Shakeology, What are your thoughts?

2

Replies

  • seltzermint555
    seltzermint555 Posts: 10,740 Member
    I know I was one of the people who hasn't tried the shakes and said "it's a waste of money" but I think some of us (myself for example) have a preconceived notion of these fad programs as being kinda evil. So I don't think you should take the negative reactions personally...if that makes sense.

    Me for example...I have never tried any of them...but I have good friends who have bought into these programs and spent a lot of money (sometimes even screwing up their budgets) on the products, and lost very little weight and then gained it all back lightning-fast after stopping the shakes.

    So for someone like me who has watched a lot of friends do just that, but then actually tried logging my food on this site - regular normal food - and pretty easily losing 76 lb in just over 1 yr, it feels like these fad things are unnecessary traps for gullible and desperate people.

    I hope that makes you feel a bit better. If it doesn't, I apologize for my own response.
  • Lyadeia
    Lyadeia Posts: 4,603 Member
    Didn't think I would get bashed for such a simple question.

    YOU did not get bashed.

    SHAKEOLOGY got bashed.
  • Chill out everyone. The only reason why this is "one of those threads" is because some people did start "bashing" when it came to it being a "scheme" or a "money pit". Glass I have tried them and I loved them, I only drank one in the morning ( mainly because I normally dont eat breakfast) or if it was super late coming home from work. They did fill me up, the taste is a little plain. Though I did enjoy mixing berries with mine. Hope this helps.
  • Timelordlady85
    Timelordlady85 Posts: 797 Member
    I bought a month supply of it with a workout program. The shake tasted good but I just couldn't justify the cost of it every month or having to sign up to get a discount for it. I just make sure I eat enough protein or use this
    sun Warrior brand protein powder.
  • cmglass10
    cmglass10 Posts: 31
    I know I was one of the people who hasn't tried the shakes and said "it's a waste of money" but I think some of us (myself for example) have a preconceived notion of these fad programs as being kinda evil. So I don't think you should take the negative reactions personally...if that makes sense.

    Me for example...I have never tried any of them...but I have good friends who have bought into these programs and spent a lot of money (sometimes even screwing up their budgets) on the products, and lost very little weight and then gained it all back lightning-fast after stopping the shakes.

    So for someone like me who has watched a lot of friends do just that, but then actually tried logging my food on this site - regular normal food - and pretty easily losing 76 lb in just over 1 yr, it feels like these fad things are unnecessary traps for gullible and desperate people.

    I hope that makes you feel a bit better. If it doesn't, I apologize for my own response.

    Thank you, This was along the lines of feedback I was looking for.
  • CyberEd312
    CyberEd312 Posts: 3,536 Member
    No One in this thread has bashed Anyone... Period.... This is a public forum and you will get opinions. Just because certain poster have commented that they would not use this product (as I did) just gives another view. And OP you have to realize there are more than just you and like minded Shakeology people reading this thread and to have different opinions on the subject may help others reading this thread decide what they want to do... but lets be perfectly clear, having a difference of opinion on the subject is not bashing you in any way....
  • I'm using it as part of my carb cycling and HIT training. It does curb hunger. It is low calorie. What I like the most is that it contains no Aspartame nor Sucralose (which gives me headaches). There is no aftertaste. It blends well and freezes well. For a lower cost alternative, check out Nature's Way Metabolic Reset (Amazon). There is a trend in health care products these days to set people up as coaches for a better price. Vitamin companies, health supplement companies and Acne care companies are doing it. Often there is an automatic restocking for the best price. They may reserve the right to post on Facebook and other social media in your behalf. Just watch what you are signing up for.
  • JenniB619
    JenniB619 Posts: 85 Member
    I love Shakeology! I actually just started it this week and can notice a total difference already. My face was breaking out, I just couldn't get the little ones to go away and just within the 1st week of having it I can notice it's starting to clear up. Also, my skin is so much softer now - I was in total shock when I was rubbing my face! I have the chocolate one - to me personally, it tastes like I am drinking a chocolate brownie or something.. its SO good :)
  • I tried Shakeology for a month and then decided it was too expensive and bough the Beach Body Meal Replacement shake. Let me tell you-Shakeology is far more superior in taste, quality, nutrients, and efficacy. I am obsessed with the chocolate flavor. It tastes like a chocolate brownie. I seriously crave it, its that good! It gave me energy and curbed my cravings for sweets. When I started the beach body meal replacement, I didn't notice anything besides providing me with a low calorie protein substitute for breakfast. Shakeology is expensive but I truly see the value in this wonder supplement. I even noticed my mood improve. I plan on continuing to buy it!
  • WVprankster
    WVprankster Posts: 430 Member
    Useless bullfeces.
  • Richterchuk
    Richterchuk Posts: 16 Member
    Thank you for asking this question as I was wondering about it myself.

