
Tom Grogan’s first job paid him simply £30 ($40) a day lugging bricks and hauling cement on a Birmingham building site. His newest payday? A £400 million ($532 million) takeover deal for the UK arm of Wingstop—the American fried hen chain with superstar followers like Kylie Jenner—that he cofounded with Herman Sahota and Saul Lewin.
And it’s all because of an opportunity encounter that traces again to when he was simply 18 and unsure what he actually needed to do along with his life. Like many Gen Zers immediately, the millennial determined to skip university and check out his hand on the commerce trade when he turned 16 years previous.
He had been working as a labourer on a constructing website for two years when he met a property developer. Like Grogan, he hadn’t gone to school both and made his means from the underside to the highest, so he started to mentor {the teenager}.
“You meet sure folks in life that change the route of it,” Grogan solely informed Fortune, including that the mentorship led to an internship at Dragon Den (the UK equal of Shark Tank) star James Caan’s personal fairness agency in central London.
“So I began to grasp how offers had been put collectively. I used to be surrounded by quite a few entrepreneurs, and that actually rapidly drove my hearth to do one thing extra with my life.”
“That in a short time led me to wanting to depart the world of employment to start out my very own enterprise on the planet of residential improvement and property improvement,” he added. “Alongside that journey, it’s a must to meet numerous folks, pitch for cash. So I form of understood the fundraising course of and having labored throughout the world of personal fairness, I understood enterprise plans and shows.”
His actual property profession set the stage for every little thing that adopted, together with assembly Sahota and Lewin—the lads who would finally assist him launch Wingstop UK. They met whereas working in actual property and property improvement, however they determined to likelihood their arm in quick meals seven years in the past.
The trio noticed the U.S. cult following and needed to carry it to London. The issue? No one believed in them.
It took one chilly e-mail and 50 no’s earlier than a $532 million sure
Grogan first found Wingstop by means of a line in a Rick Ross observe—the Grammy-nominated rapper was a franchisee within the U.S. and closely promoted the model by means of his music. Wanting in, he tried his luck sending a chilly e-mail to the dad or mum firm in Texas.
“That’s actually how we found Wingstop,” Grogan says. “We Googled it, and again in September 2016, I despatched a chilly e-mail to Wingstop HQ: ‘Hey, you’ve received no presence in Europe. We’d like to launch the model within the UK.’ Truthfully, my thought course of was, I’ll determine it out afterwards. It was a punt.”
To his shock, the U.S. crew replied positively, and Grogan’s cofounders got here on board to piece the deal collectively. “We managed to persuade the US dad or mum that one, we might increase the mandatory capital, and two, we’d assemble a crew round us. Sure, we had no expertise, however we had recognized a market hole. Nobody within the UK food-and-beverage world was talking authentically to youthful shoppers the way in which manufacturers like Gymshark and Nando’s had been,” he explains.
“We didn’t have to fret about product and even meals at first. We later realized simply how powerful operations are in a restaurant enterprise, however being naive allowed us to leap headfirst into the problem with no preconceptions. That was a present.”
However getting the go-ahead was simply the primary hurdle: What adopted had been months and months of rejection from 50 traders.
“Three younger males with no expertise in hospitality, in the end making an attempt to pitch a model, that nobody in Europe had actually heard of at the moment—that’s an enormous purple flag,” Grogan continued. “We had a variety of setbacks…We took a variety of no’s and we had a variety of stops and begins, however by the pores and skin of our tooth, we managed to tug it off.”
One of many largest fast-food model takeovers in Britain
In the long run, it took practically a yr to get that sure. “If we’d have stopped every week earlier, we wouldn’t be sat right here now,” he stated including that every rejection was a lesson. “Finally, by the fiftieth presentation, a variety of the issues that early traders had raised had both been found out or we had a solution for.”
By then, they’d managed to safe what’s now the location for his or her flagship restaurant in London’s West Finish. “So it made it a bit extra actual for these later traders that got here to talk to us,” Grogan provides. “We are saying amongst ourselves that the celebs have aligned on this journey, and that was most likely one of many first stars that did align for us.”
And the celebs actually did align for Grogan and the crew. They constructed the UK Wingstop model from scratch; following within the U.S. branches’ focusing on of Gen Z and millennial shoppers, utilizing social media and the celebrities of the second. Right this moment, there are 57 Wingstop websites within the UK.
Almost 9 years after sending that first chilly e-mail, the trio bought a majority stake of Lemon Pepper Holdings (Wingtop UK’s dad or mum firm) to Californian personal fairness agency Sixth Avenue simply earlier than the New Yr. Already, it has plans to develop to 200 UK sites in the next five years. The deal marked one of many largest takeovers of a restaurant model in Britain.
And Grogan, a 35-year-old Brit with zero prior restaurant cashed in his share of a £400 million ($532 million) windfall.
Reflecting on his meteoric rise from development websites, Grogan tells the subsequent era of aspiring entrepreneurs that real-world expertise—not lectures—shapes success.
“Until you wish to be a health care provider or a lawyer, college is a waste of time. The experiences which you can have throughout the world of enterprise, or with a mentor, or by turning into road good are much more precious than a textbook.”

