5 Reasons to Include Meal Plans & Recipes With Your Next Group Nutrition Program

Most of us become nutrition professionals because we love to help people and want to be able to change lives for a living. It’s a labor of love and we can’t see ourselves doing anything else. But being a nutrition professional is also a job that can become exhausting and hard to scale. You can only see so many clients in a day, and working one-on-one with people full-time may take a huge toll on you mentally and emotionally.

Team @ Practice Better
Practice Better Blog
5 min readJun 27, 2019

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Running group nutrition programs is a clear solution. They’re scalable, impact more lives, and give you the ability to serve more people than you’d ever have time to see in a day.

One of the most time-consuming and frustrating aspects of running a group nutrition program is creating the actual program content. Meal plans and recipes can really help alleviate this. They are one of the most powerful resources you can provide to your group program participants, and here’s why:

1. They make your participants more successful

By providing recipes and meal plans in your group nutrition program, you are essentially providing your participants with a roadmap to success. A meal plan with an itemized grocery list and recipes provides step-by-step instructions to the end result that you’re delivering with your program.

Without meal plans or recipes in your group program, your participants may feel excited at the beginning, but without a clear direction of where they’re going and how to get there, their engagement will quickly dwindle. They also might become frustrated trying to figure out what to eat on their own.

By providing direction on a weekly basis through a meal plan, you’re going to have committed participants that will rave about your services after working with you. A successful, raving client is the most powerful sales and marketing tool you will ever have!

2. They allow you to show participants that eating healthy can be simple and fun

It’s important to meet people where they’re at so that they feel inspired to take action in your program. By incorporating meal plans and recipes, you’re catering to your participants wants and needs and showing them that eating healthy can be simple and fun.

For example, let’s say you are running a group program for IBS-C clients titled “Six Weeks to Better Bowel Movements”. With each meal plan you create and each recipe you include, you know those meals are doing so much more than solving their problem of being constipated. The meal plans and recipes you provide can help improve their constipation in a way that is straightforward and enjoyable.

When creating the meal plans for your program, remember that your participants likely live a different lifestyle than you. Be mindful of how long recipes take to make and choose easily accessible ingredients. That Clean Life makes it easy to filter through recipes based on the time they take to create or the ingredients you’re looking to include or exclude so that you can quickly find meals that meet the needs of your participants’ lifestyles.

3. They boost engagement and foster community

Including recipes and meal plans in your group program will create engagement and help foster a sense of community. This is so important because clients will often come to you for nutrition advice, but the sense of community is what will make them stick around for the long-term.

Encourage your group program participants to share food photos, their meal prep wins, and personal successes with the community. You can easily do this using the group chat feature right inside of Practice Better.

4. They simplify your program content

When it comes to creating the content for your group nutrition program, less is more. Instead of writing heaps of overwhelming paragraphs to explain what your participants need to do to achieve their health goals, use meal plans and recipes to inspire them through simple, delicious food. Empower your participants by laying out each step they’re going to take towards feeling like their best self and keep the content you provide to them super easy-to-follow.

5. They make it more likely that participants will want to work with you again

By including meal plans and recipes into your group program, your participants feel like they’ve captured a snapshot of what goes on in your one-on-one practice. You’ve provided them with a weekly step-by-step guide on how to feel better and solve the problem they came to you for in the first place.

The meal plans and recipes from your group nutrition program will help guide your participants in the future if they ever feel like they need a reset. They have also given your participants a taste of what it is like to work with you one-on-one, so if they feel like they need more support, you will be top of mind. Your meal plans and recipes have really laid the groundwork for the work you do on an ongoing basis and created an amazing impression.

Are you ready to get those meal plans and recipes ready to go? It doesn’t need to be hard. Head over to That Clean Life for more information on how you can create beautifully branded resources for your next group program without having to spend hours on it.

PS: Interested in learning more about how easy it can be to make meal plans with That Clean Life? Click here.

Practice Better is the complete client management platform for nutritionists, dietitians and wellness professionals. Sign up for free today.

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