How the Ideas Behind McDonald's Can Help Save the World

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SOCIAL SECTOR MICROFRANCHISING: How the Ideas Behind McDonald’s Can Help Save the World Justin Berk Yale MPH Candidate 2011 [email protected]

Transcript of How the Ideas Behind McDonald's Can Help Save the World

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SOCIAL SECTOR MICROFRANCHISING:

How the Ideas Behind McDonald’s Can Help Save the World

Justin Berk Yale MPH Candidate 2011

[email protected]

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Burden of Disease

A short list of treatable diseases accounts for 70% of all childhood illness and death in the developing world. (Black, Morris, and Bryce 2003)

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THE PROBLEM:

Only 35% of the populations in developing countries have access to essential

medicines. (WHO 2009)

Over 50% of the drugs in the market are counterfeit or sub-standard. (WHO 2009)

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Disease Burden of Treatable Illnesses

Data taken from WHO Global Burden of Disease: 2004 update (2008)

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Treatments are Affordable.

Disease Estimated Annual Deaths (2004)

Estimated Cost of Single Dose

Malaria 860,000 $0.83 / £0.53

Diarrheal Disease 1,810,000 $0.09 / £0.06

Respiratory Infections 2,940,000 $0.10 / £0.06

Total 5,610,000 <£1.00

- Death statistics from WHO 2008 - Treatment costs based on calculated averages taken from the HealthStore Foundation

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Why is this happening?

•  The public system is broken.

•  NGOs have limited capacity.

•  Private markets exploit the poor.

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Government Clinic Inefficiencies

The average public sector availability of generic medicines ranged from 30% to 54% across WHO regions. (Cameron et al. 2009)

Courtesy of HealthStore Foundation

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Lack of Consumer Confidence

India: “No one uses public [health-care] facilities very much,

and if anything, the poor use them less than the non-poor.” (Banerjee, Deaton, and Duflo 2004)

Uganda: “Public health facilities were perceived to offer low

quality care with chronic gaps such as shortages of essential supplies.” (Bakeera et al. 2009)

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Limitations of the Charity Model

•  Charity creates dependence on external donor support – Accountable to donors, not beneficiaries

•  Grant conditions may restrict operations

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Private Market Exploitation •  Over 50% of drugs in

developing countries are counterfeit (WHO 2006).

•  Private sector patients paid 9–25 times international reference prices for generic products (Cameron et al. 2009).

•  No government regulation

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The Microfranchise Model

The Social Innovation:

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HealthStore’s “Three Point Test”

•  Standardization: ensure consistent quality to ensure effectiveness and gain confidence

•  Scalability: geometric growth to serve millions of customers or patients

•  Economies of scale: achieving lowest possible costs as the network grows

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How It Works

Corporate Franchisor

Franchisee Franchisee Franchisee Franchisee

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A Microfranchise

Through a business model of standardization:

•  Consistent quality

•  High customer volume

•  Low cost

•  Financial accountability

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Franchisors provide:

•  Business manuals

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Franchisors provide:

•  Business manuals

•  Regulations

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Franchisors provide:

•  Business manuals

•  Regulations

•  Brand name

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Franchisors provide:

•  Business manuals

•  Regulations

•  Brand name

•  Sometimes loans

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The Franchise Model Passes the “Three Point Test”

•  Standardization: builds a brand name to ensure replicable quality at all outlets

•  Scalability: Subway scaled from 16 to over 27,000 outlets in 86 countries in 33 years

•  Economies of scale: achieved in advertising, distribution, information systems, supplies etc.

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Methods of Funding

•  Lowest price •  Grant dependence

Grant based

•  Low price, no donor dependence •  No access to private investment Sustainable

•  Greater access to investment capital •  Need for profit margins;

how much investor return? For-profit

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Case Studies

Two practical examples of the social sector microfranchise model

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HealthStore Foundation: The “Subway” Model

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Living Goods: The “Avon” Model

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Is it affordable to the poor?

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Is it affordable to the poor?

•  HealthStore Foundation: Over 540,000 customers served

•  Base-of-Pyramid Health Sector: $158 Billion (Hammond et al. 2007)

– Currently non-competitive and inefficient – Over 50% spent on pharmaceutical drugs

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Is it profitable?

HealthStore Foundation

2008: Of 59 CFW outlets, 88% reported a profit (Beck, Deelder, and Miller 2010).

2010: HSF operates 85 locations: 82 in Kenya, 3 in Rwanda

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Is it profitable?

Living Goods

Necessary Sales per Representative: $200/month Average Rural Household in Uganda: 5.5 people Households per representative: 200 (1100 people)

$200 / 1100 people = 18 cents per month

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Current Challenges

•  Need for “social investments”

•  Low market density in rural areas

•  Legal and regulatory obstacles

•  Competition with NGOs

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A Cautionary Tale: The Medicine Shoppe - India

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How Microfranchising Works Problem Microfranchise Solution

Counterfeits Creates reliable brand name

Stock-outs Incentives to maintain inventory

Corruption Franchisor regulates and penalizes

Financial Sustainability

No dependence on donors

Overcrowding Reduces strain on public system

Affordability Limited menu keeps costs low

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How Microfranchising Works

It creates incentives that induce franchisees to comply with quality standards, then uses this standardization to scale exponentially.

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Limitations

•  Does not reach the poorest of the poor; there is always a need for charity

•  A complement to the public system, not a replacement

•  Requires strict adherence to the franchise model

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For the full paper

www.justinberk.com/senior-essay/

[email protected]

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Thank You

-Justin Berk [email protected]

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References Bakeera, Solome K et al. 2009. “Community perceptions and factors influencing utilization of health services in Uganda.”

International Journal for Equity in Health 8(35). Available at: http://www.equityhealthj.com/content/8/1/25. Banerjee, A., A. Deaton, and E. Duflo. 2004. “Health care delivery in rural Rajasthan.” Economic and Political Weekly: 944–

949. Beck, S., W. Deelder, and R. Miller. 2010. “Franchising in Frontier Markets: What's Working, What's Not, and Why.”

Innovations: Technology, Governance, Globalization 5(1): 153–162. Black, R. E, S. S Morris, and J. Bryce. 2003. “Where and why are 10 million children dying every year?.” The Lancet

361(9376): 2226–2234. Cameron, A. et al. 2009. “Medicine prices, availability, and affordability in 36 developing and middle-income countries: a

secondary analysis.” The Lancet 373(9659): 240-249. Hammond, A. L., Kramer, W. J., Katz, R. S., Tran, J. T., & Walker, C. 2007. The Next Four Billion: Market Size and Business

Strategy at the Base of the Pyramid. Washington, DC: World Resources Institute and International Finance Corporation.

HealthStore Foundation, 2010. “The HealthStore Foundation” http://www.cfwshops.org/ Living Goods. 2010. “The Living Goods Model: A Sustainable System for Defeating Diseases of Poverty.” http://

www.livinggoods.org WHO. 2008. “The top 10 causes of death. Geneva: World Health Organization.” http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/

fs310/en/index.html WHO. 2009. “Access to affordable essential medicines.” In UN - MDG Gap Task Force 2009. http://www.who.int/medicines/

mdg/en/index.html.

Photos courtesy of HealthStore Foundation or Google Images