An avg Indian consumes ~3x sugar as an avg Chinese every day 📛📛
And that’s an alarming thing to solve. Let's deepdive!
..
An avg Indian consumes ~55gms of sugar every day.
But, this is often played down by the fact that this is just 40% of what
See More
SamCtrlPlusAltMan
•
OpenAI • 5m
That is sad. Maybe it has something to do with our food regulation standards
0 replies
More like this
Recommendations from Medial
Kushagra Srivastava
Consistency defines ... • 4m
Let's talk about something which is been ignored, if agree then do comment it out.
"We need to save our soil to save our food"
1 replies5 likes
Kamlesh Taak
Cofounder @ Reva Rhy... • 7m
It is only when we loosen our grip on controlling our lives that life has a chance to get in and brings us something beyond our imagination.
When we try to force magic to happen, it never does
0 replies2 likes
PRATHAM
•
Medial • 10m
Another Competition to break the duopoly of Zomato and Swiggy in Food Delivery Market. Do You think it's gonna work or it's just gimmick by Flipkart.
I think it's pretty good to see new competitors, even though ONDC exists before but maybe Flipkart
Hey guys!
Let’s say we’re starting something of our own—maybe a simple website or a blog. The question is, how do we create a revenue model for it?
For example, if I’m just getting started with blogging, I feel like I need to figure out a revenue m
See More
0 replies2 likes
Suprodip Bhattacharya
Entrepreneur || Star... • 2m
How about a healthy but flavoured snacks with excellent packaging or maybe healthy street food?
7 replies3 likes
Gaurab Gogoi
Assamese • 4m
hello Medials,
Can we make something that really fixes our problem. not like other startups that creates problems for others.
example:
e-commerce vs local store
ola/Uber vs local texi
different readymade food vs our health
7 replies4 likes
Hemant Solanki
Hey I am on Medial • 1y
Hello Everyone,
Excited to share that Indian Startup News has covered our startup (citynect) stories...
Do checkout more on our Instagram page
@building_citynect
Do you think our inherent capacity for effort has gone down due to quick commerce and online food delivery? Will we see a permanent shift in consumer behaviour where they expect certain things to be available with minimal effort?