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Zak Omar has been a lifelong entrepreneur. He first learned about being a business owner from his father, an Afghani refugee who arrived in New York city in the 1980s.
His father introduced a new food option: a mobile fried chicken truck that he would park right outside of 1 Chase Manhattan Plaza.
When his father got sick, Omar and his brother, Ray, decided to pursue their own entrepreneurial goals by becoming multi-unit franchisees with Dunkin’. In 2013, Omar fell ill himself and was diagnosed with leukemia.
He used this diagnosis as inspiration to expand his portfolio, ultimately investing in Atomic Wings and taking over as CEO in 2016.
Connect with Zak on LinkedIn.
What You’ll Learn in This Episode
- About Zak and his path before Atomic Wings
- How Zak’s leukemia diagnosis became the driving force in his business career
- How Atomic Wings differs from it’s cometitors
- How the brand navigated the pandemic
- Lessons learned from 2020 that will help their growth in the future
- Plans for Atomic Wings growth in 2021
- Atomic Wings ideal franchisee
This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix
TRANSCRIPT
Intro: [00:00:07] Welcome to Franchise Marketing Radio, brought to you by Akosombo, comprehensive, high performing marketing solutions for mature and emerging franchise brands to supercharge your franchise marketing, go to Sambar Dotcom. That’s CEO S.A.M.. Be a dotcom.
Lee Kantor: [00:00:31] Lee Kantor here, another episode of Franchise Marketing Radio, and this is going to be a good one. Today we have with us Zach Ohmar with Atomic Wings. Welcome, Zach.
Zak Omar: [00:00:41] Thank you. Thanks for having me on.
Lee Kantor: [00:00:43] Well, I’m excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us a little bit about atomic wings, actually.
Zak Omar: [00:00:49] So Atomic Wings is a brand that was born and raised at a New York City. The brand was formed by my predecessor and founder, Adam Lipin, back in nineteen eighty nine. He actually worked out of Dove Spa, which is credited for creating the Buffalo wing. When he came to New York City, he realized there was really no good place to eat wings. So he created this awesome brand. And since then we’ve taken off and we’ve really become a cultural following here in New York City and we’re hoping to expand throughout America.
Lee Kantor: [00:01:21] So now, when he started, did he always dream of it being a franchise or did he just want it to be kind of that one shop in New York?
Zak Omar: [00:01:29] Well, when he started, he always he always he started franchising years later, so when you when he opened, it was just kind of a one shot. Yes, she opened up a bar and he started serving wings out of a bar. And then from there, he kind of took off and opened a couple locations.
Lee Kantor: [00:01:46] Now, how did you get involved with the brand?
Zak Omar: [00:01:49] So in twenty sixteen, our paths crossed, I was a franchisee of Dunkin Donuts at the time, and Adam had reached out about possibly taking about me possibly taking over territory in Maryland. And we got to talking. And Adam was in the business for about 20 plus years. At the time, I was a little burnt out and he had other things going on and. Opportunity came about where we talked and figured this was the best path forward for the brand, and he realized that with my background and the expertize that we had the best path forward for the brand and we had sold the company back in 2006.
Lee Kantor: [00:02:31] So now what did you learn from your franchisee experience that helps to make Atomic Wings franchisees?
Zak Omar: [00:02:40] So one thing I learned when school did the whole a background, did the whole Wall Street and come into franchising with Dunkin. And just in franchise world in general, I didn’t realize how Hands-On it would be and how you still have to operate your location. We still have to hire employees and you’re still in the business of customer service and employees. And at the end of the day, it’s all on you. One thing that I didn’t realize that’s helped me as a franchise owner with my franchisees is I don’t want to kill them. With construction costs, building out locations, you don’t need the high marble finishes or the high end finishes. So that’s something we’re very conscious of with our franchisees. We understand that this is their hard earned money and we definitely are sympathetic towards that. We want to make sure that they’re getting the most out of what they put in and that the return of investment happens a lot quicker than maybe some other franchises.
Lee Kantor: [00:03:49] So now you’ve talked a little bit about your back story, but can you share a little bit more about how far back that the food industry and restaurants are in your family?
