A simple tool to size your workplace nutrition gap, using a transparent formula.
What it computes. The Office Nutrition Gap: the difference between how much healthy nutrition your team wants and how much is actually available, on a 0–5 scale. Higher = more unmet demand.
Inputs. Demand for healthy options (0–5) · Availability of healthy options (0–5). Example values are illustrative, not benchmarks.
The formula (no hidden logic):
gap = demand − availability (kept between 0 and 5).
How to read your result. 0–1: low gap, demand mostly met. 2–3: moderate gap, noticeable unmet demand. 4–5: high gap, strong unmet demand and scarce options.
Limitations. Inputs are your own 0–5 estimates, not audited measurements. The model is intentionally simple. The result is a planning aid, not a market figure.
FAQ — What should I do with a high gap score?
A high gap suggests prioritising more healthy options. Pair this with the Healthy Office Drinks guide.
FAQ — Is the score a measured benchmark?
No. It is computed entirely from your own 0–5 inputs using the stated formula.
A simple tool to size your workplace nutrition gap, using a transparent formula.
What it computes. The Office Nutrition Gap: the difference between how much healthy nutrition your team wants and how much is actually available, on a 0–5 scale. Higher = more unmet demand.
Inputs. Demand for healthy options (0–5) · Availability of healthy options (0–5). Example values are illustrative, not benchmarks.
The formula (no hidden logic):
gap = demand − availability (kept between 0 and 5).
How to read your result. 0–1: low gap, demand mostly met. 2–3: moderate gap, noticeable unmet demand. 4–5: high gap, strong unmet demand and scarce options.
Limitations. Inputs are your own 0–5 estimates, not audited measurements. The model is intentionally simple. The result is a planning aid, not a market figure.
FAQ — What should I do with a high gap score?
A high gap suggests prioritising more healthy options. Pair this with the Healthy Office Drinks guide.
FAQ — Is the score a measured benchmark?
No. It is computed entirely from your own 0–5 inputs using the stated formula.