Minu Amiri was ecstatic with the success of his invention of the Amiri Pot and sought very quickly how to best spread his creation across the continent. The logistics of this problem worried him initially: How could he produce the pots and run a business over such a span of land and countries? He decided on a rudimentary Franchising solution in which he would teach the Circles and construction practices of the pots for a small fee, then that fee would be used in part as a payment for a storefront where the individual he just taught could create and sell Amiri Pots and keep somewhere between 80-90% of the profit, the rest being given to Amiri for the right to continue selling his idea. The primary issue is that Minu Amiri has no reliable way to ensure that those who he has trained will not attempt to train or create additional business he has no knowledge of and continue to profit or even compete with his actual business. This worry has, over time, become one of pride over substance thanks to Minu being extraordinarily wealthy.