one thing perfectly beats trying to be everything to everyone. The 40% Life Cycle Rule: Understanding the math behind initial installations vs. the predictable 6-to-8-week maintenance loops. The Body-Saving Career: Why high-performing W2 stylists view Dakota London as a "dream job" that eliminates physical burnout. The Supply Chain Moat: How stocking human hair inventory in-house builds instant trust and guarantees quality. The Pivot: How a failed hair distribution startup turned into a booming 15-studio franchise blueprint. 📌 Narrative Highlights The Men's Room Confusion: Kris hilariously admits that while the guys in the room might not understand the logistics of hair extensions, they absolutely understand high demand, passion, and empty market niches. More Repeat Bookings, Less Space: Scott details the ultra-lean real estate footprint ($85k–$90k target annual rent), demonstrating how high-margin services maximize small square footage. A Critical Bridge for Recovery: Katy opens up about the emotional side of the business, explaining how their services assist women dealing with hair thinning due to thyroid issues, weight loss, or chemo recovery. The 90% Conversion Tool: A deep dive into the "Insta-Quote" engine, which uses text message interactions and quick photo uploads to capture, price, and convert warm digital leads before they ever step inside. The Collaborative Moat: Why only offering extensions makes local colorists and traditional salons eager partners and referral sources rather than bitter competitors. Cutting the Overhead: How bypassing a traditional, expensive front-desk setup and sticking to a tight, focused W2 team streamlines operations for the semi-absentee franchise owner. Success in franchising doesn’t come from chasing every customer; it comes from dominating a single, highly profitable niche. Dakota London has unlocked the blueprint to high-frequency recurring revenue with an incredibly simple, low-overhead operational model. If you are ready to explore a disruptive, first-to-market brand that values transparency, efficiency, and leadership, let's talk.  Visit theperfectfranchise.com and click on "Let's Talk" to match your portfolio with our team. 📌 Stay Connected:  Visit our website: www.theperfectfranchise.com  Kris Simonich: LinkedIn | Email: kris@theperfectfranchise.com  Andrea Floyd: LinkedIn | Email: andrea@theperfectfranchise.com   Scott Cotten: https://www.linkedin.com/in/scott-cotten-8392b9280/ Katy Cotten: https://www.linkedin.com/in/katy-cotten-296030b8/ Dakota London: https://dakotalondon.com/   Produced by The Perfect Franchise

    16 min
  3. Apr 21

    The 7 AM No-Show: How a Father’s Lou Gehrig’s Battle Exposed a Broken Industry

    What do you do when the person hired to save your father's life simply doesn't show up? In this powerful episode of the TPF podcast, our hosts, Kris Simonich and Andrea Floyd  meet with Bryan Dylewski, the founder of Solenvia Caregivers. Bryan didn't start this business from a boardroom; he started it from his father’s bedside. After his father was diagnosed with ALS, Bryan experienced firsthand the heartbreaking unreliability of traditional home care—caregivers who arrived three hours late or never showed up at all because of a single, overlooked variable: transportation. Bryan breaks down how he transformed those frustrations into a proprietary care model that boasts an 80-90% caregiver retention rate (nearly double the industry average). Discover how Solenvia uses fleet vehicles and Uber Health to control the "operational chaos" of home care, and how their "shared services" model allows franchisees to focus on building relationships while corporate handles the billing, routing, and intakes.   👉 In this episode, you’ll learn: ▸ The "Home Aids" Evolution: Why a descriptive name wasn't enough to protect a national brand. ▸ The Solace Factor: The meaning behind the name "Solenvia" and why it resonates with families in crisis. ▸ Solving the Logistics: How providing transportation for caregivers eliminates missed shifts and builds massive trust with referral sources like hospitals. ▸ High-Acuity Success: Why Solenvia focuses on 12- and 24-hour care rather than short, 4-hour "check-in" shifts. ▸ Corporate Shared Services: How a 20-person back-office team supports new franchisees from day one.   📌 Narrative Highlights ▸ The ALS Turning Point: Bryan shares the story of his father—a man who biked 35 miles a day until a single fall changed everything—and how the medical system failed to provide reliable non-medical support. ▸ The Transportation Gap: A deep dive into the "hidden" reason caregivers miss work: many rely on a single family vehicle or public transit, making 7 AM shifts in suburban areas nearly impossible to reach. ▸ Solace Through Latin: Bryan explains the transition from "Home Aids" to "Solenvia," a name rooted in the Latin word for providing solace, reflecting the emotional core of their mission. ▸ The 90% Retention Rate: Why Solenvia’s model makes caregivers feel supported rather than just "placed," leading to industry-shattering retention numbers. ▸ Uber Health & Fleet Integration: Practically speaking, how franchisees use a mix of technology and vehicles to ensure they never miss a shift, which directly protects their revenue. ▸ Building a "Statewide" Presence: Insights from the 12-year development of the Connecticut corporate location and how that experience is packaged for new franchise owners.   Senior care is more than just a business; it’s a commitment to providing solace when families need it most. Solenvia Caregivers has bridged the gap that most agencies fall into by solving the logistics of care. If you want to enter a recession-resistant industry with a model that prioritizes reliability and human connection, it’s time to explore this path.    Visit theperfectfranchise.com and click on "Let's Talk" to connect with our expert team.   📌 Stay Connected:  Visit our website: www.theperfectfranchise.com   Kris Simonich: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kris-simonich-8101b6129/| Email: kris@theperfectfranchise.com  Andrea Floyd: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrea-floyd-38b103294/ | Email: andrea@theperfectfranchise.com   Bryan Dylewski: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bryandylewski-thehomeaides/   Solenvia Caregivers: https://www.linkedin.com/company/solenvia-caregivers/

