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Started By
Message
For Wellness coffee supplement
Posted on 12/31/23 at 10:24 am
Posted on 12/31/23 at 10:24 am
LINK
Anyone tried it? I’m thinking about giving it a chance.
Anyone tried it? I’m thinking about giving it a chance.
quote:
The Good Stuff™ is a performance coffee supplement that will boost the natural benefits of your coffee and reduce the caffeine jitters. Boost your coffee with premium, healthy ingredients. Ditch the bad stuff like sugar, dairy, and artificial creamers. May reduce inflammation and can support skin and joint health.
Posted on 12/31/23 at 10:28 am to peaster68
quote:
bad stuff
quote:
dairy

Posted on 12/31/23 at 12:46 pm to peaster68
What does any of that mean?
Posted on 12/31/23 at 7:55 pm to peaster68
(In case you're a "TLDR" type of person, to suffice, NO, I haven't tried it, wouldn't buy it, but please don't take this as a personal attack on you for asking about this stuff, I'm just shitting on their marketing and the pricing/subscription model. I currently take, or have in the past consumed all of those ingredients individually as supplements, just never took them in combined form added to my coffee)
My full opinion:
It looks like somebody looked at mud/wtr and decided that the world needed another "wellness" product pitched to them for their morning ritual.
Everything about this, from how the website looks, the subscription model, the sales pitch is a rip-off of mud/wtr, which I also see as an overpriced marketing gimmick. But all these "wellness" brands are pitching their stuff the same way, whether it's boner pills, micro-dosing shrooms, baldness cures, etc. Everything looks the same. It's like Gwyneth Paltrow's GOOP company, but for dudes who consider themselves "lifehackers".
I think it's 1000000000% marketing bullshite.
However, the product itself I wouldn't poo-poo, BUT.... you can source all those ingredients yourself through amazon and mix up a big tub of that stuff in your kitchen for cheaper than $40 for a month's supply. You'll probably spend way more than $40, but you'd also have way more than a 30 day supply. I'd email em and ask for a free sample, if you like it, and think it helps you just make your own and try to copy their recipe, they've made it easy for you, the ingredients are all listed and the label has the amounts of collagen, salt, and L-theanine listed, just put a standard dose of cinnamon and MCT powder in and Woila! you can start your own "wellness" brand.
My full opinion:
It looks like somebody looked at mud/wtr and decided that the world needed another "wellness" product pitched to them for their morning ritual.
Everything about this, from how the website looks, the subscription model, the sales pitch is a rip-off of mud/wtr, which I also see as an overpriced marketing gimmick. But all these "wellness" brands are pitching their stuff the same way, whether it's boner pills, micro-dosing shrooms, baldness cures, etc. Everything looks the same. It's like Gwyneth Paltrow's GOOP company, but for dudes who consider themselves "lifehackers".
I think it's 1000000000% marketing bullshite.
However, the product itself I wouldn't poo-poo, BUT.... you can source all those ingredients yourself through amazon and mix up a big tub of that stuff in your kitchen for cheaper than $40 for a month's supply. You'll probably spend way more than $40, but you'd also have way more than a 30 day supply. I'd email em and ask for a free sample, if you like it, and think it helps you just make your own and try to copy their recipe, they've made it easy for you, the ingredients are all listed and the label has the amounts of collagen, salt, and L-theanine listed, just put a standard dose of cinnamon and MCT powder in and Woila! you can start your own "wellness" brand.
Posted on 1/1/24 at 8:51 am to peaster68
Based on that description, sounds like a marketing scheme for overpriced coffee. Want “healthy” coffee? Just take it black.
Posted on 1/1/24 at 9:31 am to peaster68
Silicon Dioxide (to prevent clumping)
The Good Stuff, huh...? Not thanks.
And anyone that says dairy is bad, is just ignorant.
The Good Stuff, huh...? Not thanks.
And anyone that says dairy is bad, is just ignorant.
Posted on 1/1/24 at 10:20 am to RocketTiger
Thank yall for your honest opinions. Really did open my eyes and decided to save money.
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