• Home
  • Latest
  • Fortune 500
  • Finance
  • Tech
  • Leadership
  • Lifestyle
  • Rankings
  • Multimedia
SuccessEntrepreneurs
Europe

‘When I gave up the ‘grown up’ job I questioned whether I’d gone mad’: A stock trader and his wife quit their jobs to set up the U.K.’s biggest Christmas wonderland. This year it’ll earn nearly $30 million

By
Chloe Taylor
Chloe Taylor
Down Arrow Button Icon
By
Chloe Taylor
Chloe Taylor
Down Arrow Button Icon
November 12, 2023, 5:00 AM ET
Lapland UK founders Alison and Mike Battle
Lapland UK founders Alison and Mike BattleLuke Dyson/Lapland UK

Alison and Mike Battle spend all year, every year, thinking about Christmas. That could be your definition of heaven or hell, depending on your attitude toward the festive season, but for this couple, it’s certainly paying off.

This year, their holiday-focused business is on course to rake in around $30 million in revenue.

Back in 2007, the couple launched LaplandUK—an immersive Christmas experience for families that pops up in an English forest for six weeks each winter.

Over the years, they’ve drafted in Hollywood set designers, hired troupes of actors and carefully crafted dozens of Christmas characters—each with their own detailed backstories—to stage four-hour visits to “Lapland” that include ice skating, toy making and, of course, a meeting with Father Christmas.

Since its first year, LaplandUK has welcomed more than 1 million guests, including royalty and A-list celebrities like Elton John and the Beckhams. Tickets for this year’s extravaganza—which were priced between £59 ($72.50) and £149 ($183) each for everyone over a year old—sold out months before its doors opened on November 11.

Alison (L) and Mike (R) Battle pictured with Father and Mother Christmas at Lapland UK.
Luke Dyson/Lapland UK

The Battles came up with the idea for LaplandUK after Alison, a former elementary school teacher, was left disappointed by the lackluster holiday experiences on offer for her own four sons during what she labels their “wonder years.”

“I was very passionate about giving our sons lots of magical moments they could cherish and remember,” she tells Fortune. “During our boys’ years of belief, we visited pretty much everything that was out there—department stores and steam trains and stately homes, and everything in between—but we never found anything that I felt matched the importance that I placed on this moment.

“It was always very trivialized and commercialized, and I couldn’t understand why this moment that was so precious to us as a family wasn’t really being respected and properly honored.”

Alison and Mike have dedicated their lives over the past decade-and-a-half to filling that gap in the market. From the beginning, they wanted young children to truly buy into the illusion that LaplandUK is a real, magical place that’s home to Santa and his elves.

Luke Dyson/Lapland UK

That endeavor has seen them scouring antique markets for props—the couple say they “don’t do plastic” in a bid to be sustainable and preserve their “creative integrity”—publishing in-depth story books about LaplandUK’s residents, and spending weeks in rehearsals every year to ensure the kids who visit can’t poke holes in the magic.

They send a personalized wax-sealed invitation to children in advance of their ticketed arrival date, while parents are asked to secretly fill out a questionnaire about their child before the visit so that Father Christmas can speak to them in detail about their likes and hobbies.

While it might seem fair to assume all of this came naturally to Alison—who says she loved her job as a teacher so much that she “couldn’t believe someone was paying me to do it”—Mike’s former professional life looked vastly different to fraternizing with toymakers at the North Pole.

Lapland UK’s resident elves
Luke Dyson/Lapland UK

Before LaplandUK came into existence, he spent years working in London’s financial epicenter. But despite building a “reasonably successful” career as a stock trader—one that saw him headhunted by Goldman Sachs (an offer he declined)—Mike’s true passions lay elsewhere.

“As a child, I was always quite gifted with art—I could paint, I could draw, I was creative,” he explains. “But coming from a traditional family, my father sort of sent his son off to the city to make some money, so all of that was put away.”

While his heart wasn’t 100% in the finance industry, Mike says he’s grateful for the experiences he gained on the trading floor, which have been “fantastically useful” in his second career.

“I had a good career in the city. I started off working in various banks, I went down to the stock market floor, I became an independent trader,” he tells Fortune. “One of the things I learned was how to risk large amounts of money, and how to embrace and be at peace with that.”