Zak Omar: [00:04:00] So my father came to America as a refugee in. Nineteen eighty one, and he opened the first mobile fried chicken truck outside of one Chase Manhattan Plaza in about nineteen ninety. So I was working at that truck when I was about 12, 14 years old, and I worked until I was about 18 at the truck there in the summers and serving people fried chicken, you know, office workers, all facets. You meet all different kinds of people from the cafeteria worker to the VPE. It was really interesting. And I fell in love with that customer service aspect of it, putting smiles on people’s faces. I learned a lot from my father in terms of how he dealt with every customer and he treated everyone the same. And just it was all about delivering good hot food, fresh food and making people’s days a little bit better.
Lee Kantor: [00:04:56] So now, as a high school kid doing that work, you weren’t like, why am I doing this? You know, my friends are out hanging out, doing what teenagers do. And I’m here in this truck, you know, slinging, you know, chicken.
Zak Omar: [00:05:08] It was hot. It was hot in there. But, you know, he paid me well. So it was worth it. It was definitely worth it. I was compensated and it wasn’t working for free. But definitely, you know, summers were long and I got out about three o’clock. So still able to enjoy the rest of the day, go and play basketball and hanging out with my friends.
Lee Kantor: [00:05:30] And it did and it didn’t sour you on on getting involved in the restaurant industry. So like you
Zak Omar: [00:05:35] Did it all now
Lee Kantor: [00:05:37] And then. So when you’re when you’re telling potential franchisees because they might have to do some of that to.
Zak Omar: [00:05:45] Right. Yeah, and they have to love it, right? They have to first of all, I always tell prospective franchisees that say, listen, you need to come in. So I location try this, because if you don’t like the food, you can’t get behind this brand. You need to love the food. And thankfully, everyone that I’ve met so far and that I’ve brought on this prospect has loved the food and they’ve got tremendous things to say about the food. So that’s the first part. Second part is you have to love customer service and being able to talk to all different types of customers and be in a store. Some right now we’re at a level where we’re a growing brand, we’re an emerging brand, and we want operators are going to be hands on. We don’t want absentee owners. We want people that are going to be in their stores, care about their stores. And that’s really who we’re looking for.
Lee Kantor: [00:06:34] And then so you’re not going after kind of the professional franchisee, you’re looking at the person that wants to invest in the community and really kind of roll up their sleeves.
Zak Omar: [00:06:45] Absolutely. And it’s part of a I’m a strong believer in that foundation has to be strong. So eventually that model may change. But as of now, we’re looking for franchises that are going to be hands on. We have great story. There was a to young gentleman who used to do deliveries out of one of our franchise locations, and they’re in college and they’re about to graduate now. They love the brand so much and they deliver. They were delivery guys. They love the brand so much that they convinced their father to back them and open up a location of their own. So right now, they’re in site selection process of opening up a location. And I love stories like that. Just give them back to folks that, you know, start as delivery guys and hopefully they go on to open a hundred locations and become really successful. And that’s what we’re all about.
Lee Kantor: [00:07:38] Now, how does atomic wings differentiate themselves from the other kind of wing players out there?
Zak Omar: [00:07:45] Sure, so the biggest differentiator, in my opinion, is our product is fresh and never frozen until today, we’re still handcuffing, cutting our boneless wings and hand running them. We take pride in the fact that our food is fresh and most of our sources are gluten free. We’ve delivered this tremendous taste for over 30 years. So some of these places come in, come and go. We’ve been around for a very long time and I believe the freshness and the quality of our product speaks to that longevity additions that we have niche segments that that love the gluten free people really do appreciate the fact they don’t mind waiting 10 minutes or 12 minutes for a fresh product as opposed to something that’s under heat lamps or something that’s been in cabinet warmers.
Lee Kantor: [00:08:34] So everything’s fresh to order.
Zak Omar: [00:08:37] Everything is fresh to order, so we don’t have any heat lamps in our locations, we don’t have any worries at all locations.
Lee Kantor: [00:08:42] And then for the folks that are doing this, are they typically like targeting college towns? Like what’s the profile of a good location for you guys?
Zak Omar: [00:08:53] So it’s all over the place, I mean, we have our college kids, but our segment is mostly, I would say 16 to about forty five years old, man and woman. Everyone loves a good wedding dance for us. But it’s interesting to note that we’re busy. Monday, Sunday through Saturday, not
Lee Kantor: [00:09:15] Just game,
Zak Omar: [00:09:17] Just game day, exactly. People love wings. I was actually speaking to the VP of some of these third party apps over Eat and GrubHub, and they said that wings are the second most searched term on these websites after pizza. So that just goes to show you the strength of the wind market. And you can probably see that with guys like Pizza Hut adding links to their menus, Domino’s adding links to their menus. Yes, 7-Eleven added weights and everyone just they’re trying to just add wings just for the sake of saying to have wings on their mind.
