Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
November 12, 2000, Sunday, TWO STAR EDITION
SECTION: BUSINESS, Pg. C-1
Franchise Furor; Flurry of Lawsuits Against Gnc Sheds Light On Rough-And-Tumble
World Of Franchising
By Deborah Mendenhall, Post-Gazette Staff Writer
As
franchise owner Kenneth Korb received an award from General Nutrition Cos.
for a job well done in October of last year, an
internal company memo was
circulating that said he had to go.
Beginning that month, GNC's routine
inspections of Korb's two Cleveland
franchise stores took an adversarial turn. His stores
were cited for dust on the
floors, delinquent invoices and insufficient
inventory.
Although
some of the violations were later determined to be untrue, the
bottom line is, four months later, Kenneth and Rozann
Korb, counted among GNC's
most successful and oldest franchisees, were out.
"If
GNC can do this to me, they can do it to anybody," Korb said. "It
ought
to send a chill down any franchisee's spine."
From a
business standpoint, it's hard to argue with GNC's success. The
company rose from an independent start-up founded by
David Shakarian in 1935 to
a health product powerhouse that was acquired last
year by the Dutch nutrition
manufacturer, Royal Numico, for $ 2.5 billion.
Its
shareholders have benefited tremendously. Locally, it ranks as one of the
region's bigger companies, with 954 employees and a
Downtown headquarters in a
renovated century-old building on Sixth Avenue.
Along the
way, however, GNC also has earned a reputation as a company whose
hard-charging executives are used to doing things
their way. In 1994, the
Federal Trade Commission levied a fine of $ 2.4
million against GNC -- the
largest penalty to that date -- for deceptive claims
on more than 40 products.
From 1995 through 1998, GNC was hit with six lawsuits
that accused several
senior executives of sexual harassment and
discrimination. Most have been
settled; one remains active.
More
recently, management has become entangled in litigation with
franchisees who contend they are being crushed by the
very company they helped
build.
It's not
unusual for franchisees to feel abused by their parent company.
Studies have found that, far from being on a road to
riches, franchisees often
struggle to make money and are subject to the whims
of their chain's owners.
Some of the nation's most successful chains,
including McDonald's, Burger King
and Pizza Hut, operate under a barrage of litigation.
"In
most instances, franchising is neither safe nor secure nor is it business
ownership," said franchise expert Robert Purvin,
who wrote the book. "The
Franchise Fraud." "The franchisee is actually an indentured servant."
GNC is
among the worst offenders, Purvin said, and some of GNC's own
franchisees -- the people who helped make the company a
giant in the vitamin
and nutritional supplement industry -- agree. In 28
lawsuits -- the majority
filed within the last two years -- franchisees from Florida to California have
sued, claiming:
* Franchisees can't make a profit because of "predatory pricing." That
involves GNC's marking up wholesale prices to its franchisees. GNC then sells
the same products to the public at lower prices. In
effect, franchisees must
sell at uncompetitive prices.
*
"Encroachment." Franchise stores are being surrounded by other GNC
stores
that lure away customers.
* Some GNC
sales promotions violate federal laws.
* GNC has
terminated franchises and then seized stores on technicalities so
that they could be resold or replaced with company
stores.
At the
heart of the disputes is the belief that GNC promotes franchising as a
safe way to business ownership with itself as a
partner. The lawsuits contend
that shortly after contracts are signed and large
fees collected, GNC uses
franchisees as another market to be exploited; and that
GNC siphons as much
money as possible before closing them down and replacing
them with company
stores or reselling the franchise and starting the
process all over again.
"GNC
is a system at war with itself, and the reason is greed," said the
attorney who filed suit on behalf of GNC franchisee Igor Rafalovich.
GNC
officials declined requests for interviews for this story.
But in a
prepared statement, the company defended its relationship with its
franchisees, saying its subsidiary, GNC Franchising,
"works to facilitate an
open and constructive relationship with all of our franchisees, and we believe
we have a better record in franchisee relations than
any other franchise of
our size and international scope."
GNC also
said 51 percent of those who signed agreements to open additional
stores over the past year were existing franchisees, and that fewer than 1
percent of franchisees are involved
in litigation against the company.
However,
three lawsuits are currently seeking class-action status that could
affect more than 1,000 franchisees.
In
addition, franchise experts say lawsuits tell only part of the story.
Last year,
189 GNC franchises, or 12 percent of the 1,584 stores, left GNC.
An additional 84 left in the first six months of this
year.
