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This entrepreneurial couple cashed out their 401(k)s and sold a $126 million company—now, they run a U.K. soccer team | Fortune

Fortune Reviewed Jun 30, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Bryan and Shannon Miles cashed out $160,000 from their 401(k)s to found BELAY.
160000 $ · 401(k)s
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Citation-ready fact
In 2020, a new CEO took over BELAY, and the following year the company sold a majority stake for $126 million, with the Miles duo retaining 18%.
2020 year · CEO transition126000000 $ · majority stake sale18 · stake kept
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By the end of 2019, the Miles couple launched their first brick-and-mortar brewery, NoFo Brew Co.
2019 year · first brewery
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NoFo Brew Co. expanded to three locations across Georgia: Cumming, Cleveland, and Gainesville.
3 locations · NoFo locations
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In 2022, the Miles duo joined an investment group that bought U.K. team Walsall F.C.
2022 year · Walsall F.C. purchase
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In 2023, the Miles duo purchased Irish club Drogheda United F.C.
2023 year · Drogheda United F.C. purchase2024 year · Silkeborg IF investment2024 year · Trivela FC Togo start
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14 months after founding BELAY, the company broke even, initiating 40 consecutive quarters of market growth.
14 months · time after founding40 quarters · market growth
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Many Americans romanticize the U.K.’s football or “soccer” culture, living vicariously through Ted Lasso and the Wrexham club famously owned by Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney. But for Bryan and his wife, Shannon Miles, co-owning soccer clubs is their reality.

The couple started their careers like any other: nine-to-five office jobs in immigration law and corporate America. But by the time they hit their mid-thirties in 2010, they couldn’t ignore the entrepreneurial itch—so they decided to take the leap, founding remote team management company BELAY and beer company NoFo Brew Co., alongside their ventures in international sports and business advisory Miles AG

And despite not having the same Hollywood salaries as Reynolds and McElhenney to back their clubs, they’ve found themselves head-to-head against the record-breaking team. But the Miles duo have an edge on the actors—they serve their NoFo beer on tap in the stadiums. 

“The point is, we’re building a brand,” Bryan told Fortune last year. “The brand is pulsating. We’re feeling it in the European market. People love wearing our jerseys there; they like identifying with the brand. And they actually like our beer.”

To get their first of now many ventures off the ground, Bryan and Shannon Miles took a major gamble. They cashed out the $160,000 in their 401(k)s and founded staffing software company BELAY

“I’m not necessarily a risk-taker by nature—especially with money. But I thought, ‘Well, if it doesn’t work, we’re young enough. We can always go back [to our jobs], but at least we tried,’” Shannon says. “At that point, I’d rather choose risk than regret.”

The anxiety-inducing start of their business now feels very far away; 14 months after BELAY was founded, the company broke even—kicking off 40 consecutive quarters of market growth. The business’s strength lies in its virtual assistant services and tech-enabled bookkeeping. After years of success, private equity started to take notice, and the couple felt it was time to sell. They transitioned a new CEO to take over BELAY in 2020 and sold a majority stake of the company for $126 million the following year, keeping 18% for themselves. 

“We started feeling, ‘This business is way beyond us. There’s potential beyond us. Somebody else with more resources, different networks, different ideas could come in and store it well,’” Bryan says. “We’re like, ‘This doesn’t define who we are. We’re going to be fine. There’s life after exit, and we’re going to find other things to do.’”

That payday was life-changing coin that led to a new adventure for the entrepreneurial power couple: helping run soccer teams and pouring pints of their Georgia beer for the club’s fans. 

The entrepreneurial couple wanted more lively bars in their area of Georgia to bring people together, and at the time, distilleries were all the rage. By the end of 2019, they dived into their next passion project with their first brick-and-mortar brewery, NoFo Brew Co.

“By the time we started our distillery, we were already enjoying wealth. We’re ‘first generation’ in terms of wealth,” Bryan said. They no longer had to do the heavy work as chief executive. “We knew at that point we were never going to run the business.”

The couple appointed a CEO for the brewery, expanding to three total NoFo locations across Georgia: Cumming, Cleveland, and Gainesville. But Bryan and Shannon Miles found another unlock with their beer business: connecting with sports fans, eager to throw back pints during a tense stadium match. At the height of Ted Lasso running up Apple TV subscribers, U.K. soccer was at the forefront of the cultural zeitgeist. 

“We looked at England and also Ireland, and we realized this was a rabid fan base that would follow this team off of a cliff,” Bryan said. “So we’re like, ‘Well, what if NoFo was on our shirt? What if we put beer in the stadium?’ It’s the Trojan horse that got us into this market.”

The Georgia-based duo were part of an investment group brought together by Trivela Group that bought U.K. team Walsall F.C. in 2022—right around the time Reynolds made headlines with Wrexham. Then came their purchase of Irish club Drogheda United F.C. back in 2023, also investing in Denmark team Silkeborg IF in December 2024, and starting African club Trivela FC Togo last year. 

Selling their beers at their clubs’ stadiums and emblazoning “NoFo Brew Co” on the players’ jerseys, Bryan and Shannon Miles are living a “football” fantasy. It’s a far cry from typing away at their desk jobs just 15 years ago, and it’s proof that having an entrepreneurial knack and forecasting trends lead to huge wins. 

“What we were able to do is accelerate and go into markets where just most Americans don’t have an in,” Bryan said.

A version of this story was published on Fortune.com on May 4, 2025.

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