The SCORE 2016, Issue 4

THE

T H E M A G A Z I N E O F F R A N C H I S E B U S I N E S S S E R V I C E S

2016 ISSUE 4

FBS Business

2016

Summit

Meet the Chief Financial Officer:

Alexander Ware

PAGE 20

A Look at Your New

Board of Directors Members

PAGE 22

PAGE 26

With over 120 years of experience, we’re committed to delivering world-class

procurement, logistics, merchandising and technology services to support

Bufalo Wild Wings’ success.

To find out more, visit mclaneco.com.

your supply chain

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©2016 McLane Company, Inc. All rights reserved.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

FBS Board of Directors

Wray Hutchinson

Chairman

Mark Jones

Vice Chairman

Jenny Beaudoin

Director

James Bitzonis

Director

Brian Carmody

Director

Steve Grube

Director

Roz Mallet

Director

Larry Podlager

Director

Karim Webb

Director

Christy Williams

Executive Director

FBS Editorial Board

Kristi Keith-Hoffman

Editor-in-Chief

kristik@myfbsonline.org

Jessica Loeding

Managing Editor

jessical@myfbsonline.org

Christina Cannon

Communications Manager

christinac@myfbsonline.org

Advertising Sales

Jeff Reynolds

Director of Business Partner Relations

jeffr@myfbsonline.org

Design and Layout

Kristen Thomas

KT Graphic Design

ktgraphicdesign@gmail.com

Headquarters

1701 Barrett Lakes Blvd. NW

Suite 180

Kennesaw, GA 30144

Phone: 678-797-5161

Fax: 678-797-5171

Franchise Business Services publishes The

SCORE. Any reproduction, in whole or in part, of

the contents of this publication is prohibited

without prior written consent of Franchise Busi-

ness Services. All Rights Reserved.

In keeping with our commitment to the

environment, this publication is printed

on certified, environmentally-friendly recycled

paper using eco-friendly inks.

Copyright© 2016

Printed in the U.S.A.

www.myfbsonline.org

ON THE COVER

The FBS Business Summit made its return to Las Vegas

this year. The event brought together franchisees,

corporate partners and system suppliers. FBS Board

Chairman Wray Hutchinson, left, and Vice Chairman

Mark Jones, second from right, welcomed keynote

speaker James Damian, chair of the Buffalo Wild

Wings® board, and BWW EVP, President of North

America Judy Shoulak. Turn to page 26 to see more

from the FBS Summit.

COLUMNS

2

Chairman’s Column

DEPARTMENTS

4

FBS Member News

16

Team Up for Kids™

17

Recognitions

19

Event Calendar and New Store Openings

21

Franchisee Spotlight

FEATURES

20

Meet the Chief Financial Officer: Alexander Ware

22

Meet Your New Board Members: Jenny Beaudoin and Larry Podlager

24

Spotlight on 114th Congress: Rep. Bruce Poliquin (R-ME-02)

26

2016 FBS Business Summit: Blazing Forward

34

Service Excellence: The Leadership Factor

by Dennis Snow, Snow & Associates

38

Social Media Offers FBS Members More

by Anna Streetman, FBS e-communications coordinator

40

How the Incoming Administration May Impact Labor and

Employment Issues

by Douglas H. Duerr, Elarbee Thompson Sapp and Wilson, LLP

42

Don’t Miss Out on the Benefits of Section 179

contributed by Mize Houser & Company P.A.

44

Three Methods for Being an Effective Personal Adviser

by Dan Coughlin, The Coughlin Co.

46

Retention 101: How to Re-Recruit Your Team Members Every Shift

by Jim Sullivan, sullivision.com

DIRECTORIES

18

Associate Member Listing

48

Advertisers Guide and Editorial Calendar

2016 Issue 4

2016 Issue 4 |

THESCORE

A Message FROM THE CHAIRMAN

This year’s

event made its

return to Las

Vegas, and if

you weren’t able

to join us for this

awesome event,

you certainly

missed out.

