February 2014 Archives

The franchisor's FDD should contain two last pages that are nearly identical receipts.

After you furnish the FDD to a prospect, you must obtain from the prospect the receipt indicated to be for the franchisor, after it has been dated and signed by the prospect. 

The date must be the day of disclosure, not an earlier or later date. You may help the prospect to identify or remember the day of disclosure, but the prospect, not you, must date and sign the receipt.

It is best to obtain a manually signed and dated original of the receipt, but it is acceptable to obtain a faxed or emailed copy of a signed and dated receipt, or a receipt that is electronically signed and dated.
 
The receipt may be returned by a means different from the means used to furnish the FDD to the prospect.

Under the FTC franchise rule, a prospect's signature may be handwritten, or may be a security code, password, electronic signature or other device authenticating the prospect's identity.

The franchisor, however, may have a policy of only accepting handwritten signatures. Check with the franchisor's lawyer or compliance manager. 

If you are using an electronic FDD, the receipts must be contained within the FDD. The prospect must be required to open the entire FDD in order to locate and print the receipts.

You should encourage the prospect to date, sign and keep the other receipt indicated to be for the prospect.

(This was the seventh post in a series of 11 posts on making compliant franchise sales. )

If you would like to know if you can franchise your business, connect with me on LinkedIn and give me a call.

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Step 6: Minimum Disclosure Timing

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(This was the sixth post in a series of 11 posts on making compliant franchise sales.)

You must disclose a prospect with the franchisor's FDD a minimum amount of time before the prospect signs any binding agreement with, or pays any amount to, the franchisor or any affiliate.

If you are using a paper FDD or an FDD on a CD, disclosure occurs on the day you hand-deliver or otherwise actually deliver the FDD to the prospect, or 3 days after you mail the FDD to the prospect by first class mail. If you are disclosing electronically, disclosure occurs on the day you email the FDD to the prospect, or give the prospect directions for accessing the FDD on the Internet. The date on the signed and dated receipt received from the prospect for the FDD should correspond to the date disclosure occurs.

In most states, the minimum disclosure time is 14 calendar days before the prospect signs or pays. When counting calendar days, you may not count the day the FDD is delivered or the day the prospect signs or pays.

Some state laws require different minimum disclosure times (see Appendix A). If the Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Nebraska, New York, Oklahoma or Rhode Island law applies, you may be required to disclose the prospect at your first "personal meeting" with the prospect.

A "personal meeting" is a face-to-face meeting in a semi-private setting such as a restaurant or a lounge area at a tradeshow, or in a private setting such as a hotel conference room or your office. If the Connecticut, Maryland, Michigan, New York, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Texas, Utah or Washington law applies, or if you are exempt as a large franchisor in California, you may be required to disclose the prospect at least 10 business days before the prospect signs or pays.

When counting business days, you may not count the day the FDD is delivered, the day the prospect signs or pays, Saturdays, Sundays, or most federal or state holidays.

Some of the state laws requiring different minimum disclosure times may be changed, so you should check with the franchisor's lawyer or compliance manager about when any changes might take effect.

Until all of the state laws are changed, however, your franchisor may require you to disclose all prospects at their first personal meetings and at least 10 business days before they sign or pay, just to be safe in case any of the laws apply.

(This is the 6th part of 11 series on franchise selling compliance.

If you would like all these tips in a bound book, for a handy desk reference, sign up for the Franchise Seller's Handbook.)

If you would like to know if you can franchise your business, connect with me on LinkedIn and give me a call.

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This page is an archive of entries from February 2014 listed from newest to oldest.

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