    I hate that it's part of an MLM scheme. I wish a person could just buy some of these products (that are actually good) and not be pressured every 5 minutes to sell it.

    The reason I am curious is that sometimes mornings are so hectic for me, that I'd love a meal replacement shake. I wouldn't be using them as the basis for my weight loss - just for a healthy meal replacement.

    I am not a fan of the price either but I don't really know what I could do with a "real" food equivalent - where I live, the produce is absolutely terrible.

    If you wouldn't mind posting an update if you decide to use them, that would be great!
  • Strokingdiction
    Strokingdiction Posts: 1,164 Member
    Overpriced. You can easily make your own for pennies on the dollar by comparison.
  • Sinisterly
    Sinisterly Posts: 10,913 Member
    Do not want.
    I'll just be over here nomming on the banana I bought.
  • JenniB619
    JenniB619 Posts: 85 Member
    Thank you for asking this question as I was wondering about it myself.

    I hate that it's part of an MLM scheme. I wish a person could just buy some of these products (that are actually good) and not be pressured every 5 minutes to sell it.

    The reason I am curious is that sometimes mornings are so hectic for me, that I'd love a meal replacement shake. I wouldn't be using them as the basis for my weight loss - just for a healthy meal replacement.

    I am not a fan of the price either but I don't really know what I could do with a "real" food equivalent - where I live, the produce is absolutely terrible.

    If you wouldn't mind posting an update if you decide to use them, that would be great!

    I completely understand you needing a quick nutritious breakfast. I am sometimes in that same boat. I was also hesitant on buying shakeology, no lie because of the price mainly. I thought it was ridiculous! BUT I finally decided to give it a try, and I am glad I did. It really does cover the majority of the nutrients you need for the day in 1 serving, and gives you energy throughout the day. I am also noticing a difference in my hair and skin, just after a short amount of time using it. I won't lie, I did become a beachbody coach after starting T25 because I was getting great results and wanted to share and be able to help other people do the same. However, I am not sure what you mean by being pressured into selling it? Unless you become a coach yourself, you do not need to sell anything. If you have any other questions feel free to ask or message/friend me! I hope this helps!
  • tigersword
    tigersword Posts: 8,059 Member
    All your vitamins in one serving? Ok, so it's a crappy quality overpriced multivitamin. Got it.

    Seriously, Beachbody uses incredibly low quality ingredients, the cheapest they can source, and then out in just enough to be able to list it on the ingredients list, but not enough to actually be an effective dose for whatever the ingredient claims to do.

    If you want details, look at any breakdown of Shakeology from an independent source (meaning not associated with Beachbody.) I believe Acg on this site did a very comprehensive breakdown in the past.
  • tracywwertz
    tracywwertz Posts: 1 Member
    I tried a bag worth. I wasnt a fan of flavor and I am losing just a well eating healthy.
  • texstorm
    texstorm Posts: 158 Member
    Thank you for asking this question as I was wondering about it myself.

    I hate that it's part of an MLM scheme. I wish a person could just buy some of these products (that are actually good) and not be pressured every 5 minutes to sell it.

    The reason I am curious is that sometimes mornings are so hectic for me, that I'd love a meal replacement shake. I wouldn't be using them as the basis for my weight loss - just for a healthy meal replacement.

    I am not a fan of the price either but I don't really know what I could do with a "real" food equivalent - where I live, the produce is absolutely terrible.

    If you wouldn't mind posting an update if you decide to use them, that would be great!

    Shakeology certainly isn't for everyone, but don't confuse MLM with anything illicit.

    Like everything, there are bad businesses and good business out there. In my opinion the compensation structure of Beachbody is one of the good ones. No one is required to carry product stock, or handle their own fulfillment. Many MLM companies actually make most of their money not because anyone buys or uses their products but because their reps have to do huge buy-ins to stock up on product that they then have to manage the fulfillment for.

