1. Overview of Disclosure Policy
Coocaca.sg isn’t just a place where smoothie lovers scroll past colorful bowls and vibrant breakfast ideas, it’s a space run by real people who taste, test, and sometimes accidentally explode a blender. With every recipe shared, a small corner of truth gets served too: part of what keeps this site alive includes a bit of funding from partners, sponsors, and affiliate programs.
What does that mean for someone browsing through açai blends or reading about overnight oats? It means some links on this site may result in a small commission paid to the creators if someone makes a purchase after clicking. That support helps cover things like site hosting, camera gear, the occasional restock of chia seeds, and even a blender or two (because they do break).
No pay-to-play stuff here. Every featured product, every recommended ingredient, and each gadget shown has either been used, tasted, tested or strongly questioned by the site’s creators. Recipes come first. Health always matters. Taste? Non-negotiable.
2. Scope of This Statement
Everything written here applies across the site. That means the homepage, recipe pages, blog posts, product reviews, email newsletters, and even downloadable guides fall under this disclosure. If content is published anywhere under the Coocaca.sg domain or sent out by the team behind the site, this policy applies to that content.
Sponsored posts, affiliate links, samples sent by brands, partnerships with wellness products, or even seasonal gift guides that might include links to online stores, all of it falls under this umbrella. This doesn’t mean everything is paid for or influenced. Most content comes straight from Maya’s or Elias’s own kitchen. But when money, free samples, or promotional partnerships do come into play, they get clearly labeled.
If someone stumbles across a smoothie bowl recipe and sees a blender mentioned with a link? That link might be an affiliate one. If there’s a blog post about gut-friendly ingredients, and it highlights a specific brand of kefir or a new superfood powder? That brand might’ve sent a free sample or sponsored that specific piece of content.
This statement is updated over time as new formats or partnerships roll out, so it’s always a good idea to swing by occasionally and check for updates.
3. Affiliate Relationships Explained
Here’s how affiliate links work on Coocaca.sg: when a link on this site points to another site like an online shop, grocery delivery service, or health product store and someone makes a purchase after clicking, a percentage of that sale may come back to support this site. That commission comes at zero extra cost to the buyer.
Affiliate partnerships are formed through trusted platforms that help connect websites like Coocaca.sg with brands. Maya and Elias handpick affiliate programs based on what they already use in their own kitchens or personally believe in. If a product hasn’t passed their standards, it doesn’t get promoted.
No link gets thrown in just to make a buck. Every mention comes after questions get asked: Is this something we would recommend to a friend? Is it genuinely good? Does it align with our values on healthy eating and accessible wellness?
Affiliate programs include things like kitchen appliances, meal prep tools, pantry staples, and health foods that play a real role in the recipes shared on the site. There’s no pressure to buy anything, ever but if readers do choose to buy through a link, that’s a simple way to support more free content without needing to sign up or subscribe to anything.
4. Link Mechanics and Visitor Impact
No tricks. No hidden popups. Just links that sometimes include special codes or tracking numbers used by affiliate platforms. That helps them know that a visitor came from Coocaca.sg.
If someone clicks on a link and browses a product, the site they land on uses cookies (small digital identifiers) to track the visit. If they decide to make a purchase within a certain time window, sometimes 24 hours, sometimes 30 days depending on the brand, a small piece of that purchase gets credited to Coocaca.sg’s affiliate account. Again, prices stay the same for the shopper. No markups, no added fees.
Readers who prefer not to use affiliate links can always search for the product directly or shop elsewhere. Links exist to simplify access, not pressure purchases.
Every link placed here respects privacy and aims for simplicity. No pop-under ads, no redirects through shady middlemen. Just clean links to products that play a real part in making everyday healthy eating easier.
5. Sponsored Content and Brand Collaborations
Sometimes a company reaches out and asks to sponsor a post. If that happens, Coocaca.sg makes it clear with a label at the top of the article: “This post was sponsored by...” or something similar. That way, nobody’s confused about where content came from or who paid for it.
