13/06/2026
1. Using poor-quality ingredients to cut costs
Good food starts with good ingredients. Customers may not see what goes into the pot, but they can always taste the difference.
2. Inconsistent taste from one order to the next
When someone finds a dish they love, they should be able to trust that it will taste just as good every single time.
3. Seeing other food business owners only as competition
There is room for everyone at the table. Some of the best lessons, partnerships, and opportunities come from community rather than comparison.
4. Treating the food business like “just cooking”
Feeding people is a serious responsibility. Your food becomes part of someone’s daily routine, family gathering, celebration, or comfort after a long day.
5. Underpricing just to win customers
Quality ingredients, time, skill, and care all deserve to be valued. Sustainable pricing helps businesses continue serving well.
6. Prioritising aesthetics over taste
Beautiful packaging may catch attention, but exceptional flavour is what keeps customers coming back.
7. Packaging that leaks during delivery
Presentation matters, but practicality matters even more. Good food should arrive exactly as intended.
8. Overpromising and underdelivering
It is better to set honest expectations and exceed them than to disappoint customers.
9. Ignoring customer feedback
Listening to customers is one of the most powerful ways to grow and improve.
10. Wearing burnout as a badge of honour
Long hours are often part of the journey, but exhaustion should not be the standard for success.
11. Tiny portions at premium prices
Good food is valuable, but customers should still feel they received their money’s worth.
12. Poor hygiene behind the scenes
Cleanliness is non-negotiable in any food business. Customers are trusting you with something deeply personal — what goes into their bodies and what they feed their families.
📌 What’s one thing you think should never be normal in the food business but sadly is?