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Slim Chickens’ president and COO Christina Vaughan shares brand, prototype, and AI strategies ahead of her QSR Evolution session on September 10.
Photo by Bunly Hort
Christina Vaughan will take the Unstoppable Chicken Wars stage at 1:30 p.m. on September 10 during the QSR Evolution Conference, a spotlight that arrives as Slim Chickens climbs to 214 restaurants across 33 states as of June 24, 2026.
As president and chief operating officer, she steers U.S. operations, performance strategy, and franchisee support, uniting execution with long-range planning. The category has wind at its back, with chicken quick service generating $55.24 billion in 2025 sales, a 4.2% lift that intensifies the contest for guests and growth.
Her résumé tracks the arc of modern franchising.
Vaughan brings more than twenty years of franchising and operations expertise, with senior leadership posts at Sonic Drive-In and Steak ’n Shake before joining Slim Chickens as senior vice president of operations. A 2024 promotion to chief operating officer and a later appointment as the company’s first president expanded her remit and influence. QSR Evolution, now in its fourth year, is built around themes such as “Tech Check and Innovation Central” and “Franchising and the Road to Growth,” a fitting backdrop for her playbook.
That playbook has sharpened Slim Chickens’ identity while widening its footprint.
The “Whatcha Pickin’?” campaign leans into customization and variety, a clear signal that guest choice sits at the center of the brand’s promise. To match the message with bricks and mortar, Slim Chickens introduced new restaurant prototypes that range from compact urban formats to expanded suburban layouts, along with development incentives that offer franchisees performance-based fee adjustments and co-investment opportunities.
“Every evolution is intentional, strengthening the guest experience while creating long-term value for our franchise partners,” Vaughan explains.
The results show in the numbers: the chain has grown from fewer than 100 locations in 2020 to 214 by mid-2026, with Texas alone accounting for 16% of units.
Vaughan’s stance on technology is pragmatic and people-focused.
Ahead of the conference, she urged attendees to “go in with a plan, but leave room for the conversations you didn’t expect to have,” crediting peer exchanges with some of the best ideas.
She expects plenty of discussion around AI and analytics, with a caution to keep usefulness front and center. “AI is certainly part of that conversation, but the bigger question is how to apply it in practical ways that make life easier for guests, team members, and franchisees,” she says.
There is evidence that careful application pays off.
Deloitte found that AI-driven analytics empowered one global quick-service brand to optimize labor forecasting and reduce bottlenecks, and Wendy’s reported a 20- to 25-second cut in drive-thru service time through an AI voice-ordering pilot.
Competition in chicken is fierce and widening.
Industry data rank Chick-fil-A, Popeyes, and Slim Chickens among the leading chains by systemwide sales and average unit volume, and both Wingstop and Slim Chickens placed among the top ten for net outlet growth in 2024-2025. Growth stories crowd the field: Chicken Salad Chick signed 35 development deals in Q1 2025, a 50% year-over-year jump, and plans 43 new openings in 2026.
Franchising itself shows resilience, with the International Franchise Association projecting over 12,000 new franchised establishments and a 1.6% rise in economic output to $921.4 billion in 2026.
Operators are pressing their advantages through off-premise offerings, global flavors, and targeted loyalty programs that can tip a visit in their favor. The road is not without ruts.
High advertising fund contributions, sometimes exceeding 5.5% of sales, can tighten unit-level margins and drain enthusiasm for faster rollouts. Technology pilots that outpace training or change management risk frustrating guests and excluding certain demographics.
Labor shortages and inflationary pressure can force brands to throttle development or pare back incentive packages. The winners will weigh invention against discipline and measure every upgrade against a clear return for franchisees.
Expect Vaughan’s September session to hinge on that balance.
She is likely to press for guest choice through the “Whatcha Pickin’?” lens, prototypes and incentives that fit varied trade areas, and AI that proves itself in the real work of staffing, speed, and service. For operators sorting through today’s chicken wars, the conversation at 1:30 p.m. on September 10 offers a focused look at how to keep growth steady and partners aligned.