If a week is a long time in politics, then 48 hours is a lifetime in business and TV.
On Thursday millions of viewers of Dragonsâ Den watched Lucie MacLeod leave empty-handed for her Pembrokeshire-based hair oils business Hair Syrup.
Her appearance caused controversy after Dragon Touker Suleyman offered the full ÂŁ190,000 in exchange for 3 per cent of the flourishing business â but only if he got all his money back after three months and kept the 3 per cent!!
The offer stunned his fellow Dragons. Deborah Meaden shook her head and warned the 24-year-old: âYouâre basically giving away those shares.â
Steven Bartlett advised her to walk to the back of the Den, have a drink of water before making a decision.
Sensing the mood Suleyman quickly backtracked.
âI donât want you to feel Iâve tried to trick you in anyway,â he told her. âThat is not my intention.
âI tell you what Lucie, I can feel youâre uncomfortable and I donât want to take 3 per cent of your business so Iâm out.â
Viewers took to âXâ to accuse Suleyman of âshamefulâ tactics and trying to âconâ MacLeod.
However, fast forward 48 hours and the biggest winner is undoubtedly Lucie MacLeod herself.
Her appearance has attracted blanket media coverage and added an extra 20,000 TikTok followers in just two days.
Hair Syrup â which has changed its profile to âRejected by the Dragons, LOVED by TikTok â now boasts 323,000 followers and 8 million likes.
Since the programme was recorded the company has got its products stocked by Boots and is on track for a record ÂŁ6.5m turnover this year.
Rather than shy away from the chastening experience â especially when Deborah Meaden said: âI think you donât really understand the mechanics of how companies work.â – MacLeod is embracing the experience.
The day after the programme aired MacLeod took to LinkedIn to write: âHelp. Woken up to the whole of the UK believing I donât know what a dividend is. Television, hey đâď¸.â
However itâs on TikTok â which accounts for nearly half of Hair Syrupâs sales â that MacLeod has fully exploited her 15 minutes of fame with a series of  self-deprecating posts.
One post alone got 159.6k likes and if anything her appearance highlights an embarrassing lack of knowledge among some of the Dragons about the power of TikTok.

Speaking, predictably, on TikTok she said: âThey didnât really say anything about the product. I think that caused a bit of disconnect because they thought it was this TikTok trend. I donât think they really understood how amazing these products actually are. I think they just thought I was this girl who got lucky selling some stuff on TikTok because I was good at marketing, which obviously isnât the case.â
As PR strategies go, MacLeod has played a blinder.
Rather than criticise the Dragons, sheâs gone out of her way to praise them. âThe Dragons were really lovely,â she told the BBC. âThey told me and taught me a lot of things that are really invaluable lessons to me.â
Iâve now re-watched her appearance on the BBC show three times and Iâd go as far to say that not investing in Hair Syrup could go down as the Dragons biggest ever mistake.
For those who havenât seen the show, a quick recap.
The story started in 2019 when MacLeod was a 21-year-old student at the University of Warwick, frustrated with her frazzled, dry and damaged hair.
After wasting money on products that promised the earth and failed to deliver she set about finding a natural solution and so Hair Syrup was born.
In 2020, during the height of the UK lockdown, the self-confessed âaccidental entrepreneurâ posted a video  showcasing her hair transformation to her TikTok followers.
The video went viral, amassing 600,000 views.
By harnessing the power of TikTok, MacLeod realised she was on to something and the growth soon followed.
In 2022 the turnover was ÂŁ130,000 with net profit of ÂŁ42,000; in 2023 the turnover was ÂŁ1.3m with net profit ÂŁ400,000; and in 2024 the turnover was ÂŁ4.5m with a net profit ÂŁ1.4m.
It was then that MacLeod took her biggest gamble of all to raise Hair Syrupâs profile â she went on Dragonsâ Den.
It was clear she didnât need the ÂŁ190,000 she was seeking in exchange for a 3 per cent slice of her business.
âI want someone to grow with me and help me to not make the mistakes Iâm probably going to make without someone,â she told the Dragons. âI want someone to come on a journey with me. What I want from a Dragon is mentorship.â
She spoke about wanting to take Hair Syrup to the ânext levelâ as she plans to grow turnover to ÂŁ10m by 2028.
