º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Fat Hippo burger business to grow workforce to 600 as roll-out ramps up

The company will open restaurants in Edinburgh and Bath this year with more to follow in 2024

Paul Gainford of RMT Accountants and Business Advisors with Fat Hippo founder Michael Phillips(Image: RMT Accountants & Business Advisors/Fat Hippo)

The founder of North East independent restaurant group The Fat Hippo has revealed ambitions to grow its workforce to 600 employees this year as its national roll-out heats up.

The popular gourmet burger business first opened in Jesmond 12 years ago and is now putting on a show in the London’s theatre district with the launch of its first West End venue, its latest opening as part of huge growth this year. Now managing director and founder Michael Phillips has said the company will create a further 90 jobs before the year is out, taking the workforce to the milestone figure.

He said: “Taking our workforce towards 600 people by the end of the year is a big achievement for a business that started with a single small venue in North East England, but we know that there’s a lot more potential in the brand to be realised in 2024 and beyond.”

Read more: Dragons' Den entrepreneur Sara Davies reveals plans to publish second book

The Soho opening marks the Newcastle group’s second London location alongside its Shoreditch premises, and after opening five new restaurants during 2022 it is aiming to add a further three to its growing portfolio this year, including a new restaurant on Edinburgh’s George Street this summer and a venue in Bath. Several more restaurants will follow in 2024.

The Fat Hippo Group management team is working with Paul Gainford and Julie Cuthbertson of Gosforth-based RMT Accountants and Business Advisors on all aspects of its growth strategy, and with property firm @retail to secure sites.

The company was launched in 2010 when Mr Phillips opened the company’s first restaurant in Jesmond after writing his original business plan while still a student at Northumbria University.

Its Cardiff, Birmingham, Glasgow, York and Shoreditch restaurants all opened last year, and sit alongside venues in Newcastle, Durham, Leeds, Liverpool and Nottingham city centres. It also has four concession kiosks within bowling venue Lane 7’s Sheffield, Manchester, Bristol and Edinburgh sites, a concession in the Kommune urban foodhall in Sheffield and a street food fleet that travels across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.