How Mike Sutton 40x’d a Soap Brand & Scaled a Restaurant

Mike Sutton of Guideboat Capital shares how he scaled Ojos Locos to $25M EBITDA and 40x’d Buff City’s value through overlooked, high-growth deals.

Michael Sutton

From Wall Street to Main Street, Michael Sutton has taken an unconventional path to building a powerhouse independent sponsor platform.

His first deal? A sports bar chain that skyrocketed from $5M to $25M (EBITDA) under his leadership. His second? A handshake over beers. His third? A $5m EV soap shop.

Guideboat Capital Partners built a track record through exceling at scaling multi-location businesses in overlooked industries.

"Independent sponsors are underdogs. You have to work harder. You have to sell yourself better. You have to be able to sell a track record and reputation, and an ability to execute."

In this episode we learn about Guideboat’s proclivity for “overlooked” deals.

"We’ve really built Guideboat around looking for businesses that some folks may not want to invest in because they’re not trendy or have hair on them."

In particular we get to hear about Ojo’s Locos, a restaurant chain with a strongly-identified customer demographic, that scaled from $5m to $25m of EBITDA under Guideboat’s ownership.

"Over time I have built good relationships with a lot of different folks. I was lucky enough in [the Ojos Locos] case to be able to pick up the phone, call some buddies that were in the City, and I said 'look, I have this business, I think it's incredible, here's my diligence, I need a lot of money.' They call me the next day and say 'we agree it's a good business, we're in'. If it hadn't been for knowing them, it wouldn't have been that easy," shares Michael.

We furthermore learn the story about Buff City, a soap retailer. Says Michael: "EV today is up by more than 40x. We bought it for $5 million. It was tiny, very under the radar. We were on the fence. It's interesting, but it's small. We ran one very rudimentary survey with the existing customer base, and 95% said they were buying the product for themselves and their family. So we had a repeatable base. That resonated extraordinarily with me because it told me this is not a business that is just purely transactional. That was really powerful. That's something that we could build off of. So that's what finally pushed us over the edge and said let's go."

"The most important thing with the first deal is, what I commonly tell people, don't worry about hitting a home run. Don't worry about getting the best economics possible. Just make sure you get something done, build your reputation, show you have high integrity, you're a prudent individual, you make people money. It doesn't have to be a fortune, but you're going to get a lot more shots on goal in the future if you have a great outcome on the first one."

This episode is packed with insights on deal-making, Michael’s obsession with constant revenue growth, capital raising, and the art of building a business from the ground up.

Photo: Mike Sutton scuba diving with orcas in northern Norway in early January 2025.

More recent episodes

Bill Boffa & Darren Fultz
EP.
38
with
Bill Boffa & Darren Fultz

Platform + Key Competitor = Multiple Expansion

Willistown Capital's award-winning acquisitions of Quiltcraft and Fabtex demonstrate how independent sponsors execute complex deals for multiple expansion.

Ryan Sullivan
EP.
37
with
Ryan Sullivan

Buy Small ($1m EBITDA at 4x), Keep Winning

Learn Ryan Sullivan's proven strategy at North Park Group: buy $1m EBITDA companies at 4x multiples, leverage SBA financing, and achieve 25% annual returns.

Quinten Griffiths
EP.
36
with
Quinten Griffiths

$100m Fund? No, Thanks!

Quinten Griffiths turned a failed $80 search fund into GoodCapital success, declined $100m fund offer to stay independent sponsor focused on purpose-driven acquisitions.

new episode every week
new episode every week
new episode every week
new episode every week
new episode every week
new episode every week

Be the first to know about new episodes!

Receive summaries of our weekly interview drops:
Thank you! You've subscribed to our podcast list.
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Want to recommend a guest for the Minds Capital Podcast?
Send an email to podcast@mindscapital.co.