Point Franchise Welcomes Premier
James Muddimer, writer
Children’s sport franchise Premier kicks off Point Franchise journey.
By leading sports and activity sessions on the nation’s playgrounds for the last two decades, Premier has inspired millions of schoolchildren to get active. The franchise’s sports, art and wellbeing programmes are delivered to around 240,000 youngsters every year.
There’s a secret to Premier’s success. The sports franchise did not grow into the country’s leading provider of sports and activity sessions for schools by coincidence. Premier has grown year-on-year by building a strong network of franchise partners that cater for their own communities.
Premier is run by a family of 1,200 different coaches who get hearts pumping by leading energetic sessions week in, week out. Without them, Premier wouldn’t have been able to deliver its service to over 2,500 schools in the UK.
The sports franchise is looking for more franchise partners to help connect more schools across the country with Premier. If you are a business owner that wants to expand your sports service, a teacher that is looking for some fresh inspiration or a person that’s involved in sport and wants to build a business out of your passion, Premier wants to talk to you.
In return for an initial investment of £14,950, franchisees will benefit from serving territories that, in some instances, overturn more than £1 million per year. Joining Premier is a great way of starting up your own business without the added risk of starting from scratch. But don’t take our word for it. Danny Bloomfield took the same plunge to become a Premier franchisee in 2003, and never looked back since: "Premier has been one of the best decisions I have ever made, as not only am I running a successful business, but I am making a real difference to the local communities we serve. I now have around 75 staff across 7 territories."
Premier
Premier is the UK’s number 1 franchisor for delivering sports and activity in schools. We’re at the forefront of delivering sports, arts and wellbeing programmes to around 250,000 children a year.
James Muddimer, writer