Lee Kantor: [00:09:53] So now the menu at an atomic wings isn’t just wings, though. You have chicken sandwiches, you have burgers.
Zak Omar: [00:09:59] We have our crispy chicken sandwich. We have our tender’s, which which are great and breaded and freshly made on a daily basis. We just relaunched our tender’s in original and spicy, and we have 14 unique flavors to dip them in.
Lee Kantor: [00:10:15] And so is that kind of very region to region what’s on the menu.
Zak Omar: [00:10:23] We have some regional items that we have limited time offers on, but with our main staple, I would say eighty five percent of our business comes from our wings up almost Langsner tenders.
Lee Kantor: [00:10:36] And then the sources, are they the same in every location?
Zak Omar: [00:10:39] They are the same in every location.
Lee Kantor: [00:10:41] And so that doesn’t change. No matter the region. You might have special specialties.
Zak Omar: [00:10:46] I have a regional yes, we if we open in, you know, in a different region of America, we might open up with the regional special or a limited time offer only and and create a sauce just for that region.
Lee Kantor: [00:11:00] And then when a person opens, are they typically are they opening one just kind of checking out or are they buying like multiple units?
Zak Omar: [00:11:09] So we’re doing multiple units outside of New York area. We’re doing a three star minimum outside of New York.
Lee Kantor: [00:11:18] And then when the customer comes in, are they. Is this just for them or is there kind of a catering or a party element to it as well?
Zak Omar: [00:11:26] So they they would have to order in advance, but there is catering a lot of that in New York City. We have a lot of office workers Thursday and Friday as they place the orders ahead of time. You’re getting the underling orders to angel wings. And it’s just something that the Oval Office enjoys
Lee Kantor: [00:11:43] And is that is like the because of New York and the office density. Is that the unique thing or is like the typical atomic weapons taps into the offices as well?
Zak Omar: [00:11:54] I believe a atomically steps its offices anywhere that we go into, but our traditional, I guess, guest is, you know, young professionals that are at home and they want something really good to eat.
Lee Kantor: [00:12:09] And are they doing it to, like, pick up? Are they getting those third party deliveries? How does that how does that.
Zak Omar: [00:12:14] Mostly it’s mostly pickup and delivery. That’s where where are spaces of service. And that’s where we keep our footprint small so that we’re doing quick service type of I guess that that’s who our segment is. It’s really delivery and pickup.
Lee Kantor: [00:12:32] Now, I’ve talked to a lot of franchise folks where the pandemic really it didn’t hurt their business so much. It kind of helped him in some places that their their sales didn’t go down because they were an essential service and they were able to pivot to the curbside and to be able to kind of facilitate the ordering and the pickup. Is that how it worked for you guys?
Zak Omar: [00:12:55] Yeah, absolutely. We had so come on location, we had some locations that were up over 100 percent in sales there and covid last year, then we have a location that’s on Wall Street where, you know, there’s nobody on Wall Street, third covid. So they were they were a little less fortunate. But a lot of our locations, for the most part, had a lot higher sales in twenty twenty than they had previously.
Lee Kantor: [00:13:23] Now, are you looking to grow in certain regions of the country or is it just kind of a full court press nationwide at this point?
Zak Omar: [00:13:30] So right now it’s a full court press nationwide. We actually just signed a three star agreement out in in Texas and in the Arlington area. But where where we have a lot of people that are looking to come on board and you should see tremendous growth from our brand in the near future here.
Lee Kantor: [00:13:50] And when you go into a new market, is there a strategy that you like your franchisees to kind of do when like in terms of immersing themselves in the community, getting to know?
Zak Omar: [00:14:01] Absolutely. Absolutely. So we don’t we don’t collect advertising fees from our franchisees. And that’s done intentionally because we want them to be ingrained in their local communities and we want them to be part of the community and and spend that advertising money that they would have given us locally and helping those folks out. So that’s something that we always like to do with our franchisees. And when we go into a new market, we want to be cognizant of the fact that there’s different taste buds all over the nation. So if there’s something that we can do locally and pivot it and kind of create a local flavor for them, that’s something that we like to do.
