Rolling Thunder is a single-truck smash-burger operation working downtown Nashville's weekday lunch crowd and the city's booming weekend event circuit. We sell a tight menu of four burgers, hand-cut fries, and spiked shakes — fast, consistent, and Instagram-loud.
The concept is deliberately narrow. A four-item menu off a 200-square-foot griddle means a 4-minute ticket time, food cost held under 30%, and a brand people can describe in one sentence. We are not trying to be a restaurant on wheels; we are trying to be the best burger in a three-block radius, twelve times a week.
Nashville added 36,000 downtown office workers since 2021, and the city permits food trucks at 40+ approved curb zones. Demand for fast, high-quality lunch outpaces the brick-and-mortar seats being built. A truck captures it at a fraction of the rent.
Marcus ran the line at a top-30 Nashville burger bar for six years; Dana built the catering book at a 4-location BBQ group. We have the recipes, the commissary relationship, and 11 signed event LOIs before we've served a single plate.
An SBA microloan covering the build-out and first 90 days of working capital. Combined with $45,000 of owner equity, it funds a fully-wrapped truck, a six-week runway, and zero personal debt to the founders.
Four burgers, one shape, no substitutions during a rush. Every item is built for speed on a flat-top and for a photo on a phone. Buns are brioche from a local bakery; patties are 80/20 smashed thin for lacy edges; everything ships in a branded waxed box.
A typical order is a burger, fries, and a drink — $21 average ticket at a blended 27% food cost. At 150 tickets a service we clear $3,150 in sales off roughly $850 of food.
The griddle holds 12 patties at once. Steady state is 40–50 burgers a peak hour with two on the line — enough to clear a 30-person line in under fifteen minutes without quality slipping.
Nashville is one of the strongest food-truck markets in the country: permissive curb rules, a year-round event calendar, and a downtown that empties into the same dozen lunch blocks every weekday.
Downtown office occupancy crossed 80% in 2025 while new fast-casual seats lag demand by an estimated 4,000 covers a day. Rent on a comparable storefront runs $7,500/month; our curb permits total $310/month. The truck arbitrages that gap.
Event organizers increasingly book trucks on guaranteed minimums — de-risking our weekends before the season starts.
The lunch blocks are contested — but mostly by generalists with twenty-item menus and slow tickets. Our wedge is focus: a four-item burger truck beats a do-everything truck on speed, consistency, and brand recall.
The week is a fixed loop. A commissary kitchen handles prep and overnight storage (required by Metro Health); the truck runs a published route so regulars always know where we are.
Office-dense lunch core; our bread-and-butter weekday revenue.
Tech and agency offices; higher average check, strong shake attach.
Lunch, then late-night Broadway spillover at premium pricing.
Festivals, breweries, private books on guaranteed minimums.
Organic-first by design. We budget $650/month for boosted posts and loyalty SMS — well under $2 per new regular given a 4× repeat rate. The truck wrap itself is a rolling billboard that needs no ongoing spend.
Two owner-operators plus one part-time line cook at peak. Payroll scales with services, not square footage.
Conservative single-truck assumptions — 12 services a week, 135 tickets at a $21 average check, 50 weeks. Every figure below holds even if we miss plan by 15%.
Funded by $45,000 owner equity + $40,000 SBA microloan.
~50% contribution margin per service covers fixed costs by the ninth month of operation.
Year-2 growth comes from added weekend services and catering; Year 3 assumes a second truck funded from operating cash, not new debt.
Rolling Thunder is a focused, proven concept entering a market that's already lining up. The capital below is the only thing between a finished plan and a truck on Music Row.
Truck purchased, kitchen built out, brand wrapped, permits cleared.
Music Row lunch route live; loyalty program and event book activated.
Cash-flow positive; SBA repayment running on the standard schedule.
Second truck funded from operating cash — expansion without new debt.
The plan reaches break-even in month nine, repays the SBA microloan from contribution margin alone, and self-funds the second truck. The $40,000 doesn't buy a gamble — it buys a head start on a market already lining up.