Entrepreneur and investor Jamie Weeks has launched Founders Row, a new investment platform designed to rewrite the playbook for early-stage founders. Anchored by a new investment model — the Founder Partnership Vehicle (FPV) — Founders Row is Weeks’ latest venture in a career that has blended Wall Street savvy with hands-on brand building. This time, his focus is clear: supporting founders in the first, and often most brutal, stretch of their startup journey.
“Traditional private equity is a multi-trillion-dollar industry, but it has always focused on mature businesses,” said Weeks. “While VCs can write the early checks, they rarely provide real operational support. Founders Row was created for the stage in between — the first three to four years, when the founder needs just as much operational support to scale their vision, as they need capital.”
Weeks’ model (the FPV) is designed to bridge the discipline of private equity with the agility and speed of venture capital. But at its core, Founders Row is about more than just capital. It’s about rolling up sleeves and standing shoulder-to-shoulder with founders when it matters most.
Backing the Founder, Not Just the Balance Sheet
Weeks is no stranger to entrepreneurship. After years advising family offices and entrepreneurs on Wall Street, he stepped into the operator’s seat in 2014 by opening his first Orangetheory Fitness studio. By 2017, he sold the franchise group to private equity and stayed on to grow it into the largest Orangetheory franchisee in the world; a portfolio that ballooned to over 140 locations.
In 2019, he launched SweatHouz (SWTHZ), a wellness brand that scaled rapidly under his leadership. By 2022, Weeks sold a majority stake in the business. Today, SweatHouz boasts over 65 locations and is reportedly on track to cross 100 by early 2026.
With Founders Row, Weeks is flipping the script on how capital and operational support are delivered in the early days of a company’s life.
“At Founders Row, we back the founder as much as the brand,” he said. “The DNA of the founder is the key to this model. We’ve seen what happens when you strip the DNA of the founder from a company. You change it completely. The founder and their vision are as important — if not more important — than the balance sheet in the early years of a company’s growth.”
That founder-first philosophy is already being put into action. Founders Row is launching with three companies under letter of intent (LOI), supported by a private equity anchor partner that brings structural backing and capital from the outset.
While the first three investments are in the health and wellness sector; a space Weeks knows well, he emphasizes that the firm isn’t boxed in by category. Sector comes second to people. “The DNA of the founder is the key,” he reiterated.
Built by Operators, For Operators
What separates Founders Row from many investment firms is the team it’s assembling. It’s operator-first and built with experience.
Mike Mehr, who helped Weeks scale Orangetheory Fitness from day one, is stepping in as Chief Development Officer. Tori Woodhull, Weeks’ trusted partner throughout his entrepreneurial journey, takes the role of Chief of Staff. These are not resume-based hires; they are people who have built alongside Weeks before and know what it takes to grow and exit a brand.
“The difficulty for founders is being on that island all by yourself,” Weeks said. “People don’t realize how lonely it can be when you have the vision of what you want to achieve, but don’t have the support to achieve it. It’s not always about capital; it’s about the structure to support the vision. Providing this to founders early will be category-defining.”
That support structure comes via an eight-person team with deep expertise in operations, marketing, development, and finance. This all aligned to help scale early-stage businesses quickly and sustainably.
Introducing FR Advisory: An Incubator for the Next Big Ideas
Another innovative aspect of the Founders Row model is FR Advisory. This is a consulting and incubation arm that will work with just four companies at a time. This group will focus on helping brands reach a level of operational maturity and vision clarity where they’re ready for investment.
Unlike traditional firms that lean heavily on management fees over the long haul, Weeks is positioning Founders Row for speed, efficiency, and aligned outcomes.
“The key to what we are doing is not about fundraising and building a firm where we collect a 2% fee for a decade-plus — this is clearly becoming a problem for LPs,” he said. “We’ve proven our speed to exit over the last 7 years with multiple brands. The FPV model and FR Advisory greatly increase the odds of success at the earliest stage of growth.”
A New Category in the Making
Weeks sees Founders Row not just as a firm, but as the beginning of a new category in the investment landscape; one that finally aligns the interests of general partners (GPs), limited partners (LPs), and, most importantly, founders.
“I created Founders Row because this is what founders truly need — vision alignment, an operating partnership, and a structure that finally puts GP, LP, and Founder on the same side of the table,” Weeks said. “As traditional private equity firms grow even larger, it becomes difficult for them to invest at the earliest stage of a brand’s growth cycle. This is exactly where the unicorns live — just as Orangetheory and SweatHouz once did.”
What’s Next for Founders Row?
With its first three companies under LOI, a proven team in place, and a founder-first ethos baked into its model, Founders Row is poised to carve out a unique position in the early-stage investment landscape.
As the startup world continues to evolve and the lines between venture capital and private equity blur, Founders Row may be leading a broader shift toward more integrated, empathetic, and effective support for the entrepreneurs building tomorrow’s standout brands.