Your franchisees are focused on operations. They’re executing your national playbook. They’re
delivering consistent customer experiences.
But they’re invisible in their local communities.
They’re not sponsoring youth sports teams. They’re not partnering with schools. They’re not
participating in Chamber of Commerce events. They’re not building relationships with local
influencers.
And that invisibility is costing them customers, brand equity, and competitive positioning.
Community engagement isn’t optional anymore. In an era where consumers choose local
businesses based on values and relationships, franchises that feel like nameless corporations
lose to competitors who feel like community members.
The Franchisee Who Was Invisible
A client of mine in the personal services franchise space had a franchisee who had been
operating for three years in a mid-sized market. His location was well-run. Clean. Good
customer service. Solid execution. But his sales were flat, and he was frustrated.
He shared that he had three competitors within two miles,” he told me, and they all seem busier
than his location. I had the opportunity to ask him why he thought that was, and he answered
that he assumed they had better locations or lower pricing.
I asked if he had considered their level of community involvement. He hadn’t, so we did the
research. All three competitors were deeply embedded in the local community:
Competitor A sponsored three youth sports teams. Their logo was on uniforms seen by
hundreds of families weekly.
Competitor B partnered with the local high school’s fundraising events. They were known as
“the business that supports our schools.”
Competitor C’s owner was active in the chamber of commerce and local business networking
groups. He knew every other business owner in town.
My client’s franchisee? Invisible. No community presence. No local partnerships. No
relationships beyond transactional customer interactions.
“I’m so busy running the business, I don’t have time for community stuff,” he said. But his
competitors had made time. And they were winning market share because of it.
Why Franchisees Avoid Community Engagement
Most franchisees under-invest in community engagement for understandable reasons:
They’re focused on operations. Daily execution consumes their attention. Community
involvement feels like a discretionary nice-to-have.
They don’t see the ROI. Sponsoring a youth sports team costs $500 and can’t imagine there
could be a measurable return.
They don’t know where to start. What organizations should they engage with? How do they build
relationships? What’s appropriate?
National brand marketing feels sufficient. Franchisees often erroneously believe that the
franchisor handles marketing. “My job is operations.”
But here’s the reality: national brand awareness doesn’t equal local brand preference.
Customers choose businesses they feel connected to locally.
The Real Cost of Community Invisibility
When franchisees are invisible locally, they’re seen as corporate outsiders, not community
members. Customers perceive them as interchangeable chains instead of local
businesses. They miss word-of-mouth marketing opportunities. Community involvement creates
authentic referrals that paid advertising can’t replicate.
They’re vulnerable to locally rooted competitors whereas independent businesses with deep
community ties have competitive advantages that franchises can’t match through operations
alone. They leave customer lifetime value on the table. And community relationships create
emotional loyalty that transcends price and convenience.
The Local Community Engagement Framework
So here’ the workable plan for helping your franchisees in building community engagement into
franchisee operations:
Phase 1: Identify Local Engagement Opportunities (Month 1)
Help franchisees map their local community landscape:
Youth sports leagues need sponsors. Schools looking for fundraising partners. Chamber of
commerce and business networking groups. Local charities and nonprofits aligned with brand
values. Community events where participation makes sense.
Create a target list of 5-7 high-impact engagement opportunities.
Phase 2: Start With Low-Cost, High-Visibility Partnerships (Months 2-3)
Don’t require a massive investment. Start where ROI is clear:
Sponsor a youth sports team ($300-$1,000). Partner with a school event (donate products or
services). Join the chamber of commerce or a local business group (membership fees
$200-$500). Participate in one community event per quarter.
These create visibility without breaking budgets.
Phase 3: Build Authentic Relationships, Not Just Transactions (Ongoing)
Community engagement isn’t about writing checks. It’s about showing up:
Attend games of teams you sponsor. Participate in school events you support. Show up at
chamber meetings and network genuinely. Engage with community posts on social media.
Franchisees who show up authentically build real relationships. Those who just sponsor from a
distance don’t.
Phase 4: Leverage Community Engagement in Marketing (Ongoing)
Don’t hide community involvement. Make it visible:
Share sponsorship stories on social media. Display partnership logos in-store. Mention
community involvement in local advertising. Encourage employees to participate in community
activities.
When customers see you as a community partner, preference increases.
Phase 5: Track Community Engagement ROI (Quarterly)
Measure the impact of community involvement:
New customers mentioning community partnerships. Social media engagement on community
content. Employee recruitment referrals from community connections. Brand sentiment in local
market research.
ROI won’t be immediate, but it compounds over the years.
The Community Engagement Audit: Five Questions
1. How many local organizations, schools, or groups does the average franchisee
actively support?
If it’s fewer than three, community engagement is weak.
2. Can franchisees name five local business owners or community leaders they have
relationships with?
If not, they’re operating in isolation.
3. What percentage of new customers mention community partnerships or local
involvement when asked how they heard about the business?
If it’s below 10 percent, community engagement isn’t visible enough.
4. Do franchisees have guidelines or frameworks for selecting community engagement
opportunities?
If not, they’re guessing about where to invest time and money.
5. How many franchisees participated in a community event in the last 90 days?
If it’s below 60 percent, community engagement isn’t prioritized.
The 90-Day Community Engagement Launch
Month 1: Train franchisees on local community mapping. Help each identify 5-7 engagement
opportunities in their market. Provide frameworks for evaluating fit and ROI.
Month 2: Set minimum community engagement expectations: participate in one partnership or
event per quarter. Provide budget guidance ($500-$1,500 quarterly).
Month 3: Create a community engagement toolkit: sponsorship package templates, partnership
proposal examples, social media content ideas. Celebrate franchisees who launch partnerships.
Why This Matters Now
Consumers increasingly choose businesses based on values and community connection.
National brand strength alone doesn’t drive local preference.
Franchisees who build authentic local community relationships create competitive moats that
operations alone can’t replicate.
Community engagement isn’t charity. It’s a strategic investment in local brand equity and
customer loyalty.
The Bottom Line
Your franchisees can execute operations perfectly and still lose to competitors who feel like
community members.
Community engagement doesn’t require massive budgets. It requires intentionality, consistency,
and authentic relationship-building.
Teach franchisees to map their communities, identify high-impact partnerships, show up
authentically, and leverage involvement in marketing.
When franchisees become community partners instead of just businesses operating in a
community, local brand preference climbs.
Want to build a community engagement framework that helps franchisees become local
brand leaders? Let’s design a system that drives authentic connection and measurable
results. Contact us at https://gersonadvisoryservices.com.