With a theme

of “Blazin’

Forward,” the meeting offered sessions

focused on today’s hot topics, as well as

lively entertainment for all.

We enjoyed fantastic keynote

speakers like Buffalo Wild Wings®

Chairman of the Board James Damian,

who made us think about innovation

and how the brand’s future looks; BWW

Vice President of Franchise Operations

Dale Gallion, who guided us through

a franchise operations update; and

Golden State Warriors GM Bob Myers,

who hit the mark with his presentation

on taking a collaborative approach to

decision-making.

The Summit also delved into

emerging trends within the alcohol and

restaurant industries. Sazerac President

Mark Brown provided insight into where

alcohol may be headed, and Wall Street

analyst John Zolidis provided predictions

for the casual-dining segment going

forward.

We also had time to have some

fun while building relationships at

both our exhibitor trade show and

during our annual Casino Night and

Texas Hold ‘em Tournament. As

always, we concluded with a lively

auction, graciously led by our very own

auctioneer, Mike Jones.

This year, we also provided tangible

benefits to our managers in the form

of a course from Rapport Leadership

on keeping a service culture alive. FBS

wants to continue to offer valuable

content for managers at this event in

the coming years, and I encourage you

to submit ideas for courses or training

that you would find enticing as reason to

register them.

Designed specifically to address

issues important to you, as franchisees,

I wholeheartedly believe the Summit is

worth the relatively minor expense and

time away from your business to attend.

I hope to see everyone next year, Oct.

11-13, when we are back in the Big Easy

at the Hilton New Orleans Riverside.

As we move into the New Year, we

will face an evolving regulatory envi-

ronment. Misty Chally from FBS and

Tim Ehlert from Buffalo Wild Wings

addressed the election’s potential effects

in Las Vegas, while attorneys from

respected labor and law firms discussed

the impact of the sea of regulations

facing franchisees, but it’s on us to stay

informed on how our businesses will be

affected.

As an association, FBS will keep

you updated throughout the year with

emails, webinars and The SCORE on

changes to business regulations and how

to prepare. I encourage you all to take

advantage of those opportunities. It’s all

about engaging for success.

2017 brings a fresh start and a new

season. Ringing in the New Year means

college bowl games and the Super Bowl,

which bring big business. I hope 2017

brings happiness to you and your family,

as well as success to your business.

Wray Hutchinson

was quite the year! It

saw the improbable

become possible –

Donald Trump was elected the 45th U.S. president, and the

Chicago Cubs won the World Series! FBS also capped the

year off with a winning combination of engaging speakers

and networking fun at the 2016 FBS Business Summit.

As a Buffalo Wild Wings® franchise owner, you think about service, productivity, laws and regulations, time management and the

everyday challenges of running a business. Insurance for your franchise doesn’t have to be one of those concerns. BB&T Insurance

Services is proud to be Franchise Business Services’ (FBS)* exclusive property and casualty insurance provider. Our agents are licensed

in all 50 states and work with franchise owners throughout the nation.

Your business will be supported by a dedicated team of franchise insurance specialists who are knowledgeable about your industry

and will develop a plan specifically for you.

Advantages of our program for FBS members:

Competitive pricing on all lines of coverage

A dedicated team of specialists from BB&T Insurance Services

Certificates of insurance within 24 hours

Proactive renewal planning conducted 60 days prior to the plan expiration date

Claims assistance and loss control services

We are excited to work with you and encourage you to take the time to learn about BB&T Insurance Services. To speak with the FBS

team, please call or email:

*FBS is unaffiliated with BB&T Insurance Services, Inc.

© 2014, Branch Banking and Trust Company. All rights reserved.

Manage your business

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1-866-402-7952

memberservices@myfbsonline.org

ServiceNow

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Insurance.BBT.com

2016 Issue 4 |

THESCORE

MEMBER NEWS

n Oct. 12, a Buffalo Wild Wings® in Yuma, Arizona, held

its sixth annual Pink Party for Bridget’s Gift, a local breast

cancer organization.