    And MLM companies are not illegal. Again, there are a few that have ripped people off, but BB isn't one of those. I was a customer who used the products and liked them enough and got the results I wanted using them to help support other customers to have the same kind of success that I've had. And yeah, there are some sleazy creeps out there working BB. In my experience these are not fitness or health enthusiasts, but rather chronic MLM folks who move from one business to another. Most of us are in this because we, as I said, love the products and want to help other people, and if we can make some extra cash, awesome.

    The cost objection for Shakeology is one I had as well. But when I set it next to the protein powders, multivitamins, fish oil capsules and every other thing I was buying every month to try to fill the gaps in my daily nutrition the cost started to make more sense. The other thing that swayed me was that the ingredients are food-based and not chemical suspensions, like most supplements. Plus, as someone else mentioned - no artificial sweeteners and I really do like the taste a lot.

    I think the ideal Shakeology candidate is someone who has obvious gaps in their nutrition and needs an easy way to fill them. I have one customer who adores his shakes because he hates vegetables. He grew up on Chef Boyardee and Kraft Mac & Cheese and just does not have the taste buds for salads and steamed broccoli, but he knows that means he's nutrient deprived, and he also knows if he buys a bunch of pills he won't take them consistently. But he faithfully mixes his shake every morning and is feeling better and losing excess weight because he found something he likes as much as a bowl of Capt. Crunch for breakfast. And if you've seen the price of a box of cereal these days... well, he's also spending less money.

    Inversely, if you're someone who is really into food and cooking your own meals and is getting a well-balanced nutrient-rich diet, Shakeology is probably a waste of money for you. There is no one-size-fits-all answer here. Anyone who says there is has an agenda of some kind.

    -Tex

    KPP
  • apo2650
    apo2650 Posts: 1
    I was very apprehensive when I was approached to try shakeology. Not only is it something completely new for me but it was a big investment. The first day was rough. I pushed myself to swallow it like a pill the first three days. After that I think my taste buds adjusted and I've been drinking it every morning for the past two weeks! I love my shakes. The first two weeks I told myself I would only do ice and water with my shake because the point for the shakes for me was to curb my sweet tooth. I can say that this actually works for me. I feel energized during my busy work schedule and planning a wedding. This week I tried a new twist to my strawberry shake. I crushed ice in my blender, added a 1/4 of a banana, 8oz of water and a 1/2 scoop of shakeology. I make this recipe twice in one day to get all of my nutrients and curb my hunger. I hope your shakeology journey gets easier for you ! Best of luck!!!
  • Keepcalmanddontblink
    Keepcalmanddontblink Posts: 718 Member
    I've never had banana Reese's.
    OMG!! They should make that!!!
  • Knight8383
    Knight8383 Posts: 16 Member
    Shakeology is a substitute for clean eating. If you want to change your health for the better do something you can do everyday for the rest of your life. I'm pro shakes but I tried a sample of Shakeolgy and I was not a fan. Plus a lot of the coaches are vultures for lack of a better word. They constantly post how great their shakes are and how you should join their conference calls or how much money they are making selling their shakes. Of course they lose weight. They are eating at a defecit.
  • wheird
    wheird Posts: 7,963 Member
    I regularly get questions about this or that MLM product, whether it be Advocare, Herbalife, Visalus, Isagenix, or Whateverthehell. I am yet to come across a health/nutrition-related MLM company that doesn't economize production costs with sub-par nutritional formulations, especially the protein-containing products (for example, MLMs love to use soy as the first ingredient or fructose as the second ingredient). Adding insult to injury, these protein-based products cost at least double that of the leading non-MLM brands that actually use higher-quality protein formulations. To top it all off, these mediocre MLM products are hyped as the best things on the market, and of course they rely on the emotional triggers of zealous testimonials rather than the weight of the scientific evidence. So yeah, my opinion of MLM-based nutritional products is LOL (yes, let the hurt flow through your butt over that).
  • Not everyone pushes people to buy. I drink shakeology regularly, I became a coach so I could get the discount for myself. I help everyone I can with my free fitness accountability group on Facebook, but there are some good people that aren't all about money. Since my husband is in the military, I don't pay anything to be a coach, even if I never sell anything. It's a good product, I really ok enjoy the flavor, and the way I feel.
  • kgeyser
    kgeyser Posts: 22,505 Member
    Not everyone pushes people to buy. I drink shakeology regularly, I became a coach so I could get the discount for myself. I help everyone I can with my free fitness accountability group on Facebook, but there are some good people that aren't all about money. Since my husband is in the military, I don't pay anything to be a coach, even if I never sell anything. It's a good product, I really ok enjoy the flavor, and the way I feel.

