Nothing Bundt Cakes vs Papa Murphy's

Two franchise systems, side by side. For a software vendor, they are not the same opportunity.

More open target
Nothing Bundt Cakes
wins 3 of 12 vendor rows

Nothing Bundt Cakes is the stronger software-sales opportunity right now, and it’s not particularly close. The dimension that matters most here is budget. With an AUV of $1.48M, franchisees are running higher-volume operations that justify and can afford a modern tech stack. Papa Murphy’s units, at $680K AUV, are scraping by on thin margins where every dollar of software spend gets scrutinized. The 6% royalty at Nothing Bundt Cakes signals a franchisor that’s actively reinvesting in systems and support, which means they’re more likely to mandate or subsidize technology adoption across the network. When you’re selling POS and back-office software, you want operators who treat technology as infrastructure, not a luxury.

The tradeoff is total addressable market versus account quality. Papa Murphy’s gives you 1,119 franchised units to chase, nearly double Nothing Bundt Cakes’ 643. But those Papa Murphy’s operators are running a declining brand with negative unit growth and an overdue FDD filing—red flags that suggest franchisee distress and franchisor disengagement. Nothing Bundt Cakes is adding units at 18.6% YoY, which means you’re selling into a growing ecosystem where new franchisees need to stand up operations from scratch. That’s a recurring pipeline of greenfield deployments, not just replacement sales into stagnant locations.

The procurement model is the only meaningful counterpoint. Papa Murphy’s approved-supplier model theoretically gives you a direct path to franchisees without franchisor gatekeeping, whereas Nothing Bundt Cakes’ franchisor-controlled procurement means you’ll need corporate buy-in first. But that’s a feature, not a bug—once you win the franchisor, you get pushed down to every unit. The franchisor’s 2025 FDD filing signals active corporate management, and the higher royalty stream gives them the budget to invest in centralized technology decisions. You’re selling once to a motivated buyer with enforcement power, not 1,119 times to operators who can’t afford you.

Verdict: Nothing Bundt Cakes wins on budget, growth trajectory, and organizational leverage—the only tradeoff is a smaller current unit count, which is more than offset by higher-quality economics and a franchisor positioned to mandate adoption.

quick_service_restaurant
Nothing Bundt Cakes
quick_service_restaurant
Papa Murphy's
Total units
660
1,127
Franchised units
643
1,119
Unit growth YoY
18.635%
-2.271%
Average unit revenue (AUV)
$1.48M
$681K
Royalty
6%
5%
Ad fund
5%
2%
Initial franchise fee
$45K
Investment range (low)
$667K
$367K
Investment range (high)
$1.03M
$670K
Procurement model
Franchisor controlled
Approved supplier
FDD fiscal year
2025
2024
Filing freshness
DUE
OVERDUE

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Common questions

Nothing Bundt Cakes vs Papa Murphy's, answered

Nothing Bundt Cakes has 660 total units and Papa Murphy's has 1,127, so Papa Murphy's is the larger system.
Nothing Bundt Cakes grew units +18.635% year over year vs -2.271% for Papa Murphy's, so Nothing Bundt Cakes is growing faster.
Nothing Bundt Cakes reports $1.48M in average unit revenue and Papa Murphy's reports $681K, so Nothing Bundt Cakes has the higher AUV.
Nothing Bundt Cakes charges a 6% royalty and Papa Murphy's charges 5%, so Papa Murphy's has the lower royalty.
Nothing Bundt Cakes's initial investment runs $667K–$1.03M and Papa Murphy's's runs $367K–$670K, so Nothing Bundt Cakes requires the larger investment.

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