On top of donating 15 percent of net restaurant proceeds

for that day, the B-Dubs® location also featured a raffle and a

silent auction where items ranged from a diamond pendant and

staycations to coolers and event tickets. “It was a huge collab-

orative effort from so many local business owners,” said Wings

West Operations franchisee Lisa Meyer. T-shirts were also sold

to help raise money.

Roughly 500 people came out to support Bridget’s Gift, and

with the community’s help, the event was able raise a total of

$10,000.

Local organizations such as the news media, radio station,

police and fire departments, and even the Jaycees chapter all

collaborated to pull off the best event yet. The 2016 event repre-

sents the most money ever raised at the annual Pink Party, and

Meyer thinks that the company is already on the path to raise

even more money next year.

“It was the most successful fundraiser we’ve ever had, and

it was made possible from an enormous collaborative commu-

nity effort,” said Meyer. “I’m so grateful to have a business

involved in a Yuma-based organization formed in memory of

Yuma native Bridget Orta Martinez that focuses on education,

awareness and support of breast cancer in the Yuma County

area.” S

Wings West Operations Raises $10,000

for Breast Cancer at Annual Pink Party

The sixth annual Pink Party was able to raise $10,000 for Bridget’s Gift, a Yuma, Arizona, breast cancer organization.

A

Watchung, New Jersey, BWW® hosted its first ever 5K to

raise money for a local Boys & Girls Club.

On Oct. 30, roughly 100 runners gathered at a local park to

support the organization. Runners were given an event T-shirt,

goodie bag, coffee, water, energy drinks and snacks. There were

also multiple sponsor tables and a live DJ.

“This was an amazing event where AMPAL Group was

able to give back in a big way while hosting a fun event for

the local community,” said franchisee Amit Patel “We were

very grateful for the turnout and generosity of the community

throughout our first 5K event.”

The 5K raised approximately $2,500 for the Boys & Girls

Club, and B-Dubs® also held an Eat Wings Raise Funds event at

the restaurant, which generated an additional $500.

“The local Boys & Girls Club brought their teens to help

with the event, which was a treat to be able to work alongside

those who the donation was going to help,” said Patel. S

New Jersey BWW 5K Raises

$3,000 for Local Boys & Girls Club

AMPAL Group’s Watchung, New Jersey, location raised money for

the local Boys & Girls Club through a 5K held Oct. 30.

THESCORE | 2016 Issue 4

MEMBER NEWS

n Oct. 22, employees from the six-unit Potters Wings

gathered at Chain Park in Mississippi to participate in the

Hattiesburg Food Festival. A total of seven food vendors partici-

pated in the festival, with roughly 1,000 people in attendance.

“The purpose of the event is to bring local vendors

together in the community in order to build diversity,” said Will

Littlejohn, regional director for Potters Wings.

B-Dubs® had a booth staffed with six employees that

featured a limited menu of burgers, traditional wings, boneless

wings and wedges that were sold for anywhere from $3 to $7.

The restaurant made $550 at the event.

Vendors at the festival paid an initial $75 entry fee, but

were able to set their own prices and keep 100 percent of their

proceeds. Vendors also had unlimited space to set up their

booths.

Littlejohn notes that finding the right employees to attend

the festival and setting equipment up was a bit of a challenge,

but it was still well worth it to attend the festival.

“Community involvement is one of our passions. We love

to make new friends to continue growing our family,” said

Littlejohn. “We made new friends out there to help support

local sales in our restaurant. We have continued to see growth

in sales every time we do events like this in the community.”

In addition to

being able to purchase

food, attendees at the

Hattiesburg Food Festival

enjoyed live music,

visited with animals from

the Hattiesburg Zoo,

participated in arts and

crafts, hopped on board

several rides, played

games and even toured

one of the Hattiesburg

Fire Department’s fire

trucks. S

Potters Wings Participates in

2016 Hattiesburg Food Festival

Potters Wings’ Hattiesburg BWW® location was one of seven

vendors at the Hattiesburg Food Festival.