Lee Kantor: [00:14:43] Now, fairly recently, you had a health scare. Can you talk about how that impacted you personally and how that kind of affects how you manage atomic things?
Zak Omar: [00:14:56] Capsule in twenty thirteen. I was initially diagnosed with leukemia. That was previous to me getting my tomac when I was given a clean bill of health in about twenty fifteen and then I had a relapse in twenty eighteen. I had to have a bone marrow transplant in twenty eighteen. And thank God ever since then I’ve been given a clean bill of health. But something that made me realize was I was twenty four hours a day, it was atomic weapons and I was taken on what I was doing. I was pretty much wearing 20 different hats marketing, advertising, product development, R&D, going into the stores, training. And what made me realize that I needed a team around me, a strong team that I could trust. And since then we’ve brought on quite a number of folks that have helped out with the franchise and helped us grow and have brought on great ideas.
Lee Kantor: [00:15:54] Now, can you share a little bit about how you went about creating that team and building that team, because that’s important for everybody out there that has an emerging brand. If you don’t have the right folks, it’s going to be difficult to scale.
Zak Omar: [00:16:08] Yeah, absolutely. So, you know, when looking for team members, they have to they have to share your vision. You have to share your vision with them. This is this is where I want to go. I’m open to butting heads and I’m open to different ideas. But at the end of the day, this is the path and this is where we want to be. So bringing up folks with that are going to provide something that you can’t necessarily provide that’s going to provide a different point of view that maybe you haven’t thought of and have, you know, checkmarks based on the industry that you’re in. So they have to have some sort of experience in the industry that you’re looking for or that you’re in necessarily. That experience goes a long way. And it just opened your eyes to different facets of the industry.
Lee Kantor: [00:16:55] Now, in your career, since you started out kind of with a super large brand that everybody knows, and then you’re creating this brand and you’re kind of developing the brand through your own efforts. How do you see kind of this playing out? How does the story end for you?
Zak Omar: [00:17:15] Well, I believe I’ve always been a very competitive person, and one of the things one of my goals and I shared that vision has to be the same is we want to be a name that’s known throughout the industry, all over the nation and internationally. So hopefully this story never ends for me. You know, we’re hoping that we take this thing and go throughout the world. And that’s that’s our hopes for the brand.
Lee Kantor: [00:17:47] And how many Atomic Wings units do you have right now?
Zak Omar: [00:17:50] We have 11 brick and mortar locations and another nine under construction this year, so we’ll have 20 by the end of this year. And we’re in talks with a lot of folks to double and triple that number.
Lee Kantor: [00:18:04] And then it’s right now, it’s only in the US right now.
Zak Omar: [00:18:08] We are only in the US
Lee Kantor: [00:18:09] And then any region, Europe and any region,
Zak Omar: [00:18:13] We are open to any region. Yes.
Lee Kantor: [00:18:15] And then the ideal franchisee, are they kind of second act folks like what’s your ideal franchisee look like?
Zak Omar: [00:18:22] So Atomic Wings Franchisee is someone obviously with the financial you know, we have certain financial, I guess, requirements that they would need to be successful and to make sure that they’re healthy enough to to run an operating location but are a deal franchisee as someone that has some sort of restaurant experience that’s worked in a restaurant, knows food costs, labor costs and financially savvy in that regard, we have a lot we’re very hands on with our franchisees. We train, we have our operations manager that goes around and that’s also our franchisees on a weekly basis. But they have to have some sort of knowledge of the industry
Lee Kantor: [00:19:03] And that knowledge of the industry. It could be food truck knowledge as well, right?
Zak Omar: [00:19:07] Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely.
Lee Kantor: [00:19:09] And so they don’t necessarily have to own their own restaurant they could have worked on.
Zak Omar: [00:19:15] Yeah, I just, you know, as long as they’re familiar with what it takes.
Lee Kantor: [00:19:22] Right, exactly. Maybe manage their own restaurant is OK. And if somebody wanted to learn more, have more substantive conversation with you or somebody on the team, what’s the website to go to?
Zak Omar: [00:19:34] They could go to www.atomicwings.com or they could email us at info at atomic wings dot com.
Lee Kantor: [00:19:41] Good stuff. Well, congratulations on all the success and
Zak Omar: [00:19:45] I appreciate it. Thank you.
Lee Kantor: [00:19:47] This is Lee Kantor. We will see you all next time on Franchise Marketing Radio.