Abstract

Franchising as a legal or marketing concept was not new. It arose as a structured business system in the US, around 1860´s when The Singer Company established a network of resellers for sewing machines. Nowadays franchising is one of the fastest developing forms of business in the world. The evolution of theories that seek to explain franchise systems have been published in academic journals from time to time, but until now there was not a study that have established a social network analysis to quantify the degree of centrality and cohesion of the relationship between the main authors, journals, methods and theories in franchise. Therefore, the main purpose of this study is to extend the knowledge about franchising through an extensive research on its main theoretical perspectives into relevant international academic journals, showing the evolution of the field, highlighting the principal issues, authors and methods. Through a selection of 130 articles ranging from 1966 to 2015 the study investigates five relevant theories in franchising: (1) Resource Acquisition Theory, (2) Agency Theory, (3) Transaction Cost Analysis, (4) Signaling Theory, and (5) Property Rights Theory. A descriptive statistical analysis was done in order to identify the main authors and trends with the most used associated theories in franchise papers. The findings show agency theory and signaling theory, and resource scarcity theory as the main perspectives used in studies about franchising, but other perspectives have been increasing its presence, mainly the institutional theory and resource based-view perspective. The main dependent and independent variables cover a wide range of constructs, but ownership, performance, age, size, growth, geographical dispersion, and internationalization have been the most cited.

Highlights

  • Franchising as a legal or marketing concept was not new

  • The findings show agency theory and signaling theory, and resource scarcity theory as the main perspectives used in studies about franchising, but other perspectives have been increasing its presence, mainly the institutional theory and resource based-view perspective

  • The main objective of this study is to extend the knowledge about franchising through an extensive business are difficult to protect from imitation, and research on its main theoretical perspectives into this can involve expansion to preempt a rivals entry relevant international academic journals, showing (Thompson, 1994)

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Summary

Introduction

Franchising as a legal or marketing concept was not new It arose as a structured business system in the US, around 1860 ́s when The Singer Company established a network of resellers for sewing machines (Antonowicz, 2011; Marques, 2006). Nowadays franchising is one of the fastest developing forms of business in the world It can be conceptualized as a system of marketing goods and/or services and/or technology, which is based upon a close and ongoing collaboration between legally and financially separate and independent undertakings, that is, the franchisor and its individual franchisees, whereby the franchisor grants its individual franchisee the right, and imposes the obligation, to conduct a business in accordance with the franchisor’s concept (Antonowicz, 2011).

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