Founders, Jack and Emma Sykes (Credit: Friday4:30)

Mother and son land £335k to launch Friday4:30 crisis tool for food and drink brands

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A London-based start-up founded by a mother-and-son team has secured £335,000 in investment to overhaul how the food and beverage industry handles incidents, from product failures to supply chain crises.

Friday4:30, created by incident management specialist Emma Sykes and her son Jack, has attracted backing from venture capital firm Haatch to bring its end-to-end platform to market. The software is designed to help brands and manufacturers log, manage and resolve issues in a structured way, replacing the often reactive and fragmented processes still widely used across the sector.

The business takes its name from what the founders describe as a familiar industry scenario: the ‘Friday 4.30 moment’, when problems are addressed hastily at the end of the working week, often without adequate preparation or coordination.

Emma Sykes, who has spent decades advising food and drink businesses on crisis response, said the platform is built on real-world experience of handling incidents under pressure.

“Food and beverage has and always will face incidents, from single product failures to full-scale production line shutdowns. But in a world where news travels faster than any response can, the stakes have never been higher,” she said.

“I’ve personally dealt with hundreds of incidents. Every single one needs to be handled in a systematic way.”

Her son Jack, who studied at the University of Edinburgh and previously ran a start-up focused on student work placements, translated that experience into a digital product.

“I’m not a coder, but I knew what I wanted to achieve, and there are some incredible tools that meant we could create a prototype,” he said.

“It’s about bringing together the many moving parts. Incidents aren’t always about a product or a service – they can be industry-wide. The platform removes the scramble to get the right people in a room and the risk of knowledge leaving the business when key staff are unavailable.”

Haatch said the investment reflects both the scale of the problem and the opportunity to modernise outdated systems still relied upon by many operators.

Charlie Weavers-Wright, principal seed investor at Haatch, said: “Emma has spent decades solving one of food and drink’s most costly and underserved problems, yet many companies are still managing recalls and supply chain crises on spreadsheets and email chains.

“Friday4:30 makes professional crisis management accessible to mid-market brands that wouldn’t typically have access to retained consultants.”

Launched in July 2025 and incorporated later that year, the company has already generated early revenue and assembled an advisory committee spanning the UK and US, with expertise across food and drink, quality assurance, customer service and technology.

With fresh investment secured, the founders say the focus now is on onboarding customers and scaling the platform.

“We wanted to do this properly from the outset,” added Emma Sykes. “Now, with the support from Haatch, we’re ready to take this to market.”

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