Monday, December 1, 2008

Francorp Client - Maui PlayCare

Kid relief
Maui PlayCare offers stress-free child care
By Adam ElrashidiAs published in: Franchise Times - November-December 2008

A Montana transplant to Hawaii hopes that parents and franchisees will say "Aloha!" to her drop-in day care franchise.Hawaii gave the world hula dancing, macadamia nuts and Don Ho. Now you can add stress-free, drop-off childcare to the list, thanks to Bonnie McCarthy's franchise, Maui PlayCare.
A Montana-transplant, McCarthy quit her job in construction safety and office management to become a stay-at-home mom shortly after her last two children were born, but found that she had less time for herself. "It just became a way of life where I didn't even have a minute to even think," says McCarthy.
McCarthy didn't like the idea of leaving her kids with babysitters and didn't want to pay the membership fees and high rates at day-care centers when she only needed an hour or two a day. So in 2002 she came up with the concept of Maui PlayCare - a center where parents can leave their children for an hour or two, or for the full day.
The concept is simple: Maui PlayCare provides parents running to the grocery store or a doctor's appointment with a place they can safely leave their children for a short amount of time. There's no reservations. No membership fees. No unadjusted hourly rates. Maui even provides parents with a to-go pager for an added sense of security.
Bonnie McCarthy's own child care problems led her to create Maui PlayCare in 2002.Maui PlayCare is structured around the "Aloha Spirit" - an attitude akin to "Southern Hospitality" that emphasizes community service, fun and relaxation.
Additionally, Maui provides children with a fun environment they can enjoy at their own pace. Children play in secured-access playrooms that are monitored by attendants. Kids are given healthy snacks, and can participate in activities as they wish.
The company also has a program to help kindergarten-age children transition from being home all day to being in the classroom. Children are left in Maui's care for intermittent periods of time, allowing them to learn that even though their parents are gone, they will be back.
"By the time school comes around and they drop them off, the child is used to it - they know mommy is coming back, it doesn't disrupt the teacher or the classroom," said McCarthy. The franchise's main location cooperates with a local community college to provide tuition assistance for college students with children.
McCarthy began franchising the concept last year after receiving numerous inquiries from tourists who were able to take advantage of her services while on vacation. "I had people from Texas, from Florida, from New York coming to me and saying there's nothing like it (on the mainland)," said McCarthy. "I had people asking me, 'Is this a franchise?' 'Do you sell franchises?' - so I started educating myself on franchising, and I decided that this was something I wanted to do."
At a glance
Initial Investment: $137,000-$221,000
Franchise Fee: $40,000
Royalty: 7 percent
Ad Fee: 6 percent local
Units: 1Maui PlayCare has a no-brainer sales pitch to prospective franchisees - each unit comes with its own trip to Hawaii. McCarthy trains new franchisees herself at the company's Maui headquarters.
That's not the only reason Marilyn Alexander, a retired child welfare worker, was interested in the concept. The Oklahoma City franchisee said the concept allowed her to begin working with kids again.
"If I would have had something like this when my kids were growing up, I would have used it - a lot," said Alexander. "Just thinking about going to the supermarket (now), and looking at some of these moms who are so stressed out because they've got three kids hanging off them, wanting this, wanting that; and these moms are just barely making it through."
Currently, Maui PlayCare has two units in development, one in Oklahoma City and another in Scottsdale, Arizona. McCarthy said she plans to have 20 more units signed in 2009, with roughly 10 to 15 open or under construction by the end of that year, plus another 50 deals signed by the end of 2010.

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