The Layer8 Franchise Evaluation Framework
1. The 23-Item FDD — What It Is
Every franchise sold in the United States is legally required to provide a Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD) to prospective buyers at least 14 days before signing any agreement. The FDD is a federally mandated document containing 23 standardized items covering everything from the franchisor’s litigation history (Items 3 & 4) to investment requirements (Item 7), fee structures (Item 5), franchise system size and attrition (Item 20), and the franchisor’s own audited financial statements (Item 21). The FDD is the foundation of every Layer8 franchise evaluation.
The FDD is not a marketing document — it is a legal disclosure. What a franchisor chooses to include, omit, or obscure in each item is itself a signal. Layer8 scores not only the content of the FDD but the quality and transparency of the disclosure itself.
2. The Item 19 Problem
Item 19 is the most important item in the FDD — and it is entirely optional.
Item 19 is the Financial Performance Representation section, where a franchisor may disclose average
unit revenues, expenses, and profitability data. Because it is optional, many franchisors simply
choose not to provide it. Layer8 treats this decision as a meaningful signal: a franchisor that
declines to disclose Item 19 data is withholding the single most important piece of evidence a buyer
needs to underwrite an investment.
Layer8 scores Item 19 at double weight (2.0×) within the FDD Quality domain
for exactly this reason. No other single criterion carries more weight in our framework.
3. Eight Evaluation Domains
Quality and completeness of FDD disclosure — the most important signal of franchisor integrity. Item 19 disclosure is scored at double weight within this domain.
Financial viability of a single franchise unit. Highest-weighted domain. Covers AUV, payback period, profit margin, fee structure, and investment clarity.
Stability and growth trajectory of the franchisor. Covers Item 21 financials, system unit count trends, company-owned unit ratio, support infrastructure, and ownership stability.
Quality of territorial protection. Covers territory definition, size, online channel rights, right of first refusal, and encroachment history.
The most honest signal in any FDD evaluation. Covers satisfaction scores, attrition rates, training quality, technology, and marketing fund effectiveness.
How easily a franchisee can exit. Covers transfer rights and fees, renewal terms, termination provisions, post-term non-compete, and dispute resolution.
Category dynamics and brand strength. Covers brand recognition, category growth, competitive differentiation, market saturation risk, and recession resistance.
Match to a typical buyer profile. Covers owner involvement required, prior experience, capital accessibility, lifestyle compatibility, and multi-unit scalability.
4. Three Products
Single-franchise deep score across all 8 domains and 40 criteria. Includes investment summary, Item 19 status, key strengths and concerns, and a Layer8 recommendation.
Side-by-side evaluation of two franchise opportunities. Domain-by-domain winner flags, unit economics comparison, and a direct Item 19 disclosure comparison.
Evaluates a candidate’s readiness to franchise — capital position, experience fit, lifestyle requirements, and risk tolerance.
Coming soon
5. Scoring Scale
All criteria are scored 1–10 using domain-specific rubrics. Domain scores are weighted averages of their criteria scores. The overall score is a weighted blend of all 8 domain scores.
| Score | Rating | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| 8.0 – 10 | STRONG / EXCEPTIONAL | STRONG BUY / BUY |
| 6.5 – 7.9 | ADEQUATE | BUY |
| 5.0 – 6.4 | NEEDS REVIEW | BUY WITH CAUTION |
| 3.5 – 4.9 | HIGH RISK | NEEDS MORE INFO |
| 0 – 3.4 | HIGH RISK | DO NOT RECOMMEND |
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