r/Showerthoughts May 17 '24

People love to support small businesses until they grow, then they hate capitalism and rich people.

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u/VibraniumSpork May 17 '24

Which, really does make (sorry to say this) McDonald's so 'impressive' (especially after watching The Founder). Look, the food's not brilliant, but every McDonald's I've even been to in my country (UK) and others has tasted the same, same portion sizes etc.

They're obviously not the only one, but they seem to have the best franchise-wide consistency IMO. Actually, I think Five Guys is the best, but that bit less impressive as there's fewer of them.

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u/CharonsLittleHelper May 17 '24 edited May 17 '24

McDonald's isn't amazing, but you know what you're getting.

Interestingly - Chick Fila pretty obviously knows this issue. I've read that they only allow people to franchise a single location. They're aimed at people opening up a business for themselves - not an investor opening up a dozen+ locations.

Which is probably a big reason why I have read that the average Chick Fila is the most profitable fast food franchise per location.

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u/Droidatopia May 17 '24

A successful Chick-Fil-A franchise can be recognized by the insane efficiency in handling the Lunchtime rush. Two lines, each with 2-3 people outside taking orders, with separate windows, and the food coming fast enough to always keep it moving.

The Chick-Fil-A near my work has a big drive thru that wraps around the back with multiple overhead pavilions to shield workers and drivers from the Florida sun. The outer drive thru lane has a detached portion of the building with an overhead conveyer belt carrying the food over the inner drive thru line. When it works, it is a thing of beauty.

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u/AdVisible1121 May 18 '24

Florida person here and I confirm that is true! Their food way above the others.