Papa John's franchisees open new store in Bristol



After the success of their first store opens in Derby, Papa Johns youngest franchisees, Hitesh Patel and Harry Singh, both aged 26 years old Papa John's pizza, opened their second store. The new outlet is located in the region of fishponds in Bristol. Business partners, Patel and Singh, who only got Papa Johns in April in years, tasted success quickly and now plans to acquire three additional franchise stores in the next four years.


"We chose Bristol fishponds as a placement as it relates to our development plans," explained Patel. "It is a densely populated area, with families and some students and one where we believe that the community will benefit from Papa Johns ' Better ingredients, better Pizza! ' brand.


"Our Derby store works well we are growing and are in the process of being established in the area," he continued. "We have already been visited by the local mayor, who was a true highlight. Now our new expansion in Bristol will take us to the next level of our development plan and we look forward to open new outlets in the near future. "


"Although the Lotte and Harry is our youngest franchisees, they actually have more than 12 years of combined fast food the background between them," explained Anthony Round, Business Development Manager at Papa John 's. "Their enthusiasm and experience combined with the support, Papa John's franchise team offers, means this business minded duo has the right ingredients to deliver an exciting future."


Papa Johns is one of the largest pizza companies in the world with about 4,000 stores worldwide and is rapidly expanding in 33 markets around the world. Papa John 's, which is famous for its product quality, has opportunities for potential franchisees throughout the United Kingdom, including the key places in the South-East, Yorkshire, Manchester, the West Midlands, East Midlands, South West, North East, Wales and Scotland.

This entry was posted on Monday, June 17th, 2013 at 6: 10 pm and is filed under franchises Info. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.


View the original article here