"That
is a high percentage," said Ann Dugan, franchise expert and director of
the small business development center for the Katz
Graduate School of Business
at the University of Pittsburgh. She speculated that
"predatory pricing" by the
company against its franchisees is a major
reason for the comparatively high
exodus. Franchise fallacies
The attorney
has watched GNC and its franchisees battle for years. He said most of the
company's tactics are not new. Other companies have treated their franchisees similarly in the past and will do the same in the future if the
system is not changed, he said.
In his
book, Purvin describes an industry rife with abuse, with contracts and
laws designed to protect the company, not the franchisee.
He wrote
the book, he said, to educate would-be entrepreneurs before they
invest life savings in franchises. Too many, Purvin
said, reach for the American
dream only to end up losing their businesses, homes
and life savings and
destroying their credit ratings.
The myth
that franchising is safe began with a set of faulty statistics that
said 95 percent of all franchises remain in business
after five years, while 55
percent of all independent start-ups fail, Purvin
said.
The first
figure came from a 1986 U.S. Department of Commerce pamphlet that
relied on a small voluntary survey of franchisers and
accepted the industry
definition for success as any store still open after
five years, he said. A
store was considered a success even if the original
owner went bankrupt and was
replaced by other franchisees or a company
store. If a franchise changed hands
five times, it was considered five successes, and no
failures.
The second
misunderstood figure -- 55 percent -- was misquoted from a U.S.
House committee hearing on small businesses. The
testimony actually said 55
percent of businesses that fail do so within the
first five years, Purvin said.
The
industry considers both of those statistics to be deceptive and
misleading, Pitt's Dugan said.
Yet GNC has
been using those old figures on its Web site, where it also
assures potential investors it is "committed to
providing the assistance you
need to tap into your share of this growing
market."
"If
GNC continues to quote those figures, that makes me think they have a
hidden agenda," Dugan said. "Even the
International Franchise Association, the
franchisors' own trade group, said that is a false study
and should not be
quoted."
Most people
who hear those figures think the government has studied
franchising and pronounced it to be safe, which is
not true, Purvin said.
The
reality, he contends, is that many companies often use franchising as a
relatively inexpensive way to build stores and
markets as opposed to building
them on their own.
Once the
market is built and the stores are doing well, companies may turn on
their franchisees, citing very
technical violations of the contractual
agreements between the parent and the franchised
operation.
"A
company can trump up a charge through performance reviews, terminate the
franchise agreement, invoke the noncompete clause,
assume the lease and put a
franchisee out of business," Purvin said.
The biggest
"crime," in his view, is that "most of what companies do is
totally legal. That's why they usually prevail in
court."
But others
allege that GNC's tactics are illegal and are looking to the
courts for relief, particularly in light of what it
costs to become a
franchisee -- roughly $ 130,000 to $ 208,000 per store.
Some
lawsuits allege that GNC made many misrepresentations and omissions in
its Franchise Offering Circular, a disclosure
document required by the Federal
Trade Commission. In the document, companies must reveal material risks to
investors before they sign contracts, said the
attorney for GNC franchisee Rafalovich.
GNC's
circular shows a profit margin of 55 percent at GNC stores, but fails
to disclose a marketing plan of company-store and
online discounts that would
make that figure impossible for a franchised store to
achieve, according to
Rafalovich's lawsuit.
The lawsuit
alleges that Rafalovich was deceived by GNC and would not have
invested $ 200,000 in a Baltimore franchise if he had
known the truth. Feeling
misled
Rafalovich's contract promised a two-mile protected territory against
other
GNC stores and mail order sales, and he was told that
all GNC stores were the
same from appearances to prices, the lawsuit said.
However,
Rafalovich's store was soon surrounded by 17 GNC company stores and
outlets inside Rite Aid drug stores -- some inside
his so-called protected
territory. GNC online and company store sales also
pulled Rafalovich's customers
away by offering double discounts, the lawsuit said.
The lawsuit
also alleges that while the circular promises franchisees
"reasonable" wholesale prices, GNC
routinely sells products to the public at
lower prices than Rafalovich paid wholesale.
One example
cited is GNC's popular diet product Xenadrine, which costs
franchisees $ 18.58 a bottle, wholesale. GNC sells the
same product to the
public for $ 12.31 at company-owned stores.
Rafalovich's profits were depleted further when GNC regularly shipped
products and displays that he hadn't ordered, charged
him for them, then
refused to take them back, the lawsuit said. In
addition, GNC "consistently
failed to apply credits toward invoices."
Because
Rafalovich also paid more than 12 percent of gross sales for
royalties and advertising, a common practice in the
franchising industry, GNC
was able to make money on sales at his stores even
though he wasn't profiting.