Whether it was more by accident than design, MacLeodâs masterstroke was she appeared vulnerable â and the cameras loved it.
She walked into the Den after 39.29 minutes of Thursdayâs show and walked out at 59.21 minutes.
The Gen Z entrepreneur may have failed to secure any investment but she bagged nearly 20 minutes of prime time TV to talk about herself and her company.

Lucie MacCloud, founder, Hair Syrup, on Dragons’ Den
She revealed she had no plans to sell the company, take out a dividend and wanted to expand beyond cosmetics.
âOne thing I really want to do one day is revision books because I was a sucker for them when I was younger and there was a very limited market,â she said in answer to a question from Jones.
A phrase you hear a lot is âpeople invest in peopleâ and the biggest mistake the Dragons made was that they overlooked MacLeodâs entrepreneurial talent and obsessed on how they would get their money out.
âIâm not trying to catch you out,â Meaden said. âI think you donât really understand the mechanics of how companies work.
âThe problem is you have to generate ÂŁ6m of profit, not turnover, to pay me back my ÂŁ190,000. No return on that at all.
âTo double my money youâve got to produce ÂŁ12m worth of profit â weâre not talking turnover â unless youâre willing in a reasonable timescale to look at an exit. Youâve actually said youâre actually keen on that.â
Meaden is one of the longest-serving Dragons and while social media dismissed her advice as patronising it was gold dust.
âIâm not great at that side of things,â admitted MacLeod, who is the only shareholder in Hair Syrup so doesnât need to pay herself a dividend,
It was at that point that guest Dragon Trinny Woodall – CEO of global, digital-first beauty brand, Trinny London – intervened with the immortal line: âI think Lucie doesnât know.â
The 60-year-old also questioned the longevity of the brand.
âThe biggest risk to me is âis this a moment in time?â or is it going to turn into something big and I do not know the answer to that,â said Woodall.
âI donât like to invest in trends. I like to invest in things with longevity. If youâd been asking for less â say ÂŁ100k â Iâd have been willing to take the risk but ÂŁ190k Iâm not willing to so for that reason Iâm out.â
Fellow Dragon Peter Jones was gushing in his praise. âItâs awesome,â he said. âTo get a business making ÂŁ1.4m profit is off-the-chart great.
âBecause of the fact that you genuinely havenât thought of what an investor would want an investment offer from me would place you in a situation when Iâm going to have to steer and control you and I wouldnât want to do that.
âIâm going to say Iâm out but congratulations on what youâve done.â
Meaden also declined to invest: âFor me youâre brilliant but you have made it difficult for an investor,â she explained.
Sara Davies, my favourite Dragon, dipped out as did Steven Bartlett, who was surprisingly underwhelmed by the power of TikTok despite having 2.8 million followers on the platform himself.
âI think youâve done a wonderful job but Iâm personally a little bit concerned about your dependency on one particular platform (TikTok) to generate 50 per cent of your sales,â he said.
âWhen I heard this 50 per cent number I thought âwe need a life raftâ. For that reason Iâm going to say Iâm out.â
MacLeod apologised for ânot selling it enoughâ and had the cameras stopped rolling then itâs unlikely weâd still be talking about her and Hair Syrup.
Every show needs a pantomime villain and Touker Suleyman played this role to perfection with arguably the most outrageous offer ever made in the showâs 20-year history.
As despicable roles go all I could think of was the fictional Child Catcher character in the 1968 film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.
âI think what you need is a mentor not to make mistakes,â said Suleyman, before making his controversial offer.
What I donât understand was why none of the Dragons make MacLeod a counter offer. If theyâd offered ÂŁ190,000 for 10 per cent of the business theyâd be sitting on a small fortune now.
Thatâs why I think the decision not to invest will go down as one of the biggest mistakes the Dragons ever made â especially Woodall, whose business looked a natural fit for Hair Syrup.
As for MacLeod, she may have left the Den without a Dragon but she still owns all the business and has secured invaluable exposure for her brand.
âWhat I did get was a load of really, really useful feedback that Iâll be sure to take onboard and hopefully help me succeed in the future,â she said.
She summed it best in the final line of her LinkedIn post on Sunday. âMoral of the story?â she asked. âNot getting a deal turned out to be the best possible outcome âśď¸đ.â


