
Source: Abram’s Kaizen Program
Abram Anderson does not describe himself as someone who overcame adversity to build a business. He describes himself as someone who got depressed, borrowed a concept from a car factory, and accidentally lost 40 pounds.
The car factory part is literal. Before Abram Anderson was a nutritionist, before he was a published author, before he was a public speaker, and before he built a coaching program that has served more than 6,000 women, he graduated high school early and became a college student studying automated manufacturing. It was there that he encountered the Toyota Production System – a methodology in which workers make small improvements at every step of the assembly line, producing a finished product that is exponentially better than if corrections were saved for the end. The Japanese term for this principle is kaizen: continuous improvement.
“I was 20 years old and getting out of college, and I wasn’t trying to get in shape,” says Abram, Founder of Abram’s Kaizen Program. “I was just trying to get out of depression. I knew what to do, I just wasn’t doing it. When I learned about the Toyota Method, I thought: what if you applied that to health? Not fix everything at the end, but make one small improvement at every step.”
The results were both unexpected and formative. By focusing on incremental improvements to his mental health rather than weight loss specifically, Abram Anderson lowered his cortisol, improved his wellbeing, and lost 40 pounds as what he describes as a byproduct. He was not counting calories. He was not tracking protein. He was applying the kaizen principle to himself – the same principle that would eventually become the foundation of Abram’s Kaizen Program.
That experience planted the seed, but the program did not take its current form until 2014, when his wife needed to lose weight and nothing in his conventional nutritionist’s toolkit worked. The investment of more than $200,000 in direct mentorship from experts including Mel Robbins, Dr. Michael Greger, James Clear, Dr. Jason Fung and Tim Ferriss – and the result of his wife losing 60 pounds in two months – gave Abram Anderson both the methodology and the conviction to build Abram’s Kaizen Program into a full-time business.
Today, Abram operates Abram’s Kaizen Program from the Philippines, where he and his wife married more than a decade ago. They live with their children, who attend an international school. He wakes at 4 or 5 a.m., works on the program’s curriculum and AI coaching system, takes client calls and staff meetings when his American clients wake up, and spends the rest of his day in deep work and family time.
“I completely stopped taking days off,” Abram says. “I used to work 27 days and take 3 off. Now I just work every day. Because it feels so in alignment with what I want. It forces me to be in better shape, forces me to have a better relationship with my kids. If my kids need help with homework, I’m there.”
The word that recurs most often when Abram Anderson describes his philosophy is “easy.” Easy weight loss. Easy adherence. An easy life. He has not diversified into supplements, has not launched adjacent product lines, has not pursued corporate partnerships. He has done one thing – Abram’s Kaizen Program, refined continuously – for a decade.
“I can do one thing forever, and it just makes my life easier,” Abram says. “I don’t know my competitors. I don’t know what other programs offer. I just focus on making Abram’s Kaizen Program better. That’s the Kaizen method applied to business.”
It is, perhaps, an unusual posture for a health industry entrepreneur. But for someone who borrowed his core philosophy from a Japanese car factory and tested it first on his own depression, the commitment to incremental improvement over dramatic reinvention has a certain consistency.
Meet Abby, a passionate health product reviewer with years of experience in the field. Abby's love for health and wellness started at a young age, and she has made it her life mission to find the best products to help people achieve optimal health. She has a Bachelor's degree in Nutrition and Dietetics and has worked in various health institutions as a Nutritionist.
Her expertise in the field has made her a trusted voice in the health community. She regularly writes product reviews and provides nutrition tips, and advice that helps her followers make informed decisions about their health. In her free time, Abby enjoys exploring new hiking trails and trying new recipes in her kitchen to support her healthy lifestyle.
Please note: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical, legal, or financial advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making any decisions based on this content. See our full disclaimer for more information.





