Friday, October 21, 2011

The 2009 Diet That Beats The Credit Crunch

a 2009 diet to beat the credit crunch
With the current economy the way it is, dieters are looking for new ways to lose weight and a new 2009 diet is ticking all the right boxes.

After sales of lunch boxes has reportedly gone through the roof and dieters look to take their food to work instead of shopping out, The Lunch Box Diet fits well into a diet maket that has been saturated with plans that are more or less the same. This diet takes a fresh new approach and although it's being released in 2009 by publishing giant Harper Collins, the story of The Lunch Box diet actually starts here, on the web.

Personal trainer Simon Lovell devised the plan after his clients needed a healthy way of eating. As an overweight and bullied teen, the 29 year old fitness fanatic gave his clients a simple three page document. After about a month, his clients were coming back to him with amazing results in both weight loss, improved hair, skin and nails. So The Lunch Box Diet was born. It was then picked up by top glossy magazines, notibly Elle Magazine who called it 'the best diet ever' and 'a way of life'. For a 10 page ebook, downloadable from Simon's web site it was quite a step for internet books.

Now there's a 224 book appearing on January 5th in the UK, although it's set to be a hit worldwide. Simon's ebook made the cover of top USA women's magazine Woman's World where they said it produced 'gold star results' and was 'the easiest diet'.

So, back to the credit cruch - the diet has already made a name for itself as being a diet that can save you money. MSN published the article, Save Money, Shed Kilos, where The Lunch Box Diet has proven itself to work for those on a budget and in this current downturn, this can't be a bad thing.

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