    21 min
  4. Mar 30

    The 3 PM to 7 PM Goldmine: Why You Don't Need to Be a Musician to Own a Music School

    What happens when two professional musicians stop touring in a French-fry-scented van and start a business? In this episode, Kris Simonich and Andrea Floyd sit down with Kay Barker and Joseph Barker, the founders of Musicologie. Their story is anything but corporate—it involves touring the lower 48 with Walk the Moon and Sarah McLachlan, a van that ran on waste vegetable oil, and a realization that the music education industry was broken. Kay and Joseph explain how they took a fragmented market dominated by "mom and pops" and turned it into a sophisticated, AI-enhanced, and marketing-forward franchise. Discover why their most successful franchisees aren't actually musicians, how they’ve solved the "staffing nightmare" by tapping into the gigging musician economy, and why the most valuable thing an owner can do is simply pick up the phone. 👉 In this episode, you’ll learn: ▸ The French Fry Van Era: How life on the road led to a passion for education. ▸ The Private Lesson Advantage: Why Musicologie succeeds by offering what big "Rock School" franchises can't. ▸ The "Non-Musician" Owner: Why CFOs and marketing execs make the best music school owners. ▸ Vetting the Talent: How the corporate team handles the "auditions" so the owners can focus on the business. ▸ The 4-Hour Window: Understanding the high-efficiency recurring revenue model that runs primarily from 3 PM to 7 PM. 📌 Narrative Highlights ▸ The Accidental Teacher: Kay shares her journey from "I'll never teach" to opening her 15th studio in Nashville, fueled by the "lightbulb moment" when a student realizes their own potential. ▸ Fragmented Market Opportunity: Joseph discusses the gap between "Rock Franchises" and "Mom and Pops," and how Musicologie occupies the high-ground of professionalized private lessons. ▸ The Auditon Hurdle: One of the biggest fears for non-musician owners is "How do I know if they can actually play?" Joseph explains how the franchisor team vets every single teacher's musicianship via video auditions. ▸ Recession-Resilient Families: Kay talks about the "existential" transition from corporate life to ownership and why parents prioritize music lessons even when budgets get tight. ▸ Flexible Real Estate: Why you don't need a "Class-A" retail spot to be successful—and how "around the corner" office spaces can actually be a strategic advantage. ▸ The 3 PM to 7 PM Business: A deep dive into the scheduling freedom of Musicologie, where the heaviest lifting happens in a narrow, manageable window of time. Are you a community-minded leader looking for a business that actually strikes a chord? Musicologie proves that you don't need to be a virtuoso to build a music empire—you just need the right systems and a passion for people. If you're ready to trade the corporate grind for a business with heart and high-level strategy, let's talk. Visit theperfectfranchise.com and click on "Let's Talk" to connect with our team. 📌 Stay Connected:  Visit our website: www.theperfectfranchise.com  Kris Simonich: LinkedIn | Email: kris@theperfectfranchise.com  Andrea Floyd: LinkedIn | Email: andrea@theperfectfranchise.com Kay Barker: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kay-barker-31851264/ Joseph Barker: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joseph-barker-43447612/ Produced by The Perfect Franchise

    21 min
  5. Mar 16

    The Red Flags of Family Partnerships: When to Say No to a "Sure Thing"

