Meal donation app comes to KC: How the phone-eats-first foodie photo trend can help fight hunger

March 26, 2021  |  Channa Steinmetz

GiftAMeal, Lion's Choice partnership

People are already taking photos of their food — why not donate to food banks at the same time, Andrew Glantz proposed. 

“GiftAMeal is a free mobile app; each time someone takes a photo of their order from one of our partner restaurants, we make a donation to a local food bank to help give a meal to someone in need. If the user posts their photo on Facebook, Instagram and/or Twitter, then we donate a second, third or fourth meal,” the CEO and founder of GiftAMeal explained.

Andrew Glantz, GiftAMeal

Glantz founded GiftAMeal in 2015 while he was still a student at Washington University in St. Louis. There, he leaned heavily on his professors and peers to learn about what it takes to build a successful foundation for a startup, he shared. 

“After graduating, we continued learning and growing from the St. Louis community, the Missouri Restaurant Association and all these other groups,” Glantz said. “It has been super beneficial for us as we continue to grow.”

GiftAMeal has grown to more than 240 partner restaurants and 40,000 application users. The team is currently made up of three full-time employees, three part-time employees and two interns. Through its growth, the app is expanding outside St. Louis and coming to Kansas City, Glantz shared. 

“We’ve wanted to expand to Kansas City for a while now; it was really a matter of timing,” he shared. “We just launched this partnership with Lion’s Choice and their 32 locations. When we saw they had locations in Kansas City, we knew it was the right time to launch there.” 

Lion’s Choice, a fast food company famous for its roast beef sandwiches, operates five restaurants across Kansas City — a starting point for GiftAMeal in KC, Glantz said. 

“We’re really excited to build relationships with hopefully a lot of other Kansas City restaurants and build the same market we’ve done here in St. Louis,” he said. “… This will be the launching point for how we scale our startup and expand into other cities across the country.”

Restaurant owners in the Kansas City area can request information and reserve a special Early Adopter discount here.

GiftAMeal, Lion's Choice partnership

GiftAMeal, Lion’s Choice partnership

GiftAMeal is partnering with Harvesters, The Community Food Network, a local organization that provides healthy groceries and household goods to more than 760 partner agencies throughout northwestern Missouri and northeastern Kansas. In St. Louis, GiftAMeal is partnered with Operation Food Search.

GiftAMeal food pantry volunteering

GiftAMeal food pantry volunteering

So, who pays for the donations?

Restaurants that partner with GiftAMeal pay a $79 monthly subscription for a combination of marketing and giving back, Glantz explained. 

“We’ve been able to see some really cool results from case studies that we’ve done with our partner restaurants,” he noted. “We found that customers who are using GiftAMeal are returning more frequently, spending more per check and tipping more than customers who are not using GiftAMeal. It is great to see the power of a socially conscious incentive, rather than a financial incentive like coupons and discounts.”

Click here to check out a 2021 case study conducted by GiftAMeal on Espresso Yourself Coffee & Café. 

GiftAMeal is a for-profit social venture. On an average month, the platform is donating more than 25 percent of its revenue to the local food bank partners.

“We also don’t have a limit for the maximum amount that we donate,” he said. “So if more and more people take and share photos, then that percentage would go up as well.”

Glantz’s passion for fighting hunger dates back to teen years when the Los Angeles-native volunteered at Camp Harmony — a summer camp for underserved children.

“Through interacting with those children and hearing their stories, it was an issue that really touched my heart,” Glantz shared. “I felt very fortunate for the position I was in and felt that sense of obligation to give back.”

In Missouri, one in four children face hunger, Glantz added.

“Hunger prevents future opportunities for a lot of people,” he shared. “… In children, hunger can stunt childhood development and get them held back in school — leading to a lack of access to future opportunities.”

GiftAMeal has donated nearly 600,000 meals to those in need, Glantz said — noting he would love to see that number reach a million meals, 10 million meals and so on. 

“When we hit half a million meals, I was trying to visualize in my head what that meant; it’s about 10,000 school buses full of children that all got a meal from GiftAMeal,” he said. “Hunger is not just a number, it’s affecting real people and real lives, so that visualization is definitely something that motivates me.”

GiftAMeal is available on the Apple Store and Google Play.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2021 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        "All Boys Aren't Blue," published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR); overset: Andrews McMeel Universal Kansas City headquarters

        As book banning spreads across US, one KC media company calls out specific threat to diverse creators

        By Tommy Felts | February 10, 2022

        The Kansas City publishing powerhouse behind many of the nation’s most-beloved newspaper comics — from Calvin & Hobbes and The Far Side to Garfield and Peanuts — this week raised its voice amid a growing push to condemn book bans flaring up across the country. “Books are safe harbors, where the freedom of expression and…

        Adam Lurie, Torch.AI

        Torch.AI secures second acquisition in two months with more in its pipeline, revealing strategy to ‘turbocharge’ military intel

        By Tommy Felts | February 10, 2022

        Leawood-based artificial intelligence firm Torch.AI recently expanded its team and capabilities through the acquisition of B23 — a Virginia-based data extraction software company, noted Adam Lurie, chief strategy officer of Torch.AI  “Our belief is that the combination of Torch.AI’s software platform Nexus, alongside the subject matter expertise and customer capabilities of B23, will allow us…

        Christina Williams and Tamela Ross, The Blakk Co.

        New initiative has a message for KC: When Black men say they need a ’90s self-love reboot — listen

        By Tommy Felts | February 10, 2022

        Love yourself enough to know you matter  It’s virtually impossible to love others when there’s not already a sense of self love, said Kansas City small business owner Christina Williams, announcing the launch of an initiative to guide its community of Black men to understanding and believing in their own self-worth. “I know a lot…

        Brad Starnes, Splitsy

        Splitting time between student, entrepreneur lives earns Splitsy co-founder top UMKC honor

        By Tommy Felts | February 10, 2022

        Recognition as UMKC’s Student Entrepreneur of the Year is a reminder that innovators often begin early, said Brad Starnes, one of Kansas City’s most-talked-about emerging young startup founders. “When I was about 8 years old, I submitted a drawing to an engineering firm,” said the co-founder of Splitsy, a bill splitting app that launched its…