I don't know of any franchises per se, but Thoughtbot, a well known Ruby on Rails consultancy, publishes a "Playbook"[0] that outlines how they run their consultancy. I find it to be a good guide to consult from time to time. It covers everything from the development process to sales. It's written from the point of view of a new Thoughtbot employee, which makes it an interesting read.
Get one client and go from here. The hardest parts will be learning how to manage your time, saying no to your clients, and figuring out how to take an idea from a client and transferring it directly to code.
Go meet people. It's amazing how many people are out there searching for talent. If they can't hire a full time, they often resort to contractors. That's you.
WSI (www.wsicorporate.com) is still around. But I really don't understand the point of a franchise for a web development business. A web development business is one or more people with a computer, some skills and the ability to deal with customers. You don't need a consumer brand, a supply chain, specialist equipment and training or a stylish bricks & mortar store, so I'm really not sure what value you'd expect to get from a franchise fee.
If you need help getting customers, offer your services to other agencies for which they pay you
Well people don't know if you are competent, if your prices are reasonable, if you are honest, if you follow some standard business practices, if you document your work, and so on.
The point of the brand is to promise all that to them.
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[ 3.9 ms ] story [ 13.8 ms ] thread0 - http://playbook.thoughtbot.com/
Get one client and go from here. The hardest parts will be learning how to manage your time, saying no to your clients, and figuring out how to take an idea from a client and transferring it directly to code.
you can do a search for marketing agencies.
hope that helps
If you need help getting customers, offer your services to other agencies for which they pay you