Ideas:<p>- Low-carb and Keto<p>- Meals with Shirataki noodles<p>Monetization:<p>- Link to ingredients on Amazon affiliates<p>- Link to cooking supplies used in videos on Amazon affiliates<p>- Make an app that stores your recipes<p>- In the app, make a random button to switch through recipe ideas quickly<p>- Charge 2.99 for packs of 30 recipes<p>- Allow faceting through recipes by nutritional concerns, carbs, macros, etc.<p>- <a href="https://developers.google.com/search/docs/data-types/recipes" rel="nofollow">https://developers.google.com/search/docs/data-types/recipes</a><p>- Get into supplements<p>- Feeds > Email lists. I'd even say email lists are an antipattern. Offer ways for users to stay in touch without giving an email, that's a bit of a one sided deal. Go for Twitter, Facebook, YouTube etc. That way you can have your cake and eat it too, not annoying users, and letting them stay up to date with your content.
Hi everyone! I'm the original founder of geek canteen! I'm happy to answer any questions you might have or discuss feedback. This was posted by my husband who encouraged me to act on this idea in order to make healthy food more approachable to busy developers like himself.
Just curious--why did you make this a phone app I have to install, rather than just a web app? Making the first step of the onboarding process having to install the app makes it more difficult for users just to give it a try.
If you don't mind me asking, what is the monetization strategy here?<p>I don't see any privacy policies, or just what you will be doing with my information that you are asking users to submit.<p>I like the idea, but want to know about any service before interacting with it.