    You have 3 posts here and all of them are about Shakeology.
  • sheltol
    sheltol Posts: 120 Member
    I'm sure I'll take lots of smack talk for this but here goes.
    I am a beachbody coach. Yep, admittedly and proud of it.
    It's something I do part time and am fortunate that I don't need the money.
    By day, I'm a toxicologist and age group triathlete with multiple finishes up through the half iron distance.
    A lifelong friend of mine lost nearly 80 lbs with p90x, insanity, and asylum. I had gained 30 pounds after
    A traumatic event and had finally convinced myself it was time to do something about it. So I did p90x
    Lost the 30 lbs in about 7 weeks and dropped to about 12% body fat without shakeology. Yes without!
    I entered my first tri in over 5 years and broke a personal best by 7 mins. After eating healthier than I ever have
    I was still having digestive issues and had multiple doctor and specialist visits. In short, I was told to eat better.
    But I was eating better! I was taking fiber supplements and stool softeners just to not be in pain. So after dropping to about
    8% body fat and in the best shape of my life and eating healthier than I ever have in my life I ordered shakeology.
    After two weeks I was off all the fiber and stool softeners. It made a dramatic difference in my quality of life. So I use it.

    As a coach: I have never not offered to help someone who wouldn't buy shakeology from me. I have never told someone I
    Lost all my weight with shakeology. I didn't lose any weight taking it. I simply tell them the truth. I take it because it has over 70 exotic foods in it that have helped my digestive system. I eat healthy but I don't get near the variety of foods that I get with shakeology. And even if I could buy them locally I wouldn't know how to prepare them. In my opinion it taste really good and is developed so that you can add calories and make lots of different recipes. I no longer crave desserts, candy etc, because I really enjoy my shakeology.

    I'm proud to be associated with bb because they promote both exercise and healthy eating. They aren't built on the premise of living off 2 drinks a day to lose weight. It takes a combination of healthy eating and exercise. Shakeology is great for those people who drop $7 a day on a mocha frappuchino or can't resist jelly beans by the bag, or those who struggle with making all of their meals fit in their calorie or macro goals. Even a recent study noted in GNCs magazine indicated meal replacements can really help people on the go. I recommend what I use. Whether it's sold by beachbody or not. Things like quest bars, ultragen by first endurance, ironman perform intraworkout, and ultimate muscle protein by Beverly international.

    So bash all you want. My team has had some amazing transformations. Several of their before and after photos have been ripped
    Off and posted in false ads on Facebook claims they got the results in a month and it took the guys a year. There are lots of bad seeds but I'm just here to tell you there are good ones too. As for bashing MLM's. It's no different. A lot of people try to feed off their friends and family and it doesn't work. I tell everyone who is interested on joining as a coach that this is not a get rich quick scheme and your family and friends will not buy anything from you. It's as much of a business as you put into it. I'm proud to say that 90% of the coaches under me are still at it. Truth will earn your success.

    Finally I would say that in just a few short weeks of being on the MFP message boards there is a lot of smack talk. I agree who foods are the way to go. But it's difficult for a lot of people so if there is a way that can help. Why bash it? I find it hilarious that a these clean eaters love to recommend some of the harshest preworkouts out there. Eat clean but drink chemicals
    To improve performance. I find that a bit comical and hypocritical. At the end of the day if that works for you, great. But, don't hate on what I do. I workout with crossfiters, mud runners, marathoners, and triathletes. Some of them use shakeology and some don't
    But they are all down for a great workout.
  • texstorm
    texstorm Posts: 158 Member
    I'm going to concur with everything Sheltol said and add my own two cents...

    I am a Team Beachbody Coach. I've been a customer since 2010. I love working out in a gym. I also love running, cycling and playing soccer, and I do those things when I have time to do them. Having the option to do a full-body workout in my home drew me to P90X and that started me on the path to being as fit as I have ever been in my life. I did 3 rounds of P90X, a round of Asylum and a round of T25 without Shakeology. I got very good results and was pretty resistant to even try the stuff.

    My logic was "I can buy ON Gold Standard Whey at GNC for $30 and make my own shakes, so why would I pay $130 for the same thing?" I made the choice to become a Coach because I enjoyed chatting with people on the BB message boards and on Facebook about what I'd done to improve my health, to help them with their own goals. I believe we have a serious health crisis in this country that's the result of overstressed people, an environment and culture that discourages activity and a food system that's profoundly broken. I have seen people utterly transform their lives over the past several years by using Beachbody programs. Could they do it at a gym or via some other avenue? Sure. Will they? Probably not. Why? Because the demands on their time and availability of options to get active have boxed them in.

