The Franchise Flywheel

Build a franchise-ready run worth $5,000 to $10,000, and get the system that builds it for $997.

Because one franchise sale pays for it many times over. This is the exact model Mark used to grow a home-services network to 55 franchisees without ever mowing a lawn. In 90 days it gives you a territory that books its own clients, a bench ready to service them, and a first run on the path to being sold.

Instant access. 16 modules and the full done-for-you asset vault. One sale pays for it many times over.

You own a territory. It does not own itself.

You have the patch. You have the right to the geography, the brand, maybe a handful of runs already ticking over. On paper you have a business.

In practice you have a job you cannot leave.

The phone rings and it is you who answers. A quote goes out and it is you who priced it. A cleaner calls in sick and it is you in the car with a mop, because there is nobody else who can be trusted to do it right. The territory does not grow because the one person who could grow it is booked solid doing the work inside it.

And here is the part nobody warns you about. A territory like that cannot be sold. Not for what it should be worth. A buyer is not paying for you and your car and your Sunday nights. They are paying for a machine that runs without the founder standing in the middle of it. You do not have a machine. You have a very well organized version of yourself, and that is not for sale.

The trap is not that you are busy. It is what busy is costing you.

Look at where the hours actually go. You are the marketing department, chasing the next client. You are the pricing department, working out what to quote so you do not lose money on the job. You are the delivery department, covering shifts. You are the recruiter, the trainer, the complaints line, and the quality inspector, all at once, all you.

Every one of those jobs is real work. None of it is the work that makes a franchisor money.

So the territory sits at the size one person can personally hold, and one person can only hold so much. You are not building an asset. You are renting yourself to it, at a rate that looks fine until you count the hours.

Then comes the mistake that burns most people who try to break out of it. They decide the answer is to sell a franchise. They find a buyer, take the fee, and hand over a patch of geography with no proven runs in it. An empty territory with a logo on it. The buyer works themselves into the ground trying to build what was never built, and inside a year they are angry, or gone, or asking for their money back. You did not sell a business. You sold a promise you had not kept yet, and it came back to bite you.

There is a right order to this. Almost everyone gets it backwards.

The story

The refund that rewrote the whole model.

Early on, a run got sold before it was ready.

The demand looked real enough on the surface. A territory, a brand, a buyer with cash and ambition, a handshake. The fee went through. Everybody was happy for about a month.

Then the buyer went looking for the business he thought he had bought, and it was not there. No steady book of clients. No system feeding him work. Just a patch on a map and a set of expectations that nobody had actually built the machinery to meet. He did the only thing a reasonable person does when the thing they paid for is not the thing they got. He came back and asked for his money.

This one was Brett's, not Mark's, years before the two of them built this course together. The buyer's name was Amit, and Brett had sold him a territory on the strength of demand that only existed on paper. There was no proven run underneath it. No booked calendar, no invoices, nothing a buyer could point to and say "this is real." Just Brett's word that it would be, and that was not enough.

The run got bought back. The money got returned. It stung, and it should have.

Build the run first, sell the receipt second. Never sell an empty territory.

But the buy-back paid for the single most valuable rule in this entire business, and it is the rule the whole course is built on: build the run first, sell the receipt second. Manufacture a proven, documented, running operation that a buyer can see with their own eyes, then sell that. A buyer will not argue with a booked calendar and a bank statement. There is nothing to refund when the thing you sold is already true.

That is the difference between a franchise that sticks and a franchise that boomerangs. One is sold on hope. The other is sold on receipts.

Who is teaching you this

Mark has built this twice.

M

The man behind the Franchise Flywheel is Mark, national owner of Mr Green, a home-services brand established in 1992. He grew a home-services network to 55 franchisees. He did it without mowing a lawn or cleaning a house himself, because the entire point of the model is that the founder stops being the operator. He has built a major franchise business not once but twice, with real franchisees who paid real money and stayed.

