Loveland Reporter-Herald

Teriyaki Madness opens Fort Collins location

- — Bizwest, an independen­t news organizati­on, and is published under a license agreement. © 2023 Bizwest Media LLC.

A former police officer and his fishing buddy have opened an Asian fast-casual restaurant on Fort Collins’ north side.

The Teriyaki Madness franchise location, in 1,300 square feet of leased space in the North College Marketplac­e at 1880 N. College Ave., Suite 130, held a grand opening on Friday.

Denver-based Teriyaki Madness has 128 units open now in 33 states plus Lethbridge, Alberta, Regina, Saskatchew­an, and San Luis Potosi in Mexico, and chief marketing officer Jodi Boyce said it plans to open 59 more shops this year. Locations already open in Northern Colorado include Broomfield, Longmont, Johnstown, Greeley and Firestone.

A meal at that Firestone location and a conversati­on with its owner, Tim Mccurry, helped Bobby Traylor and Justin Ballek decide to open a Teriyaki Madness location in Fort Collins.

Traylor’s family had owned restaurant­s for 30 years in Cheyenne, Wyo. A University of Wyoming graduate, he worked in constructi­on but also was a police officer for 15 years. Ballek, a Colorado resident since 2003, has a background in corporate finance.

The pair met while sitting next to each other at their children’s Denver Nuggets Skills Challenge Final. They and their families became best friends and neighbors.

“We kayak fish,” Traylor said, “and I had the idea during COVID to take Justin after we fished to restaurant­s he’d never been to before.”

While eating at a Raising Cane’s location, they talked about opening their own fast-food restaurant. Traylor knew a real-estate agent who had brokered Teriyaki Madness locations, and because the chain’s Firestone shop along Interstate 25 seemed a good midpoint between Fort Collins and their children’s softball and basketball activities, the pair stopped there and got the details from Mccurry, then made the decision to sign up to bring up to three Teriyaki Madness franchises to Fort Collins.

According to its website, the initial investment range for a Teriyaki Madness location is between $346,000 and $768,760, compared with what it says is the average initial investment in the fast-casual restaurant industry of $764,395. According to the website, the average unit volume for a Teriyaki Madness unit is $1,161,201.

Starting up in the postpandem­ic era hasn’t seemed to slow Teriyaki Madness’ growth, Boyce said.

“A lot of it’s based on the technology and support we offer,” she said, noting that even before COVID the company had an app and a system for ordering integratio­n with third-party delivery. “So we didn’t have to pivot too much, just crank up the volume and let people know about how they could get food into their hands,” she said. “In fact, some of our best years ever were 2020 and 2021.”

She said supply-chain and labor issues in 2022 posed more of a challenge, “but we have a pretty robust system,” as well as strong support from restaurant-food suppliers “to get the right food into our shops.”

Traylor and Ballek testmarket­ed their Asiantheme­d bowls Sunday by giving them away to staffers and customers at the nearby King Soopers, as well as to a local fire station and the Northside Aztlan Community Center. “The comments we’ve gotten so far are that these portions are huge,” Traylor said.

The pair said their goal is to make the restaurant a staple in north Fort Collins, a healthier alternativ­e to burgers and tacos. “We’re really excited to open up there,” Boyce said. “There’s a bunch of people in our office who went to (Colorado State University) and even grew up there, so we’re excited to bring the madness to Fort Collins.”

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