When Arjun Panesar’s grandfather was diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes, he wasn’t sure what to do next. What was the ideal diet? Could he still eat the food he loved while managing his condition? Arjun didn’t have many answers, so he quickly coded up a forum for people with diabetes to discuss their lifestyles.
The forum took off pretty quickly, reaching 40,000 members. The team released a free diabetes-friendly cookbook that was downloaded 257,000 times in the first four weeks. With strong feedback and engagement from the community, Arjun decided to launch a comprehensive website: diabetes.co.uk.
“Our goal from the beginning was to empower people with diabetes to lead healthier, happier lives,” says Arjun. And in order to realize that mission, Arjun partnered with medical professionals to create a structured program, called the Low Carb Program, which would reduce intake of ultra-processed foods and refined carbohydrates and increase the share of real foods in the diets of people with Type 2 diabetes.
“Our users were aware that they could control their diabetes, but at that time there was so much conflicting information on the internet,” says Arjun. “We wanted to be a single source of truth for people, drawing on surveys from our user community as well as research from actual doctors.”
Soon stories started pouring in from users who had used the Low Carb Program to change their lives. One man who had been diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes in 1997 was able to reverse his diabetes in just six months thanks to the program.
The site wasn’t just growing quickly — it was also having a genuine impact on people’s health outcomes. Now it was time for Arjun to figure out how to make the site’s impact sustainable, while keeping this valuable content accessible to the large, diverse community of people with diabetes.