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Susannah Frost named Chick-fil-A President, joining Cliff Robinson as COO to guide domestic expansion and international growth.
Photo by Abdul Raheem Kannath
On the surface, the moment is a quiet door opening: Susannah Frost stepping into the presidency at Chick-fil-A, Inc. is more than a reshuffle; it marks the emergence of a two-person executive leadership team alongside Cliff Robinson. The announcement, coming after Tim Tassopoulos's retirement at the end of 2023, sets a rhythm for a brand entering a new phase of growth—domestic breadth and international curiosity—guided by care as a compass. Starting October 1, 2024, Frost and Robinson will carry the baton together, a gesture of continuity wrapped in a gentle, hopeful cadence that feels right for a company built on hospitality.
As the release frames it, Frost will also lead Chick-fil-A’s Executive Committee, aligning strategy with the day-to-day work across a network of more than 3,000 restaurants. “Susannah has demonstrated tremendous leadership throughout the business and has the range of expertise that will help the company continue growing with care and confidence.” said Andrew T. Cathy, CEO. Frost will balance strategic leadership with a hands-on understanding of real estate, site development, and the field teams that manage Chick-fil-A’s footprint. In short, hospitality is born in the margins between vision and everyday execution.
Frost’s growth path reads like a well-worn map of devotion to the brand. She holds degrees from The University of Georgia and Emory University, and began her career as a real estate attorney at Troutman Sanders during the early 2000s before joining the Chick-fil-A corporate support center in 2007. Over 17 years with the company, Frost advanced through the legal department, restaurant development, and operations, culminating in a recent three-year tenure as executive vice president overseeing field operations. In this blend of law, development, and hands-on management, you hear a clear signal: she’s ready to guide a network that now exceeds 3,000 restaurants, with international ambitions on the horizon.
As Frost steps into this capacity, she carries a portfolio that spans real estate, site development, and the front lines of field operations. The education and career arc sharpen a practical sensibility for a brand that grows with care, not haste. With a network beyond 3,000 restaurants and with international ambitions in view, her inside-out view of Chick-fil-A’s engine—contracts, builds, and the people on the ground—could be the steadying hand the company seeks as it reaches into new communities.
Just as Frost rises, the company couples her ascent with a change in the leadership room: Cliff Robinson, the current Chief People Officer, will become Chief Operating Officer, with expanded responsibilities that include field operations and restaurant development. Robinson’s long tenure at Chick-fil-A—starting with roles at the support center in 1990 and tracing a path through field operations and development—positions him to oversee the operational engine of the network as the brand scales. The press release notes that Frost will continue to supervise the real estate portfolio and lead field operations for the network of more than 3,000 restaurants, while Robinson’s COO remit will focus on the operational alignment required to support both domestic growth and international opportunities.
The announcement confirms that Frost and Robinson will assume their new roles on October 1, aligning leadership with the company’s next phase of growth. The arrangement means a deliberate balance: Frost anchors strategy in the core business of development, while Robinson keeps the engines of execution oiled and moving—an arrangement designed for scale that still feels intimate.
The August 2024 release points Frost to lead growth efforts both at home and abroad, a roadmap that embraces a bold horizon for an iconic network. The plan calls for re-entering the United Kingdom in 2025, followed by expansions into European and Asian markets by 2030. This international footprint sits alongside a push to strengthen the supply network as growth accelerates, with attention to antibiotic-free poultry sourcing and other dynamics that shape timing. Restaurant Dive’s coverage echoes the UK 2025 timeline and the Europe/Asia expansion, underscoring Frost’s mandate to turn ambition into coordinated momentum.
Industry observers frame the shift as part of a broader trend: large quick-service brands rethinking governance to manage a bigger, more global footprint. Yet for Frost, the pace will still hinge on execution, partner alignment, and the practicalities of new markets. The roadmap is clear, but the questions lie in how quickly milestones become measurable outcomes and how supply considerations translate into openings across continents.
This leadership transition aligns with a deeper pattern in fast-service brands: leadership structures that blend strategy with field-ready execution to sustain expansion. The combination of a newly appointed president and COO—each with responsibilities spanning field operations, restaurant development, and people operations—appears as a strategic enabler of growth into Europe and Asia by 2030. Coverage from outlets like the Atlanta Business Chronicle and Restaurant Dive frames the move as more than a fresh face; it’s a coordinated governance shift designed to support a larger, more complex portfolio.
Gaps, Uncertainties, and Limitations remain alongside any long-range plan: exact milestones, regulatory environments across new markets, and supply-chain adaptations will influence pace and sequencing. The concrete UK entry in 2025 is a milestone, but subsequent entries into European and Asian markets by 2030 could face country-specific consumer, regulatory, and logistical challenges that leadership must navigate. Industry observers also acknowledge ongoing supply considerations, such as sourcing strategies for antibiotic-free poultry, which have already influenced operations and could affect expansion timelines. Frost’s success will depend on execution and partner alignment as much as on strategic intent.
Ultimately, the Frost–Robinson pairing is positioned to translate Chick-fil-A’s stated ambitions into durable growth while maintaining the brand’s culture and Corporate Purpose. Frost’s deep familiarity with real estate strategy, field operations, and restaurant development, combined with Robinson’s experience in people operations and operational execution, aims to deliver both scale and consistency. The leadership team’s shared focus on care, great food, and deliberate expansion suggests a future in which Chick-fil-A remains performance-driven while sustaining hospitality and community impact. As the European and Asian entries unfold and domestic growth accelerates, observers will watch how the Executive Committee translates intent into smoother field execution, stronger franchise collaboration, and a brand presence fit for a larger, more dynamic footprint.