Goldstein
said GNC's marketing plan is win-win for the company and lose-lose
for franchisees. That's
because when a franchisee is able to hold his own
against company-owned stores and online sales, GNC
wins by increased revenue.
And when a franchisee loses so much
money he can't remain in business, GNC
wins by reselling the franchise or taking over the
entire market with its own
stores.
"GNC
sets up a situation in which the franchisee can't compete,
but doesn't
tell them," Goldstein said. "Who would
invest $ 200,000 in a franchise knowing
all this?"
In a legal
response to Rafalovich's lawsuit, GNC said "the agreement is in
writing and speaks for itself," and that
allegations "inconsistent with the
language of the agreement ... are denied."
GNC has filed a countersuit against
Rafalovich, asking for royalties, back
payments and attorney fees.
In response
to inquiries, GNC also said its franchising subsidiary "strives
to provide all franchisees with an
opportunity to make a good profit on their
investment while maximizing their gross profit
margin."
GNC said
the average store that participated in its financial accounting
service "demonstrated more than $ 64,000 in
earnings capability" between Feb.
1999 and Dec. 1999.
Other lawsuits
filed by franchisees against GNC raise additional issues.
Richard
Kolenda, a former Jacksonville, Fla., franchisee, alleges that
GNC
has perpetual sales that violate federal law.
Kolenda, a
retired Air Force major who conducted corporate fraud
investigations for the Pentagon, said he invested his
life savings in a
Jacksonville franchise in April, 1994.
He grew
suspicious of GNC's unending promotions that offered one product at
half price when customers bought one at full price,
and contacted the Federal
Trade Commission. He said he was told that perpetual
promotions were against the
law.
"I
refused to participate in anything illegal, and I let GNC know it,"
Kolenda said, adding that he reported the practices
to the FTC.
Kolenda
said GNC told him that refusing to participate in the offer put him
in violation of GNC guidelines and threatened to
terminate his franchise.
"In
these inspections, I kept getting written up that I wasn't following
their guidelines," he said. "I kept
pointing out to them that to do that, I
would be breaking the law."
Kolenda
filed a lawsuit in 1997, and is seeking class-action status.
"Right
after I filed suit, GNC built stores to the north, to the east and to
the southwest of me," he said. "To the
west, there was a swamp."
One was
between Kolenda's store and nearby Mayport Naval Station, where he
had drawn most of his customers. His store began to
fail GNC's routine
inspections for things that had been acceptable in
the past, Kolenda said.
"As
far as I'm concerned, that was a way for them to take my business, and
that is what they did."
In
December, 1999, GNC took Kolenda's store, and reimbursed him at a
discounted rate for his inventory and fixtures,
subtracting $ 9,000 in attorney
fees.
"I had
to resign my commission in the Air Force to go into GNC's franchise
system," he said. "I don't know what I will
do now."
An FTC
spokesman declined to comment on whether a complaint had been filed
against GNC. However, he confirmed that perpetual
promotions are in violation of
FTC laws.
Often, franchisees run out of money and don't make it as far as a
courtroom, Purvin said. The company may cut off
product shipments, leaving
franchisees with no way to make a living or finance a
lawsuit.
It doesn't
help that most contracts call for disputes to be settled in the
company's home state, the attorney said. This
requires a franchisee to pay a second
attorney and travel expenses. Mediation is usually
stipulated in the contract,
which further eats up a franchisee's legal defense
fund.
"Sometimes a franchisee will prevail if they can get into court, but
the
system is designed to keep them out," he said.
"Most run out of money and fold."
That's what
happened to the Korbs. The Korbs
The couple
were among GNC's first franchisees and in the group GNC called
"the pioneers," Korb said.
The couple
bought five franchises, built a strong customer base and
eventually sold three successful stores back to GNC.
Their remaining stores were
in upscale regional malls anchored by Saks Fifth
Avenue, Nordstrom and Kaufmann
department stores.
In prime
locations, the GNC stores were profitable. In early 1999, Korb
discussed selling the stores back to GNC and buying
franchises in a state
where the market wasn't as saturated.
But a price
could not be agreed upon. Negotiations ceased in June 1999, when
GNC announced it would not be buying any more
franchise stores. The Korbs
couldn't sell to a private buyer because, since 1994,
GNC had reserved large
malls for company stores.
In August
1999, GNC conducted routine inspections at Korb's stores.
Inspections were usually conducted twice a year and
used to identify areas for
improvement.
The
inspector noted dust on the floors, insufficient product on the shelf and
past-due invoices. Both stores received low scores.