    Once I became a coach I needed to be familiar with more of the products, and I won't lie, if I was going to devote two or three hours of my day to doing this I needed to find a way to get compensated for that, but there was no way I was going to recommend Shakeology to someone without trying it myself. As I learned more about it I also realized I'd been looking at it wrong. I'd seen it as just a protein supplement, but it really isn't that at all. It's a meal replacement powder that is packed with food-based nutrients. So, not only was I swapping out my Whey protein, but my multivitamin and other supplements I'd been taking daily. Suddenly the cost wasn't as much of an issue. I started using Shakeology while doing P90X2, and was honestly surprised by the improvements I saw in my digestion, my energy level and other changes in my body. I kept using it while I did a round of P90X3 and dropped 3 inches from my waist and 2 full body fat percentage points.

    My point is that I'm now an advocate for the stuff. Like the other coach said, it's not for everyone, and I'd never recommend something to someone that wouldn't be a good fit for them. I'm also not interested in aggressively selling products or recruiting anyone. To paint Beachbody (or any other MLM) with a broad brush stroke that says they all make lousy products and have vultures as reps is just ignorant. It's just a business model, and it's no more or less evil than any other business model. You may as well say that all CrossFit boxes are a rip off because some of them are run by clueless nitwits who don't know what they're doing and teach their customers bad lifting form, or that all traditional gyms are bad because some chains rope people into costly memberships banking on the idea that they'll pay every month but hardly ever use the facilities. Heck, if I had a dime for every time I've seen a disinterested personal trainer walk a client through a generic 1 hour program that has nothing to do with that individual's abilities or needs just to collect a fee I'd have a lot of dimes. Does that mean all personal trainers exploit their customers? No. It means that some people are jerks.

    My mother sold Tupperware. My sister sold Avon. They had fun doing it and made a little extra money. The products were solid (heck, Skin So Soft lotion is still the best mosquito repellent you can get, and my parents' cupboards are full of 30 year old Tupperware that's still doing its job) and if you sold them to people who actually wanted them, why is that any different from someone buying something from a store?

    My final point - If you have used Shakeology and didn't like it, fine. That's valid. If you don't like meal replacement products because you find fault with the premise that's also valid. But don't dump on a product because someone who once tried to sell it to you was a ****. If I used that kind of reasoning in my purchasing choices I'd have never bought a Mac, tried a Latte or ever bought a record or a comic book as a kid.

    -Tex

    KPP
  • Wetcoaster
    Wetcoaster Posts: 1,788 Member
    Posted just up aways......


    "I regularly get questions about this or that MLM product, whether it be Advocare, Herbalife, Visalus, Isagenix, or Whateverthehell.

    I am yet to come across a health/nutrition-related MLM company that doesn't economize production costs with sub-par nutritional formulations, especially the protein-containing products (for example, MLMs love to use soy as the first ingredient)

    . Adding insult to injury, these protein-based products cost at least double that of the leading non-MLM brands that actually use higher-quality protein formulations.

    To top it all off, these mediocre MLM products are hyped as the best things on the market, and of course they rely on the emotional triggers of zealous testimonials rather than the weight of the scientific evidence. So yeah, my opinion of MLM-based nutritional products is LOL (yes, let the hurt flow through your butt over that)

    http://www.vandruff.com/mlm.html





    Summary of What's Wrong With Multi-Level Marketing

    MLMs are "doomed by design" to recruit too many salespeople, who in turn will then attempt to recruit even more salespeople, ad infinitum.

    For many, the real attraction of involvement in multi-level marketing is the thinly veiled pyramid con-scheme made quasi-legal by the presence of a product or service.

    The ethical concessions necessary to be "successful" in many MLM companies are stark and difficult to deal with for most people.

    Friends and family should be treated as such, and not as "marks" for exploitation.
  • texstorm
    texstorm Posts: 158 Member

    Summary of What's Wrong With Multi-Level Marketing

    MLMs are "doomed by design" to recruit too many salespeople, who in turn will then attempt to recruit even more salespeople, ad infinitum.

    For many, the real attraction of involvement in multi-level marketing is the thinly veiled pyramid con-scheme made quasi-legal by the presence of a product or service.