2016 Issue 4 |

THESCORE

MEMBER NEWS

n Oct. 5, a Buffalo Wild Wings® in Ann Arbor, Michigan,

hosted a fundraiser that hopefully made the Christmas

season a little brighter for a few children. For the first time, the

JK&T Wings location participated in Shop with a Cop, an event

which is now in its 15th year and is put on by the Washtenaw

County Sheriff's Office.

The BWW® location donated 20 percent of their sales on

Oct. 5 so that the local sheriff’s office could purchase gift cards

and other necessities for the area’s youth in need. Approxi-

mately $1,074 was raised for the event.

“We were approached by the group to hold a fundraiser at

our Ann Arbor location. This was the first year we’ve held the

fundraiser and would love to do it again,” said franchisee Kent

Ward. “The community perceived this event well and rallied

behind it by showing up for the fundraiser.”

The event aims to provide kids who normally wouldn’t

have the financial ability to celebrate Christmas the opportunity

to buy gifts for friends and family. On top of a $125 Meijer gift

card, Shop with a Cop presents roughly 100 children with a

backpack, T-shirt, a hat, gloves, a blanket, toothpaste, a tooth-

brush and even a personal letter from Santa.

The event took place in two consecutive sessions with the

western Washtenaw County Shop with a Cop taking place at

a Meijer in Ann Arbor, Nov. 30, and the eastern Washtenaw

County Shop with a Cop event taking place at a Meijer in Van

Buren Township on Dec. 7.

“Helping out the community and assisting with charitable

organizations is just something that we don’t need to be asked to

do,” said Ward. “We feel strongly that if we come into communi-

ties then it is our responsibility to stand behind them.” S

JK&T Wings Raises Over $1,000

for Local Shop with a Cop Event

The western Washtenaw County Shop with a Cop event took place

at a Meijer in Ann Arbor on Nov. 30.

THESCORE | 2016 Issue 4

MPAL Group hosted a grand opening event Oct. 15-16 to

celebrate the company’s latest BWW® location situated in

Marlboro, New Jersey.

On Oct. 15, the day before the official grand opening, the

restaurant sponsored an invite-only VIP party where those in

attendance included the local police department, fire department

and mayor’s office. All three groups were treated to a free meal.

Alcohol sales from the night, which totaled over $2,500,

were donated to JDRF, a charity committed to education and

research for type 1 diabetes.

“AMPAL Group is very excited to bring the Buffalo Wild

Wings® experience to Marlboro, New Jersey, and to join this

dynamic community,” said franchisee Amit Patel. “We had a

great opening and

look forward to

continued success in

Marlboro.”

As part of the

celebration, AMPAL

Group provided the

first 100 customers

to attend the grand

opening with a

coupon book featuring free wings for a year. The company also

gave the first five guests a $50 BWW gift card.

As a result, guests started lining up around 6 p.m. in order

to save their spot for the 11 a.m. opening the next day. There

were roughly 100 patrons lined up by midnight and around 180

by the time the restaurant opened.

Employees kept the B-Dubs® fans entertained throughout

the night by playing games such as slapshot, KanJam and corn

hole and hosted a competition for the longest football throw, as

well as a free throw contest. Employees also gave away prizes,

including coolers, T-shirts, headphones, corn hole sets and

tailgating chairs.

The location treated guests to a Dunkin’ Donuts break-

fast the following morning and hosted a Blazin’ Challenge, in

which 10 people participated, at 9 a.m. on the morning of the

grand opening.

The local high school band, cheerleaders and dance team

came out to support and cheer on the Marlboro mayor for the

ribbon-cutting. S

MEMBER NEWS

AMPAL Group Opens New B-Dubs

Restaurant in Marlboro, New Jersey

On Oct. 16, AMPAL Group celebrated the grand opening of its Marlboro, New Jersey, location.

