⚡ Try 𝗠𝗮𝗰𝗿𝗼𝗙𝗮𝗰𝘁𝗼𝗿: feastgood.com/recommends/macrofactor/ Enter code 𝗙𝗘𝗔𝗦𝗧𝗚𝗢𝗢𝗗 when signing up to get an extra week on your free trial - 2 weeks total. Note: These are affiliate links. Feel free to use them or don't. There's no extra cost to you. They simply help me purchase more products to review for the channel. Also, it's important to mention, an affiliate link is NOT a sponsored link. I paid for this product 100% with my own money and reviewed it independently. I have never received any financial compensation from manufacturers for reviews. Companies never know that I'm reviewing their products before a video gets published. It makes no difference to me whether I love or hate the product, I simply tell you my candid opinion. So while I can receive commissions for referring sales to products, if you end up being disappointed with my recommendation and don’t come back to the channel, I lose my audience trust. This is why I always set a very high standard for my review process, and constantly strive to provide the best, most honest, and most helpful information. ➡ 𝐂𝐡𝐞𝐜𝐤 𝐨𝐮𝐭 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐟𝐮𝐥𝐥 𝐚𝐫𝐭𝐢𝐜𝐥𝐞 𝐡𝐞𝐫𝐞: feastgood.com/best-diet-app-for-weight-loss/
@lowellwalters16 күн бұрын
So...the app you recommend is the one sponsoring your video. How convenient! How about comparing it to other apps? You know - the 21 other apps you tester? It seems very similar to the app I'm using that has a free version
@feast_good16 күн бұрын
This is NOT a sponsored video. Let me explain how the video production works on our end so you understand that the content is not trying to steer someone into one particular product or not. When deciding whether or not to do a product review, we pull data on whether or not people are actually interested in learning more about that product. Are people talking about it on Reddit? Are people searching for it on Google/KZbin? Is our audience asking us to do a review of that product? Once we decide we're going to do a product review, we independently buy that product with our own money and one, or sometimes multiple people, on our team use the product for at least 1 month. This includes people you see on the KZbin channel, but also people behind the scenes, such as Registered Dietitians and nutrition coaches (you can see our entire team here: feastgood.com/about/). Once we've gathered all of the feedback from everyone who has tested the product, we have a writer produce an article that gets published on the website. Those articles are often 4000+ words long and go into far more detail about our experiences (and testing process) than the KZbin videos you see. After the article is published, we then start repurposing the article to become a KZbin script. We then film and edit the KZbin video and publish it. So how does monetization work? First, we never go into a KZbin video expecting to make money from a single video. Our #1 goal is to build our catalogue of reviews. For example, if our audience wants us to make a review of a niche protein powder or fitness app, we will do that and share our honest thoughts, whether that's good or bad. You can see many examples of that in our video library. Next, none of the companies know that we independently buy their product and make a review of it. We don't collude with companies to produce biased reviews. What you see is what we honestly think. On that note, this is how we maintain our integrity throughout the process: After we review products, the founder of FeastGood, me (feastgood.com/about/about-avi-silverberg/), might establish affiliate relationships with companies where the products exceeded our expectations. To be clear: (1) we have affiliate relationships with companies we want to recommend because we think the product is good and our audience will benefit from it (2) we only become affiliates of products AFTER we test them (3) none of our writers or video producers know in the review process who we have a relationship with and who we don't - there is a clear separation between our editorial team and monetization. It's also important to know that for any round-up article/video we produce, like "best nutrition app for weight loss", we don't automatically put a specific product in the #1 position because we have an affiliate relationship with them. Like I said, I'm not the one selecting the products for the list. It's the content producers and our internal team of experts, who based on their testing of those products, select the positions. They have no idea how the monetization works. If we put a brand in the top spot and we have an affiliate relationship with them, great. If we put a brand in the top spot and we DON'T have an affiliate relationship with them, great. It doesn't matter on an individual article/video level as we know eventually with the volume of articles and videos we produce (700+ articles, 120+ videos, and counting) we'll be able to pay our team and earn a living. Notwithstanding, we make money in other ways that are more profitable than affiliate links (like our nutrition coaching services). Another thing I'll say is that we’ve published plenty of product reviews where after our testing process we very bluntly tell you we DO NOT think it’s a good product (i.e. RP Diet App). I decided to become an affiliate for RP Diet anyways because there's one specific use case where it does work very well, but overall for 95% of people, there are better products out there. Regardless, in the RP Diet article/video we very bluntly tell you (after multiple years of testing) that you should NOT use RP Diet. But, we leave it up to you to decide whether you want to try it or not. So just because we're an affiliate, ultimately, we're going to tell you who it's for, who it's not for, and leave you the choice. Affiliate links are ways that content creators and businesses make money and there's definitely a right and a wrong way to do things. This brings me to the next point... Any product or service we recommend has been first-hand tested. Believe it or not, many websites and KZbin channels claiming to review products simply rely on third-hand accounts by reading people’s experiences on Amazon or forum sites like Quora or Reddit. They have not actually tested the product themselves. If you want to see an absolutely dog shit example of this, you can check out this protein tier list: kzbin.info/www/bejne/e4Pam2Swjb5_odUsi=GpbUHBqniYmYULFi. The channel never bought and tested any of the products. Feel free to contrast that with our protein tier list video, which was 2.5 years in the making. This is why, for any product review we publish, we use the product for several weeks and sometimes months, before sharing our thoughts and opinions. In the case of MacroFactor, we've been using it (and paying for it) for over 2 years now and multiple people on our team still use it. When testing a product, we do so based on several criteria, which are specific to each product category. For example, when we’re evaluating a nutrition app, we look at food database accuracy, tracking capabilities, calorie recommendations, level of customization, recipe database, and several other factors. Also, when possible, we test the claims made by the manufacturer for a specific product. We’re not just relying on a company’s sales page to tell us how a product performs, we actually try to stress test the product based on different use cases. While we do receive affiliate commissions for referring sales to specific products, if you end up being disappointed with our recommendation and don’t come back to our site or channel, we lose our audience. This is why we always set a very high standard for our review process, and constantly strive to provide the best, most honest, and most helpful information. Happy to hear your thoughts on this, too.
@FrankyViral16 күн бұрын
Nice!
@feast_good16 күн бұрын
👊
@Youngsame5417 күн бұрын
🔥
@agustinsanchezb80224 күн бұрын
I have a question: If I live outside the USA, would you still recommend this app? I'm concerned that many foods might not be available on it. Or would it be better to use another app?