Inside the Race to Build the Netflix of Food

Kraft-Heinz’s Evolv is using the algorithmic analysis pioneered by tech companies to help us plan our meals

Zander Nethercutt
OneZero

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Photo: Joel Sharpe/Getty Images

“Food is the single most important habit that we have as human beings. What we’re doing is bigger than tech, it’s bigger than food, it’s bigger than I think any of the things that I’ve worked in my career. We’re fundamentally changing how people think about the single most important habit of their lives.”

– Mani Gopalakrishnan, VP of Digital Innovation for Kraft-Heinz

Food and technology are having a moment.

The love affair began in the 2000s, when companies like Seamless burst onto the scene. Then came Blue Apron, which knew that the value of food wasn’t merely in the food itself, but rather in the social experience of making it. So-called “track and trace” companies have since taken center stage by offering interested parties unprecedented insight into every aspect of their food: where it’s from, how long it traveled from farm to table, what it’s been exposed to, if it was produced on a farm with GMOs, and more.

We’re still very much in the top half of the first inning in terms of maximizing what food can be to people, for two main reasons: 1) a lack of data-driven solutions to deliver…

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Zander Nethercutt
OneZero

mistaking correlation for causation since '94; IYI, probably | 🧓Chicago, IL | ✍️. @ zandercutt.com | GET IN TOUCH: zander [at] zandercutt [dot] com