55
franchisees grown
1992
established
Twice
a major franchise built

He did not build one territory that happened to work. He built a network of fifty-five of them, each one following the same order: prove the run before you sell it. That is not a lucky result repeating itself by accident. That is what happens when a system does exactly what it was built to do, fifty-five times over.

This is not a theorist who read about franchising. This is the person other franchisors quietly ask how it is done. The Franchise Flywheel is the system he uses, written down.

The mechanic

Cleaning is not the business. The franchise sale is.

The cleaning is not where the money is. The cleaning is the proof. A run that services its clients week after week, on time, invoiced, documented, is a manufactured asset you can sell. The flywheel turns in five steps, and each turn makes the next one easier.

Generate

The lead engine brings in clients to a territory, on demand, pointed at whatever geography you choose.

Deliver

A trained bench services those clients, without you in the van.

Prove

The run builds a documented track record, a booked calendar and a clean set of books a buyer can inspect.

Sell

You sell that proven run as a franchise, for roughly 20 times its weekly revenue.

Reinvest

You keep a fixed slice underneath it forever, and you point the engine at the next run.

Every sale funds the next build. Every build becomes the next sale. The wheel does not run down, it speeds up, and it does it whether you are in the office or on a beach.

The transformation

From the person who does it, to the person who owns it.

The job you have now

You answer the phone. You price the quotes. You cover the shifts. Turn the phone off for two weeks and it all stops the moment you do. You own a job wearing a business costume.

The asset you build

The phone still rings, but it is not you who answers. Quotes go out on a method you set up once. A bench services clients to a standard built into the system. Go away for two weeks, come back, and the calendar kept filling. You own an asset.

You are managing the machine, not being the machine. The Franchise Flywheel is how a territory passes that test, and then how you sell the proof of it.

The economics

Two paydays from every run you build.

The money comes twice, and most people only ever see the first one.

The slow money

A fixed 10%, forever

You keep a fixed 10% underneath every run. On a run turning over $1,000 a week, that is about $100 a week. Thin on its own, but passive, and it stacks. Ten runs of that size is roughly $52,000 a year, coming in whether you work or not. That is not a wage. That is an annuity you built.

The fast money

Roughly 20x weekly revenue

Sell a proven run as a franchise and it goes for roughly 20 times its weekly revenue, GST included. A $1,000-a-week run sells for around $20,000. Sell a whole run, or slice it: a $300-a-week slice is worth about $6,000. Tens of thousands, in a lump, provable straight from the books, every time you sell.

The long game is collecting both. Build a run, sell most of it for the windfall, keep the 10% for the annuity, and point the engine at the next patch.

The offer

The Franchise Flywheel. The whole machine, written down.

Sixteen modules across five parts, taking you from the model to your first sold run.

Part 0: The model before the mechanics

Why the franchise sale is the business, why capacity leads demand, and the manager-not-doer discipline everything else depends on.

Part 1: The lead engine

The client-generation system, pointed at your territory, re-pointable at any geography by changing one variable.

Part 2: The delivery bench

Recruiting, training and running a team that services runs to a sellable standard without you.

Part 3: Manufacturing the run

Turning raw activity into a proven, documented, sellable asset a buyer cannot argue with.

Part 4: The sale and the reinvest

Valuing a run, packaging it, selling it as a franchise, and keeping the 10% that compounds.

Every module is built to a standard you would pay a consultant $5,000 to $10,000 to design for you. You are getting the finished thing, not a reading list.

The done-for-you asset vault

You are not building this from a blank page. It comes built.

Every course hands you knowledge. This one hands you the machine parts too. The vault is the reason a build that should take weeks takes days.

The job ads

Written to attract cleaners who actually turn up, so you fill a bench instead of interviewing ghosts.

The call script

So the person answering your leads sounds like a business, and never loses a job to an "um."

The territory audit checklist

So you know exactly what a run needs to be worth selling before you try to sell it.

