Key Takeaways
- Pinky Cole temporarily lost control of Slutty Vegan earlier this year through restructuring, but quickly bought it back.
- She launched Slutty Vegan 2.0, focused on operational discipline, profitability and smart franchising.
- Her comeback offers a playbook for founders on ownership, humility and long-term sustainability.
After temporarily losing control of her company amid a debt restructuring, Pinky Cole ā founder of Slutty Vegan, the Atlanta-born fast-casual brand known for its indulgent plant-based burgers and celebrity fans ā has reacquired full ownership and launched a new version of the brand, Slutty Vegan 2.0. In this conversation, she shares the lessons behind her comeback and why this next phase is about discipline, accountability and sustainable growth through franchising.
You recently regained full control of Slutty Vegan. What did you learn from the process?
The biggest lesson is that you canāt take your hands off the wheel ā ever. Early on, I was inside the business every day. Then we grew, I brought in experienced people, and I slid into autopilot. I was still involved as a thought leader and the face of the brand, but I wasnāt in the day-to-day. Thatās where founders can get into trouble. When youāre building something for the first time, no one tells you that you canāt just set it and forget it. Youāve got to stay tethered to the vision. Having a vision is one thing. Living it ā every day, in every detail ā is another.
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Youāve described this phase as Slutty Vegan 2.0. What does that mean to you?
Itās a new beginning. You know that saying, āFool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me?ā Thereās no way I can go through the same situation twice. 2.0 is personal. Itās about taking the lessons from 1.0 and applying them ā building a stronger foundation with people who have been there before and can show me the way.
Related: No Experience? No Problem. How This First-Time Franchisee Built a $3 Million Business.
What kind of operational changes have you made to strengthen the business?
I brought in a franchise president who spent 17 years at 7-Eleven. Sheās an operator through and through. I also have a director of operations and consultants focused on systems and efficiency, and Iām looking to bring in a head of operations who lives and breathes process and throughput. My superpower is brand and marketing. So Iām surrounding myself with people whose superpower is operations. Business is always evolving ā look at Apple, dropping something new every few months. Weāve got to keep innovating the same way.
Why was now the right time to franchise Slutty Vegan?
My husband, Derrick āDā Hayes, franchises Big Daveās Cheesesteaks, so I got a front-row seat to that process. We learned from each otherās mistakes. And I realized franchising is the clearest path to scale and generational wealth ā if you do it the right way. I used to say Iād never franchise. But when you look at the most successful companies, the ones with the highest valuations are the ones that scale effectively. I wanted scalability and efficiency at the same time. Franchising achieves that, as long as I bring in real operators who align with our vision.
How do you decide whoās the right fit to franchise with you?
First, they have to understand what Slutty Vegan really is. Itās not just burgers and fries ā itās a cultural marker. We reimagined vegan food and made it cool, fun and universal. Everyone can enjoy it. Second, they have to be operators. I donāt need yes people. I want partners whoāll tell me, āPinky, do this better.ā Iām not trying to be the hero. Iām trying to build a sustainable, proven concept thatās respected by communities, customers and investors alike.
Related: She Moved to the U.S. at 17 and Worked at a Gas Station ā Then Became CEO of a $1 Billion Brand
Where are you in the franchising process now?
Our FDD is live, and weāre using FranConnect to manage the pipeline. I also brought on a franchise director. We got about 250 leads in the first week ā from individuals and investor groups. That blew my mind. It showed me that even after everything the brand has been through, people still love it. Thatās what I call a bulletproof brand.
Youāve said before that youāre more self-aware now as a leader. What changed?
Iāve always been self-aware creatively, but I wasnāt always self-aware in business. When I started, I didnāt know terms like EBITDA. I was just a creative who could make something special. So I brought in people who knew that side, and I got too comfortable. Looking back, I shouldāve forced myself to learn it, even when it was uncomfortable. As a founder, you canāt delegate understanding. Youāve got to keep learning.
What advice would you give to other personality-driven founders who want to scale sustainably?
Donāt try to be the smartest person in the room. Surround yourself with people who know what you donāt, and pay them to teach you while they build with you. Study why businesses fail, not just why they succeed. Even the biggest companies are closing locations right now, and I want to know why. Curiosity and humility ā thatās how you grow.
Youāve talked a lot about ownership and equity impact. How does franchising fit into that philosophy?
If my concept can become someone elseās vehicle to build a life, thatās impact. One founderās dream can become dozens of familiesā livelihoods. Thatās what equity looks like to me ā ownership multiplied.
Whatās next for Slutty Vegan?
Everyone asks me for a five-year plan. But after what I just went through, Iām focused on the next 24 months ā tightening the system, supporting franchisees and letting the brand marinate the right way. Scale matters, but discipline matters more.
Key Takeaways
- Pinky Cole temporarily lost control of Slutty Vegan earlier this year through restructuring, but quickly bought it back.
- She launched Slutty Vegan 2.0, focused on operational discipline, profitability and smart franchising.
- Her comeback offers a playbook for founders on ownership, humility and long-term sustainability.
After temporarily losing control of her company amid a debt restructuring, Pinky Cole ā founder of Slutty Vegan, the Atlanta-born fast-casual brand known for its indulgent plant-based burgers and celebrity fans ā has reacquired full ownership and launched a new version of the brand, Slutty Vegan 2.0. In this conversation, she shares the lessons behind her comeback and why this next phase is about discipline, accountability and sustainable growth through franchising.
You recently regained full control of Slutty Vegan. What did you learn from the process?
The biggest lesson is that you canāt take your hands off the wheel ā ever. Early on, I was inside the business every day. Then we grew, I brought in experienced people, and I slid into autopilot. I was still involved as a thought leader and the face of the brand, but I wasnāt in the day-to-day. Thatās where founders can get into trouble. When youāre building something for the first time, no one tells you that you canāt just set it and forget it. Youāve got to stay tethered to the vision. Having a vision is one thing. Living it ā every day, in every detail ā is another.
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