Mike adds that in his past life as an investor, he became “very vision-based,” which has helped him “see what could be possible before we get there” with LaplandUK.  

“But what was really special for me on my own journey is that all the creativity I had put away and bottled, once the cap came off of it, I’ve found myself directing the show, being across the narrative of the stories that Alison and I write together, and everything and anything,” he tells Fortune.

‘It’s a risk, but you can change your life’

His passion for the project didn’t stop him questioning himself for taking the leap, however.

One of the major challenges the couple, particularly Mike, faced in the beginning was convincing others—and themselves—that what they were doing was worthwhile. When they did let people in on their vision, they remember being met with skepticism and bemusement.

“When I gave up the ‘grown up’ job that I was doing, I used to question whether I’d gone mad—I was thinking that I’d lost the plot to be doing this, even though in my heart I believed that this subject deserved so much better than it was getting,” Mike says. “But I used to look in the mirror and wonder if I’d gone nuts and didn’t even know I was nuts.”

Alison recalls being embarrassed to tell their next-door neighbors about the business when they first came up with the idea.

“I was almost afraid of the response we’d get because it seemed like you’ve gone off to join the circus, in this very trivialized sense. But we were, from the beginning, really passionate,” she says.

“People were like: ‘You’re giving up this great career and money and all this clever stuff that you do to go and work with Father Christmas and try and make a great experience for children. Is that right, Mike?’” Mike adds.

Luke Dyson/Lapland UK

But he describes switching the stock market for stockings and Santa Claus as “going back to my origin story.”

“I’m more me now than I’ve ever been—and I’m better and happier because of that,” he says. “It’s a big risk, big jump off the cliff thing, but it can be done. You can change your life, and some of the skill sets that you’ve probably picked up in a previous profession definitely can be a value in a new one.”

Rejecting investors

Part of that risk involved refinancing their home and borrowing money from friends and family to fund the launch of LaplandUK.

While they’ve had offers from would-be investors, the Battles have opted to keep the business firmly within the family—and have continued to reinvest the profits back into the company to ensure this remains the case.   

“I always think of money as like a person, and they’re saying, I want this and I want that, and that might not be aligned with what is best for the business,” Mike explains. “For me, it was more or less, just leave me and Alison alone. Our agenda was aligned: just make it brilliant. That was our agenda.”

Luke Dyson/Lapland UK

Alison agrees that not compromising on their vision is a huge part of what made LaplandUK so successful.

“Don’t compromise: say no to most things, because saying yes is going to compromise getting to your North Star,” she advises budding entrepreneurs. “We said no to virtually every approach along the way because we didn’t want any sort of pressure on us to compromise.”

Mike points out that sixteen years later, LaplandUK is still 100% family-owned—and two of the couple’s sons are now working full-time within the business, working on brand management and digital development.

“If you have an investor, they’ll be saying, we want our money back in three years’ time, and we want this and that, and your exit strategy,” he says. “We own everything, and there’s complete integrity, and I think that’s one of the reasons we’re proving to be so seductive to the public—because there’s real integrity in what we’re actually trying to do.”

Luke Dyson/Lapland UK

Looking ahead, the couple sees a big future for their Lapland business, including possible international expansion and more widespread adoption of the Father Christmas narrative as told by their books.

“Our purpose is to honor childhood together,” Alison says. “We are doing it with the families, not to the families—we’re facilitating this world for them. So, I think our future really is just to spread the story to as many families as possible.”

For now, that means welcoming 160,000 people to their hidden world in Swinley Forest between now and the end of December.

“This should be the most amazing celebration, you lay down these memories that you’ll have for the rest of your life,” Mike says. “We’ve got to be a game changer—it can’t be just a little bit better than what anybody else has done before. We want to be the iPhone of Christmas experiences.”