The email sequences

So leads get followed up automatically and nobody falls through the gap between interested and booked.

The rate-card method

So every quote is priced to make money instead of guessed at and hoped over.

The SOPs

So the standard lives in the system, and a buyer can see the business runs the same whether you are there or not.

The tool stack

Chosen and connected for you, so you are not spending a month deciding which software to trust.

The 90-day map

Ninety days, and exactly what happens in them.

Weeks 1 to 2Foundation. The model, the tool stack connected, the standard set.
Weeks 2 to 6The client engine goes live. Leads coming in to your territory, followed up, booked.
Weeks 4 to 8The delivery bench. A team recruited and trained, capacity built ahead of demand on purpose, so you are never turning work away.
Week 8 onRetention, then the first run packaged for sale. A proven run, documented, on the path to being sold as a franchise.

To be straight with you: the map does not promise you a closed franchise sale inside 90 days. It promises the machine that produces sellable runs, up and running, with the first one built. The sale happens when the run is proven, and the run is what these 90 days build.

Do the arithmetic

The decision that makes itself.

The 16-module system, built to consultant standard$5,000 to $10,000
The complete done-for-you asset vaultIncluded
The dated 90-day build mapIncluded
Honest replacement cost$5,000 to $10,000

You pay

$997

One proven run sells for

Tens of thousands

A $1,000-a-week run sells for around $20,000. And you can sell run after run.

The course that builds it costs

$997

The real question was never whether $997 is affordable. It is whether you can afford to keep sitting on a territory that will not scale and cannot be sold.

Get the machine. Build the runs. Sell the receipts.

Our guarantee

We guarantee the course. We do not guarantee your results, and anyone who does is selling you a promise instead of a system. This business runs on receipts, not promises. That is exactly why it works.

Member results

Real results will appear here, and only real ones.

Be among the first

The Franchise Flywheel is new, and we will not fake what we do not have. As members build their runs and report results, their words will go here, with their names on them. Until then, the proof is Mark's real track record above, and the model's own arithmetic.

A few people reading this do not want to build it alone. They want it built alongside them, hands on, with Mark and Brett in it directly. That is a separate tier, the Done-With-You Partnership, capped at roughly ten seats. You apply, you do not simply buy it. If that is you, read about the partnership. Everyone else, the course is the right place to start.

Questions

The honest answers.

I do not have time for this. That is the whole problem.
That is the whole point of it, too. The entire model is manager-not-doer. You are building a system that does the work so you do not have to, and the done-for-you asset vault means you are assembling parts, not designing them. The time this costs you now is the time it hands back for good.
Will it work in my territory?
The lead engine re-points to any geography by changing one variable. The model does not care whether your patch is a city or a region. It cares that you have the right to service it and the willingness to build the run before you sell it.
I am not technical.
You do not need to be. The tool stack is chosen and connected for you inside the asset vault. You follow the map. Nothing in here assumes you can code or configure software from scratch.
I tried something like this before and it stalled.
Most people stall because they sold the territory before they built the run, or tried to grow while still being the person doing every job. This course is built around the opposite order, learned the hard way: build the proven run first, sell the receipt second, and take yourself out of the delivery seat on purpose. That sequence is the fix.
Does the $997 have hidden costs?
The $997 buys the full course, all sixteen modules, and the complete done-for-you asset vault. Group coaching and the done-with-you partnership are separate options if you want them later. You do not need either to build your first run.
What exactly do I have at the end of 90 days?
A territory generating its own client bookings, a delivery bench ready to service them, and a first run documented and on the path to being sold as a franchise, with you managing it rather than doing it. Not a promised sale. The machine that produces the sale, running, with the first run built.

Get the machine. Build the runs. Sell the receipts.

Build a $5,000 to $10,000 system. Get it for $997.

Instant access. All 16 modules and the full done-for-you asset vault.

Build a $5k to $10k system for $997. One sale pays for it many times over. Get the Franchise Flywheel, $997