As he had
done in the past, Korb tried to correct the problems. He received a
$ 30,000 bank loan and ordered more inventory. He
checked his accounts and found
nothing was owed to GNC. And he continued a policy to
dust the store daily --
dust was a chronic problem because the store was
directly beneath an anchor
store's heating and cooling system.
In October
1999, Korb received an award for his efforts in local cooperative
advertising from Mike Brower, GNC district director
of franchise operations. It
was one of more than a half-dozen awards he had
received from GNC in 10 years.
What Korb
didn't know was that Brower was also circulating an internal GNC
memo that identified the Korbs as "operators
that do not belong in our franchise
system," according to evidence discovered
through Korb's lawsuit.
Days later,
GNC sent the couple a default letter saying an August inspection
had shown they were in breach of the franchise
agreement. On Dec. 2, GNC
conducted another inspection. Improvements were noted
in all areas except for
inventory, which received a low score.
Inventory
was low because of brisk holiday sales and because an order had not
arrived from GNC, Korb said.
GNC sent
another default letter in December, giving the Korbs 30 days to
correct problems.
In the
past, problems had been corrected with a telephone call to William
Watts, GNC's chief executive officer, Korb said.
(Watts has announced he is
stepping down next year and will be replaced by Greg
Horn, a nine-year GNC
veteran and son of former Chairman Jerry Horn.)
But when
Korb called Watts this time, he said, no one would accept his calls.
Rozann Korb
responded in January with a five-page letter that answered
charges point by point and added that inventory was
low because GNC had not
shipped one order and had no record of a second one
she had placed.
GNC
answered Feb. 4 with another inspection.
The
inspector noted improvements in all areas, except for inventory. An order
from GNC had arrived, but had not yet been placed on
the shelf. The inspector
refused to count it and gave the store a zero for
inventory.
On Feb. 22,
the Korbs received a letter notifying them that the franchise
agreements and the subleases for both stores had been
terminated because they
failed to display merchandise according to
guidelines, had insufficient
merchandise and had failed to pay $ 77,574 in
invoices and fees.
The Korbs
filed a lawsuit asking for restraining order to prevent GNC from
taking the stores.
During discovery,
GNC's documents revealed that the Korbs had paid all
invoices except for $ 1,000, which GNC had failed to
post as a credit. Bower's
internal memo also surfaced, as well as a GNC record
that showed the Korbs'
stores were among the high-selling stores in
northeast Ohio.
"GNC's
attorneys admitted our sales and profit margins were good," Korb said.
"We scratched our heads and said, 'Then why are
you terminating us?' They said,
'Because you did not adhere to the guidelines.' They
took my stores based on low
inventory, which was low because they didn't ship our
orders."
In the end,
the Korbs ran out of money. GNC considered them in violation of
the franchise agreement and stopped selling them
products. Unable to make a
living, they couldn't finance a legal battle and
negotiated a settlement.
GNC gave
the Korbs 60 days to sell their stores and agreed to accept an
outside buyer, and the Korbs agreed to pay GNC's
lawyers. In all, legal fees
cost the Korbs about $ 200,000. The couple sold their
franchises at a loss.
"This
just seemed like a no-win situation," Korb said. "I felt that no
matter
what I would have done, they would have pressed and
pressed and pressed. Maybe
to a jury our story would have meant a little
more."
It probably
would have, agreed attorneys who fought GNC on behalf
of franchisees and won.
Of the 28
lawsuits, 14 remain active, including three which are seeking
class-action status. Nationwide, 1,000 franchisees own 1,720 stores. Other
lawsuits have been settled or dropped.
Franchisees have been encouraged by two lawsuits that have recently gone
the distance and ended in large awards.
In March,
Allegheny County Common Pleas Judge Joseph M. James awarded $
507,680 in damages to Boston franchisee Ana Oganesov in a lawsuit that charged
GNC with violation of protected territory, unfair
competition through company
stores, and unfair and deceptive trade practices.
In August,
GNC paid $ 400,000 to franchisee Manjit Sarna, who filed a
lawsuit in San Diego, claiming breach of contract,
misrepresentation and
violation of protected territory. GNC offered to
settle as a trial date loomed
weeks away, said Sarna's attorney.
GNC
maintains it does all it can to resolve disputes.
"By
the time an issue gets to the litigation stage, GNC Franchising has
explored and exhausted all possible avenues to
resolve the issue at a
business-to-business level," the company said.
"It causes the company great
concern when a solution cannot be found at this level
and a franchisee decides
to enter the legal arena."
Post-Gazette staff writer Teresa F. Lindeman contributed to this story.