Does Dryject dictate or control labor or employment matters for franchisees and their employees?
Dryject Franchise · 2025 FDDAnswer from 2025 FDD Document
You are solely responsible for determining the terms and conditions of employment for all Your employees, for all decisions concerning the hiring, firing and discipline of Your employees, and for all other aspects of labor relations and employment practices.
All employees or agents hired or engaged by or working for You will be only Your employees or agents and will not for any purpose be considered Our employees or agents or the owner of the Marks, nor subject to Our control, and in particular, We will have no authority to exercise control over the hiring or termination of employees, independent contractors, or others who work for You, their compensation, working hours or conditions, or the day-to-day activities of those people, except to the extent necessary to protect the Marks.
It is understood that You will have sole responsibility for Your employees and all acts of Your employees, and all employment-related decisions involving wages, benefits, hours of work, scheduling, hiring, firing, discipline, supervision, record keeping, taxes and other withholding, social security contributions, Medicare contributions, unemployment fund contributions and all other terms and conditions of employment.
You must disclose to each of Your employees in writing, in a form approved by Us in advance, that you are the sole employer with total control over the terms and conditions of your employee's employment and that We are not a "joint employer" of the Franchisee's employees.
You acknowledge that We do not exercise control over or have the authority to control Your employees' (1) Wages, benefits, and other compensation; (2) Hours of work and scheduling; (3) The assignment of duties to be performed; (4) The supervision of the performance of duties; (5) Work rules and directions governing the manner, means, and methods of the performance of duties and the grounds for discipline; (6) The tenure of employment, including hiring and discharge; and (7) Working conditions related to the safety and health. You will file Your own tax, regulatory and payroll reports with respect to Your employees or agents and operations, saving and indemnifying Us of and from any liability of any nature whatsoever by virtue of it.
Source: Item 8 — BUSINESS RELATIONSHIP (FDD pages 68–229)
What This Means (2025 FDD)
According to Dryject's 2025 Franchise Disclosure Document, franchisees are independently responsible for all labor and employment matters. Dryject franchisees are solely responsible for determining the terms and conditions of employment for their employees, including hiring, firing, discipline, and all other aspects of labor relations and employment practices. This means the franchisee has complete autonomy in deciding whom to hire, what to pay, and how to manage their staff, subject to legal requirements.
Dryject explicitly states that its role does not extend to controlling the franchisee's employees. Dryject has no authority to exercise control over the hiring or termination of employees, independent contractors, their compensation, working hours or conditions, or the day-to-day activities of those people, except to the extent necessary to protect the Dryject marks. This reinforces the independent contractor relationship between Dryject and its franchisees, ensuring that franchisees maintain control over their workforce.
To further clarify this relationship, Dryject requires franchisees to disclose to their employees in writing that the franchisee is the sole employer with total control over the terms and conditions of their employment and that Dryject is not a "joint employer" of the franchisee's employees. This disclosure aims to prevent any confusion about who is responsible for employment-related decisions and liabilities. The franchisee is responsible for all employment-related decisions, including wages, benefits, hours of work, scheduling, hiring, firing, discipline, supervision, record keeping, taxes and other withholdings, social security contributions, Medicare contributions, unemployment fund contributions, and all other terms and conditions of employment. Franchisees must also handle all tax, regulatory, and payroll reports related to their employees, indemnifying Dryject from any related liabilities.