2016 Issue 4 |

THESCORE

MEMBER NEWS

rom Nov. 17-21, the city of Louisville, Kentucky, came

together to help out Toys for Tots, and Buffalo Wild Wings®

wasn’t going to miss out on the fun. A local radio station,

Q103.1, partnered with Sullivan University on the inaugural

Bikes or Bust, which donates new bikes to Toys for Tots.

Radio personality Dingo agreed to spend over four consecu-

tive days on a scissor lift parked in a Buffalo Wild Wings parking

lot, and the Derby Wings Management location agreed to be

the official location sponsor. The event encouraged anyone and

everyone to visit the BWW® location to drop off a donation, and

Dingo greeted those who stopped by from 40 feet in the air.

Dingo was outfitted with a tent and other necessities and

would update the community on the event via videos posted to

social media.

“I actually approached the radio station, ironically, for

another restaurant,” said franchisee Eric Titus. “I had told them

I was looking for some kind of traffic-driving promotion, and

they had come to me with several different things that I just

didn’t like and didn’t think would work. Then they brought this

up, and from the community connectivity aspect, I liked it and

thought there could be some traffic-driving elements to it.”

The B-Dubs® location at 10206 Westport Road provided

roughly 13 spaces to the radio station where they could park the

scissor lift and collect bikes. The company originally planned to

only use half of the space but ended up using it all.

“The majority of our parking is in back, plus we have an ease-

ment with the shopping center that’s next to us, so there really

is a lot of parking,” said Titus. “It didn’t hurt us that much, but

we ended up taking up more space than we originally planned,

mainly because of the amount of bikes that were donated.”

An amount that far exceeded the original goal. When the

event was first created, a goal was set to donate 41 bikes to

Toys for Tots because that was the projected need from the

organization.

“We realized quickly, however, that there was a lot of

people out there that wanted to donate bikes, so we adjusted our

goal to 700,” said Titus.

One of those people wanting to provide for the cause was

country music icon Garth Brooks, who called into the radio station

on the second day of the event and said he would donate 10 bikes

for every hour Dingo stayed in the lift. For the 103 hours Dingo

spent hoisted in the air, Brooks donated 1,030 bikes to the program.

“I was shocked, I was elated, and then I started realizing

that what we were doing was bigger than we originally thought,”

said Titus. “With Garth getting involved, all of a sudden there

was a national element to it, which was really exciting.”

Titus notes that Brooks was on tour and had an upcoming

show in Cincinnati, which is about one and a half hours away

from Louisville.

“He appeared on their radio station to talk about his show,

and through that process, he heard about what we were doing,”

said Titus. “Obviously it must have struck a chord with him

because he came out and said he wanted to get involved.”

With the substantial donation from Brooks, the team once

again readjusted their goal – this time to 2,000 bikes.

“The generosity of our guests was really striking,” added

Titus. “The bikes in the front were causing quite a stir in the

community. So many people were driving by just to look at it,

and then they would stop and ask us what was going on. It was

really moving to see how much the community appreciated what

we were doing.”

B-Dubs customers also showed the same sentiment with

many stating that they didn’t have time to go buy a bike but

donated money nonetheless.

“The thing that really struck me the most was that I had person

after person thanking me and just coming up and saying how

wonderful they thought what we were doing was,” said Titus.

At the end of the 103 hours, the event had surpassed its

goal of 2,000 bikes, and Buffalo Wild Wings saw an increase in

Derby Wings Management Partners with Louisville Radio

Station to Collect Over 2,000 Bikes for Toys for Tots

The inaugural Bikes or Bust event collected over 2,000 bikes. The

initial goal prior to the event starting was 41.

Radio station Q103.1 sponsored

Bikes or Bust, an event to collect

bikes for Toys for Tots, in which

radio personality Dingo stayed

on a scissor lift for four days.

Bikes or Bust collected new

bikes for Toys for Tots, which is

a program cultivated by the U.S.

Marine Corps.