I lost 60 pounds on WeightWatchers back 15 years ago. I signed up again recently but quit after a month after finding better methods and realizing they've lost their way. What made WeightWatchers great back in the day was its no-nonsense approach, great word of mouth, and excellent in-person sessions and resources. You lose weight, and if you achieve your goal you get a lifetime membership.<p>In the years since, WeightWatchers got caught up with customizable and ever-changing programs that were far too soft and excessively permissive. And they lost sight of why people joined the program. It felt like they wanted to become a lifestyle brand instead of a support group of people focused on achieving a goal.<p>They also drastically cut down on in-person sessions, and the virtual sessions are a poor replacement. It's a zoom call with a few dozen people and the entire thing feels very phoned in.<p>And while they were among the first to have a points tracking website (I loved e-tools!), which was excellent in 2009, Weight Watchers never really improved upon the technology and got left behind. Nowadays there's cheaper apps that do the same thing, and more advanced LLM apps where you take pictures of your food or describe it and it figures out the nutrient values.<p>My advice to post-bankrupcy weight watchers: focus on in-person sessions, and make it more goal and education oriented.