    Can you really build a business that your kids will actually want to inherit? In this episode of the TPF Expert Series, we’re keeping it all in the family. Kris Simonich and Andrea Floyd sit down with a powerhouse father-son consulting team, Mike Chiodo and Michael Chiodo, to discuss the delicate, often tricky, and occasionally messy dynamics of family franchising. From parents wanting to build a "legacy" for toddlers to 20-somethings looking for a startup funded by the "Bank of Mom and Dad," we dive into the hard questions you must ask before signing a franchise agreement with a relative. We explore why a parent’s passion isn't enough to fuel a child’s career, how to set "checkpoints" to avoid family friction, and why the best legacy might not be a business transfer at all—but a successful exit. 👉 In this episode, we explore: ▸ The Legacy Disconnect: Why your vision for your child’s future might not match their reality. ▸ The "Silent Investor" Parent: How to fund your child’s dream without becoming the overbearing boss. ▸ Teenagers in the Workplace: Which franchise models actually work for 15-year-old employees. ▸ Matching the Operator, Not the Bank: Why we match the business to the person running the day-to-day, even if they aren't the one signing the check. ▸ Reality Checks: Level-setting the "make money fast" expectation for the younger generation of entrepreneurs. Highlights ▸ The Maturity Match: Mike Chiodo breaks down why the "Legacy" conversation changes depending on whether your kids are 3 or 23. ▸ The Exit Strategy Legacy: Michael Chiodo offers a fresh perspective—sometimes the "legacy" isn't the business itself, but the liquidity and wealth created by selling it to split among the family. ▸ Walking the Walk: Andrea shares her personal story of growing up in an entrepreneurial home, going to pharmacy school for nine years, and eventually coming back to the business world—proving that kids don't always take the straight path. ▸ The "Look Em' in the Eye" Rule: Mike's non-negotiable rule for when parents fund a child's business: he needs to see the parents face-to-face to ensure they won't pull the rug out three months later. ▸ Red Flags & Green Flags: The team discusses how to spot when a child isn't actually "enthusiastic" about the business and is just going through the motions for their parents. ▸ Guardrails for Freedom: Defining what "Freedom" actually means to a corporate escapee and how to build a 12-month runway to get there. Building a business is hard. Building a business with family is even harder—but when done right, it’s the most rewarding investment you’ll ever make. Whether you're looking to build a multi-unit empire for your heirs or just want to help your son or daughter get their first start, you need a process with guardrails. Visit theperfectfranchise.com and click on "Let's Talk" to schedule a session with the Chiodos or any of our family-focused experts. 📌 Stay Connected:  Visit our website: www.theperfectfranchise.com  Kris Simonich: LinkedIn | Email: kris@theperfectfranchise.com  Andrea Floyd: LinkedIn | Email: andrea@theperfectfranchise.com Mike Chiodo Sr.: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-chiodo/ Michael Chiodo Jr.: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelfchiodo/

    18 min
  6. Mar 9

    From W-2 to Wealth: The Math of "Owner Income" That They Don't Teach in Business School

    What happens when the business that makes the most money is the one you hate the most? In this episode, our hosts Kris Simonich and Andrea Floyd sit down with Senior Consultants John Moreau and Dave Jones to peel back the layers of a common dilemma: choosing between a massive paycheck and a life you actually enjoy. John and Dave share "war stories" from their own transitions out of corporate America—including the reality of being "the guy on a plane every week for a decade"—and explain why your "Why" is the only thing that matters when the honeymoon phase of business ownership ends. We also tackle the "Good Problem" of liking too many brands at once. If you've ever felt stuck in analysis paralysis or wondered if you're "running from something or toward something," this conversation is for you. 👉 In this episode, we explore: ▸The Fit vs. Passion Paradox: Why loving to golf makes you a terrible person to own a golf business. ▸The Gold Watch vs. The Liquidity Event: What corporate America leaves you with versus what a business asset leaves you with. ▸Analysis Paralysis: The "Dating" strategy for finding your perfect franchise without getting overwhelmed. ▸Owner Discretionary Income: Why $200k as a business owner "feels" and acts very differently than $200k on a W-2. Highlights ▸The ROI Mirage: Kris and John discuss why picking a brand based solely on the highest earnings per territory is a dangerous game if the daily grind doesn't match your personality. ▸The "Traveler’s Exhaustion": John shares his personal story of constant corporate travel and how it shaped his perspective on what "success" actually looks like (it's not just a number). ▸Why You Can't "Mutual Fund" a Franchise: A blunt reminder that you can't just throw money at a franchise and hope it grows like a stock; it requires "swinging the racket" every day. ▸The Secret Value of a Franchise Exit: Dave explains why franchises are rarely found on "Business for Sale" websites—and the secret way they are sold before the public ever sees them. ▸Ranking the "Gut Feeling": A tactical tip for when you like 6+ brands: How to use a "ranking" system to stop overthinking and start learning. ▸W-2 vs. Ownership: Breaking down why you shouldn't worry about replacing your salary on Day 1, and the long-term math that makes it worth the wait. Are you chasing a number, or are you chasing a life? Most people start their franchise journey looking at spreadsheets, but they finish it by finding freedom. If you’re tired of the corporate grind and want to build an asset you actually own, let's talk. Visit theperfectfranchise.com and click on "Let's Talk" to connect with John, Dave, or any of our expert consultants. 📌 Stay Connected:  Visit our website: www.theperfectfranchise.com  Kris Simonich: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kris-simonich-8101b6129/ | Email: kris@theperfectfranchise.com  Andrea Floyd: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrea-floyd-38b103294/ | Email: andrea@theperfectfranchise.com Dave Jones: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dave-jones-be-your-own-boss/ John Moreau: https://www.linkedin.com/in/moreaujohn/

    18 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

Join Kris Simonich and Andrea Floyd, two veteran professionals from The Perfect Franchise, as they take you into the world of franchising. A Perfect Show for aspiring entrepreneurs and franchise enthusiasts, this podcast offers practical advice, real success stories and expert guidance on how to navigate the franchise industry.