    The ethical concessions necessary to be "successful" in many MLM companies are stark and difficult to deal with for most people.

    Friends and family should be treated as such, and not as "marks" for exploitation.

    More accurately that's a summary of what people who have no experience with MLM's or who have encountered only unethical MLM reps tend to think.

    The idea that all MLMs are pyramid schemes exposes just basic ignorance in how business, all business, works. Pyramid schemes are illegal. A pyramid scheme takes money from many and gives it to a few, delivering nothing in return to the people involved at the bottom. MLM's are not pyramid schemes precisely because there is, in fact, a product for sale. Now, granted, the compensation practices of some MLM's make it very difficult for reps to make any money without becoming hyper-aggressive with their sales tactics, and many companies require their reps to purchase product, stock it and distribute it themselves, causing them to have to invest quite a bit of money before they'll ever see the light of day. This is not, I must point out, how Beachbody works at all. Coaches do not stock or distribute product. And the monthly fee to remain active is less than you'd spend to go to a movie once a month.

    I don't want to get sidetracked into BB specific stuff here though. I'm taking more of an issue with the perception of all MLM's as inherently bad or crooked. That's simply not true. The notion that this is about endlessly recruiting reps is nonsense as well. The turnover rate is no different than any other sales-based business. In my 9-5 world I work in a sales organization, and we are constantly hiring and people are constantly moving on, either up or out. And all businesses are pyramid shaped, with a hierarchy where the people at the top of the structure make more money than the people at the bottom. The difference with MLM is that where you reside on that pyramid is dependent on your own effort and pretty much nothing else.

    As I said before, there are jerks in this business, just like any other. There are also lousy companies and bad products, which is no different from any other more traditional business. The most successful people in MLM are not exploiting anyone, because that's not a sustainable business model. Do we see people like that? Yup. Just today the top BB coach, posted a screen capture image on her Facebook wall of some really sleazy messages that a coach in her downline was sending to people on Facebook. Why'd she post them. To send the message that this isn't the right way to act and that it's embarrassing to her, to the company and disrespectful to our customers and fellow human beings.

    But again, this happens in traditional business too. Anyone remember the story in the news late last year about individuals at a major US bank who were fired for ginning up their sales numbers by opening bogus accounts on behalf of their family members? Does that make the bank evil? No. It indicates that there was a lot of pressure to perform on those individuals, and that because somewhere along the way they'd never had ethics explained to them they made poor choices.

    Salespeople get blamed, in my opinion, for being salespeople. People get bent out of shape at car salespeople all the time. Why? Because they're doing their job. No one can make you buy anything. If you can't say no, that's not the fault of the salesperson. He or she is there to sell things. If you don't want to do business with MLM's, then don't. But don't pretend that there's something inherently more evil about someone who works for themselves selling stuff than someone who works for some corporation selling stuff.

    -Tex
  • GreatDepression
    GreatDepression Posts: 347 Member
    Non-coach, Shakeology user here:

    It's a good quality shake powder that is made bad by an outrageous price and unethical MLM practices. The marketing also really plays up certain gimmicks like "all natural, no chemicals," etc. After my two month-supply runs out, I won't ever buy it again.
  • You are correct, I usually acess MFP from the app on my phone, so I have not been active on the message boards until yesterday. However when someone asks something about a topic I am familiar with, I am going to answer. Do I drink shakeology, yes, am I a coach, yes, do I try to convince people to buy it, nope. As I have said in a previous post, it is not for everyone, there are other shakes and supplements others swear by that were not for me. We make the decisions about our health and fitness that we as individuals are right for us.
  • These posts are cracking me up.
    First of all, Shakeology never claimed to be a 'magic potion'. Lol!!
    Second, try it for yourself. Yes it's a bit more expensive of a product, but
    As we all know, you get what you pay for.
    Shakeology isn't a protein powder, it's not a diet shake, it is a superfoods
    Whole food product that you can use as a meal replacement. Mostly though,
    It is to nourish your body with superfruits, antioxidants, pre & probiotics, and super proteins.
    It contains actual foods, not vitamin additives, preservatives, fillers, sugars, etc.
    I've been drinking it every day for almost 3 years. It works for ME. It may not work for everyone,
    But try it do yourself instead of listening to people with false claims and naysayers. ;)
    No two ways about it, yes, of course real chewable foods are better for you, but honestly who eats
    All those products in a day to get all their nutrients? I try but I enjoy supplementing with Shakeology.