The Lakes Distillery

Year founded 2011
HQ Location Newcastle upon Tyne
Sector Food & Drink
Staff count 85
Turnover £5-10m
When entrepreneurs Paul Currie and Gary Thornton with a vision for a world-class whisky distillery in Cumbria met expert retailer Nigel Mills, the scene was set to create a retail and export business, and award-winning tourist destination
www.lakesdistillery.com

English whisky: distilling liquid gold

“Whisky has to stay in the cask for at least three years and a day until it’s certified according to UK law,” says Nigel Mills, CEO of The Lakes Distillery. This lengthy wait presents a challenge to prospective distillers. How can they make money as the spirit is ageing and while continuing to invest in future whisky stocks?

So right from the start in 2012, Mills along with co-founders Paul Currie and Gary Thornton created a business plan that included multiple income streams. And on the menu were gin and vodka, a blended whisky, retail, a restaurant, a guided tour and an online shop.

“For most distilleries it’s a race to get the casks open and get the whisky sold,” says Mills. “But for us, we have other income streams. And as a result we have time to develop our multi-oak, multi-sherry maturation strategy. We believe this makes us unique in the world.”

Today the distillery attracts more than 100,000 visitors a year. The organisers of World Whisky Day chose the distillery as number one of the Eight distilleries to visit before you die. The list includes esteemed makers such as Glenfiddich in Scotland and Kavalan in Taiwan.

 

Building the right team

Mills always knew that human capital was integral to making their goals a reality. Without master distillers, expert restaurateurs and business expertise, he believes, the project would have little chance to succeed.

The trio shared their business plan with whisky expert Dr Alan Rutherford and asked for his professional opinion. “He said that it was the best business plan for a new distillery he’d ever seen,” says Mills. Impressed by Rutherford’s praise, Mills asked him to join the team. Then the bold move paid off.

Mills replicated this strategy in recruiting ex-Michelin-starred chef Terry Laybourne who was tasked with heading up the site’s bistro.

Our vision is to create a global whisky brand in the luxury goods sector.

Nigel Mills, The Lakes Distillery

Show us the money

After the team was in place, Mills knew they were in strong position to seek investment. “We had the plan, the people, but we just needed to raise the capital, and we knew the Enterprise Investment Scheme would help us,” says Mills.

The company raised £9.9m from high-net-worth individuals through Enterprise Investment Scheme (EIS)-qualified funds. They raised £1.5 via Crowdcube, also EIS-qualified, and a further £600,000 in grants mainly from Cumbria-based regeneration company Britain’s Energy Coast.

Their funding meant they could start construction in January 2014 and start trading on December 15 later that year. Their first batch of whisky spirit was legally entitled to be called whisky from December 17, 2017.

“Our vision is to create a global whisky brand in the luxury goods sector. Our multi-oak, multi-sherry maturation policy developed by world-class whisky expert Dhavall Gandhi who is confident of helping us achieve those goals,” says Mills.

 

Planning to go public

This year’s turnover is expected to be £6.7m. The bistro, on-site shop and tours generate £2.5m a year in sales, which Mills expects to reach £2.7m at the end of 2018. “The biggest growth area will be UK retail, wholesale and export because it’s all very scalable and generates £4m,” says Mills.

Mills points to the fact that gin sales of 70cl-equivalent bottles will exceed 200,000 this year. And as for the whisky, right now the distillery is producing around 400,000 bottles, but this is set to increase.

The company continues to need to raise funds to invest in whisky stock and white spirits. Mill says they plan to raise extra capital to fund expansion in the UK, Europe, the US and Asia.


Key Metrics

700,000

70cl-equivalent whisky bottles

produced to date

100,000

annual visitors

100,000

70cl-equivalent gin bottles

produced in 2018

Sources of capital

Related Stories

LendInvest
LendInvest has secured a strong position in the UK property finance market after raising £760m of lending capital, and is taking on the established bank market with its technology-driven model and its increasingly diverse and cost-effective capital base. Read more...
Longitude
An impressive 55.9% annual average revenue growth rate between 2012 and 2015 helped confirm Longitude’s place on the FT1000 fastest-growing businesses in Europe list. But it has done so entirely from cashflow, rather than relying on external financial support. Read more...
Re:signal
When Expedia needed to boost site traffic, the company turned to search engine optimisation (SEO) and content agency Re:signal and achieved instant results, thanks to the agency’s focus on investing in top talent. Read more...
Stylus
After founding and selling trend-forecasting company WGSN, CEO and founder Marc Worth started again by self-funding Stylus, an innovation research and advisory firm that has scaled to reach a turnover of over £10m. Read more...
Cafepod
Early investment from friends and family helped Cafepod enter the lucrative coffee capsule market when Nespresso’s patent expired, and six years on the company’s pods are stocked in every major UK supermarket. Read more...
Way To Blue
Meeting the needs of its international clients from Hollywood film premieres to best-selling Christmas toys at Hamleys, integrated communications agency Way To Blue has gradually scaled its full-service offering across the globe, investing in agencies, platforms and most importantly, people. Read more...