How a European Education Brand Built 200 Franchise Locations Across China: Case Study
In 2015, a European early childhood education brand — renowned across Europe for its Montessori-inspired curriculum, bilingual immersion programs, and child-centered learning philosophy — made a calculated bet on the Chinese market. A decade later, that bet had grown into a network of over 200 franchised learning centers across 60 Chinese cities, serving more than 50,000 students annually with system-wide revenues exceeding RMB 1.5 billion. This case study examines how the European education brand navigated China’s complex regulatory environment for foreign educational services, structured its franchise model for the education sector, localized its curriculum without compromising pedagogical integrity, and built a sustainable growth engine in one of the world’s most competitive education markets.
The China Opportunity for Foreign Education Brands
China’s early childhood education market has experienced explosive growth over the past decade, driven by rising disposable incomes, the cultural premium placed on education, and the government’s relaxation of the one-child policy, which was replaced by a three-child policy in 2021. Chinese parents spend an average of 30% of household income on their children’s education, with early childhood education representing one of the fastest-growing segments.
The European brand identified several structural advantages that positioned it well for the Chinese market:
- Parental Demand for International Education: Chinese middle-class and affluent parents place enormous value on educational approaches that develop creativity, critical thinking, and bilingual capability — qualities associated with Western education philosophies.
- Regulatory Opening: Although China restricts foreign investment in compulsory education (Grades 1–9), early childhood education (ages 2–6) and supplementary education services remain more accessible to foreign-invested enterprises under the 2024 updated Negative List for Foreign Investment Access.
- Brand Premium: European education brands carry significant cachet in China, where parents are willing to pay premium tuition fees for what they perceive as higher-quality, more holistic educational experiences.
- Scalable Model: The brand’s curriculum, teacher training methodology, and operational systems had been refined over 30 years in Europe and were designed for replication across multiple locations.
Market Entry Strategy: The Partner-First Approach
Rather than establishing a wholly foreign-owned enterprise (WFOE) for direct operations — a path that would have required millions in upfront investment and years of regulatory approvals — the European brand opted for a master franchise strategy, granting exclusive rights for China to a well-established Chinese education group with existing schools and government relationships.
The master franchisee, a Shanghai-based education conglomerate operating 50 domestic-brand kindergartens and after-school centers, brought critical assets to the partnership:
- Existing Physical Infrastructure: The conglomerate owned or leased 18 properties across Shanghai and neighboring provinces that could be converted to the European brand’s specifications, dramatically accelerating the initial store rollout.
- Licensed Teacher Pipeline: Through partnerships with three Chinese normal universities (teacher training colleges), the conglomerate had a pipeline of bilingual teaching graduates who could be trained in the European pedagogy.
- Government Relationships: The conglomerate had established relationships with local education bureaus in key cities, facilitating the licensing and inspection processes that foreign education brands often find daunting.
- Local Brand Recognition: The conglomerate’s existing reputation in Chinese education gave the European brand instant credibility with Chinese parents who might be skeptical of a foreign brand with no local track record.
Franchise Structure and Key Terms
The master franchise agreement was structured to balance the European brand’s need for pedagogical quality control with the master franchisee’s need for rapid market penetration:
| Component | Detail |
|---|---|
| Master territory | Exclusive rights for mainland China |
| Master term | 15 years with renewal options |
| Master fee | EUR 8 million upfront |
| Ongoing royalty | 6% of gross tuition revenue |
| Sub-franchise structure | Master franchisor sells individual center franchises to local operators; European brand receives 2% of sub-franchise fees |
| Store opening commitment | 25 centers by Year 3, 100 by Year 7, 200 by Year 10 |
| Teacher certification | All lead teachers must complete brand’s certified training program (4 weeks in Europe + 8 weeks in China) |
| Curriculum adaptation | 70% European core curriculum (translated and adapted for Chinese context), 30% China-specific content |
Curriculum Localization: The Critical Success Factor
The most challenging aspect of the expansion was curriculum localization. The European brand’s pedagogy emphasized free play, child-directed learning, and minimal structured instruction — a philosophy that in some ways conflicted with Chinese parents’ expectations for academic rigor and measurable outcomes. The master franchisee and the European brand collaborated on a “bridge curriculum” that addressed these tensions:
Bilingual Immersion Model: Each center adopted a 50:50 English-to-Chinese language model, with one native English-speaking teacher and one Chinese teacher co-leading each classroom. English was used for core academic subjects (math, science, literacy foundations), while Chinese was used for cultural subjects (Chinese language, calligraphy, traditional arts, and social studies). This model satisfied parents’ desire for English proficiency while meeting Chinese regulatory requirements for Mandarin instruction.