Join us at the Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit May 19–20, 2026, in Atlanta. The next era of workplace innovation is here—and the old playbook is being rewritten. At this exclusive, high-energy event, the world’s most innovative leaders will convene to explore how AI, humanity, and strategy converge to redefine, again, the future of work. Register now.
About the Author
By Chloe Taylor
LinkedIn iconTwitter icon
See full bioRight Arrow Button Icon

Latest in Success

Ryan Serhant lifts his arms at the premiere of Owning Manhattan, his Netflix show
Successrelationships
Ryan Serhant, a real-estate mogul who’s met over 100 billionaires, reveals his best networking advice: ‘Every room I go into, I use the two C’s’
By Dave SmithDecember 12, 2025
5 hours ago
Apple CEO Tim Cook
SuccessBillionaires
Apple CEO Tim Cook out-earns the average American’s salary in just 7 hours—to put that into context, he could buy a new $439,000 home in just 2 days
By Emma BurleighDecember 12, 2025
6 hours ago
Tensed teenage girl writing on paper
SuccessColleges and Universities
40% of Stanford undergrads receive disability accommodations—but it’s become a college-wide phenomenon as Gen Z try to succeed in the current climate
By Preston ForeDecember 12, 2025
7 hours ago
SuccessHow I made my first million
Hinge CEO says he bribed students with Kit Kats to get the $550-million-a-year business off the ground: ‘I had to beg and borrow a lot‘
By Orianna Rosa RoyleDecember 12, 2025
8 hours ago
Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne's signatures on the bottom of Apple's founding contract.
SuccessWealth
Apple cofounder Ronald Wayne sold his 10% stake for $800 in 1976—today it’d be worth up to $400 billion
By Preston ForeDecember 12, 2025
8 hours ago
Former Meta COO Sheryl Sandberg
SuccessWomen
Sheryl Sandberg breaks down why it’s a troubling time for women in the workplace right now
By Emma BurleighDecember 12, 2025
12 hours ago

Most Popular

placeholder alt text
Economy
Tariffs are taxes and they were used to finance the federal government until the 1913 income tax. A top economist breaks it down
By Kent JonesDecember 12, 2025
12 hours ago
placeholder alt text
Success
At 18, doctors gave him three hours to live. He played video games from his hospital bed—and now, he’s built a $10 million-a-year video game studio
By Preston ForeDecember 10, 2025
3 days ago
placeholder alt text
Success
Palantir cofounder calls elite college undergrads a ‘loser generation’ as data reveals rise in students seeking support for disabilities, like ADHD
By Preston ForeDecember 11, 2025
1 day ago
placeholder alt text
Arts & Entertainment
'We're not just going to want to be fed AI slop for 16 hours a day': Analyst sees Disney/OpenAI deal as a dividing line in entertainment history
By Nick LichtenbergDecember 11, 2025
1 day ago
placeholder alt text
Uncategorized
Transforming customer support through intelligent AI operations
By Lauren ChomiukNovember 26, 2025
16 days ago
placeholder alt text
Economy
‘We have not seen this rosy picture’: ADP’s chief economist warns the real economy is pretty different from Wall Street’s bullish outlook
By Eleanor PringleDecember 11, 2025
1 day ago
Rankings
  • 100 Best Companies
  • Fortune 500
  • Global 500
  • Fortune 500 Europe
  • Most Powerful Women
  • Future 50
  • World’s Most Admired Companies
  • See All Rankings
Sections
  • Finance
  • Leadership
  • Success
  • Tech
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • Environment
  • Fortune Crypto
  • Health
  • Retail
  • Lifestyle
  • Politics
  • Newsletters
  • Magazine
  • Features
  • Commentary
  • Mpw
  • CEO Initiative
  • Conferences
  • Personal Finance
  • Education
Customer Support
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Customer Service Portal
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms Of Use
  • Single Issues For Purchase
  • International Print
Commercial Services
  • Advertising
  • Fortune Brand Studio
  • Fortune Analytics
  • Fortune Conferences
  • Business Development
About Us
  • About Us
  • Editorial Calendar
  • Press Center
  • Work At Fortune
  • Diversity And Inclusion
  • Terms And Conditions
  • Site Map

© 2025 Fortune Media IP Limited. All Rights Reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy | CA Notice at Collection and Privacy Notice | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information
FORTUNE is a trademark of Fortune Media IP Limited, registered in the U.S. and other countries. FORTUNE may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website. Offers may be subject to change without notice.