Academic Outcomes Measurement: The European brand’s original assessment framework was qualitative and observational, relying on teacher narratives and developmental checklists. The Chinese operation added quantitative milestone assessments — regularly reporting progress in literacy, numeracy, and language acquisition — to meet parental expectations for measurable academic outcomes. These assessments were carefully designed to measure genuine developmental progress rather than teaching to a test.
Chinese Cultural Integration: The curriculum was enriched with Chinese cultural content, including traditional festivals (Spring Festival, Dragon Boat Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival), Chinese art forms (paper cutting, ink painting), and Chinese moral education elements. This not only satisfied regulatory requirements for “patriotic education” but also differentiated the brand from purely Western education models.
Operational Expansion: From 25 to 200 Centers
The expansion unfolded in three distinct phases:
Phase 1: Flagship Establishment (Years 1–3)
The first 25 centers were concentrated in Shanghai, Beijing, and the Yangtze River Delta region. Each center was company-operated by the master franchisee rather than sub-franchised, allowing the group to perfect the operational model, train the first cadre of center directors, and build a reputation for quality. The flagship Shanghai center, located in the Jing’an district, became the brand’s showcase — attracting media coverage, hosting visits from education ministry officials, and serving as the training hub for all future center staff.
Phase 2: Sub-Franchise Expansion (Years 4–7)
With the operational model proven, the master franchisee began recruiting sub-franchisees for tier-1 and tier-2 cities. Sub-franchisees were typically local entrepreneurs with experience in education or children’s services and a minimum net worth of RMB 10 million. Each sub-franchisee paid an upfront franchise fee of RMB 800,000–1,200,000 plus 6% of monthly tuition revenue. The master franchisee provided site selection support, center design and construction management, teacher recruitment assistance, and ongoing operational coaching.
During this phase, the network grew from 25 to 120 centers. Key to this acceleration was the development of a centralized supply chain for educational materials, furniture, and technology systems. By centralizing procurement, the master franchisee reduced per-center startup costs by approximately 20% and ensured consistent quality across the network.
Phase 3: Deep Penetration (Years 8–10)
In the most recent phase, expansion moved into tier-3 and tier-4 cities, where competition from domestic education brands was intense but demand for international education was growing rapidly. These smaller-city centers adopted a modified economic model with lower tuition fees (30% below tier-1 city pricing) but significantly lower operating costs, particularly in rent and labor. Digital marketing played a critical role in this phase, with the master franchisee launching targeted campaigns on Douyin (TikTok China) and Xiaohongshu (Little Red Book) to reach parents in smaller cities who aspired to international education for their children.
Regulatory Navigation: Key Challenges
The education sector in China is heavily regulated, and the European brand’s expansion was shaped by several regulatory developments:
The “Double Reduction” Policy (2021): China’s 2021 “Double Reduction” policy, which severely restricted after-school academic tutoring, created both challenges and opportunities for the brand. While the policy did not directly impact early childhood education (ages 2–6), it caused a surge of education entrepreneurs seeking new business models — many of whom became qualified sub-franchisees for the European brand. The policy also increased parental interest in holistic, non-academic early childhood programs.
Foreign Teacher Visa Restrictions: COVID-era restrictions on foreign teacher visas created significant staffing challenges. The brand’s response was threefold: (1) accelerate the training of Chinese bilingual teachers who could lead English immersion classrooms without a foreign co-teacher; (2) establish a licensed teacher recruitment office in the Philippines to access qualified native English speakers who could obtain Chinese work visas; and (3) invest in a virtual reality (VR)-enhanced remote teaching platform that allowed European-based teachers to conduct live sessions with Chinese classrooms.
Licensing and Inspection Compliance: Each center must obtain a School Running License (办学许可证) from the local education bureau — a process that typically takes 3–6 months and requires compliance with facilities standards, teacher qualification ratios, and fire safety codes. The master franchisee’s central compliance team maintained a “licensing playbook” for each province, reducing the average licensing timeline to 75 days.
Financial Performance and Returns
By Year 10, the 200-center network generated system-wide revenues of approximately RMB 1.5 billion. Center-level EBITDA margins averaged 22% for mature centers (operating 3+ years), with newer centers typically reaching breakeven within 12–18 months. For the European brand, annual royalty income from China reached EUR 7.5 million, representing approximately 15% of the brand’s global royalty revenue — making China the brand’s second-largest market after Europe.
Lessons for Foreign Education Brands
Conclusion
The European education brand’s journey from a single flagship center in Shanghai to a 200-center national network demonstrates that foreign educational brands can achieve remarkable scale in China through a well-executed master franchise strategy. Success required patience in partner selection, significant investment in curriculum localization, rigorous teacher training systems, and unwavering commitment to compliance. For foreign education brands considering the Chinese market — whether in early childhood, language training, or supplementary education — this case study offers a proven blueprint for sustainable growth that protects brand integrity while achieving meaningful market penetration.