But even when a post is sponsored, the opinions shared stay independent. No company gets to write the post or tweak the final review. If a blender is weak or a protein powder tastes like cardboard? That’s what gets written.
All sponsored content still goes through taste tests, nutrition checks, and real recipe development. Elias, being a trained nutritionist, makes sure every ingredient meets standards for health benefits. Maya makes sure everything still tastes good enough to eat on a Monday morning.
Sponsorship doesn’t mean praise by default. If something’s not great, the team either turns down the offer or shares honest thoughts because keeping readers’ trust matters far more than short-term money.
6. Display Advertisements
You’ll notice banner ads on certain pages. These come from third-party ad networks—think of them like digital billboards. Coocaca.sg doesn’t always choose which ads show up. Instead, ad platforms display things based on what they think someone might want to see.
Sometimes ads reflect past browsing behavior, sometimes they’re random. Either way, they’re filtered to avoid spammy, inappropriate, or misleading content. If something weird slips through the cracks, readers can always report it.
Ads help cover basic site costs: domain fees, hosting plans, tech maintenance, and even groceries for the next recipe shoot. Without them, Coocaca.sg would need to charge a membership or lock content behind a paywall and nobody wants that.
7. Compensation Models
Revenue sources come in a few forms:
- Affiliate Commissions: Someone clicks a product link and makes a purchase—Coocaca.sg earns a small cut.
- Sponsored Posts: A brand pays a fixed fee for a custom article or feature.
- Product Sampling: Some brands send free products to test and review—no money, just samples.
- Display Ads: Ad impressions generate a bit of income when visitors browse pages.
- Collaborative Campaigns: Sometimes Maya or Elias participate in social media campaigns that link back to Coocaca.sg.
None of this changes the way recipes are created or how reviews are written. The team only promotes items that fit with the site’s vibe and values. That means organic ingredients over artificial ones, practical gadgets over overpriced gimmicks.
At the end of the day, integrity matters more than income. Long-term trust means more than short-term payouts.
8. Independent Editorial Control
All opinions expressed on Coocaca.sg belong to the creators. Nobody else.
Elias uses his background in nutrition to double-check facts. Maya handles recipe structure, flavor balance, and presentation. Both of them make sure anything that shows up whether a step-by-step açai bowl or a post about meal prep mistakes is honest, accurate, and aligned with what the site stands for.
Brands can suggest ideas or request focus on certain products, but final approval always stays in-house. No brand dictates the tone, words, or conclusion of any review.
That’s how every post stays real. If something tastes bad, it’s not getting a sugarcoated write-up. If a tool breaks in the first week, it gets flagged.
No one, not sponsors, not affiliate platforms gets to rewrite the script.
9. Third-Party Links and Resources
Some posts might link out to articles, farm sources, scientific studies, or ingredient origin pages. These aren’t always affiliate or paid. Often, they’re just helpful extras for readers who want more detail.
That said, those outside pages operate under their own privacy and cookie policies. Coocaca.sg isn’t responsible for what other sites do with visitor information or how their content changes over time.
If a link goes dead or a site starts selling something sketchy, readers are encouraged to let the team know so it can be removed or updated.
Transparency doesn’t stop with money, it extends to knowledge sources, too.
10. Use of Cookies and Tracking Technologies
Most ad networks and affiliate platforms use cookies to figure out where a visitor came from. These are small files stored in the browser to help track purchases or ad views.
Coocaca.sg doesn’t collect personal info like names or emails through these cookies. That all happens on the affiliate partner’s side. Data collected this way usually includes things like time of visit, general location (by region), what was clicked, and how long someone stayed on the site.
Visitors uncomfortable with cookies can disable them through browser settings. That may impact affiliate tracking, but the site will still function normally.
There’s no hidden data mining, no profile building, no creepy tracking software. Just basic affiliate tech that keeps the lights on.
11. Earnings Disclaimer
Some pages may mention earnings, income from affiliate links, or popular products that performed well. All of those numbers are based on past experience, and there’s no guarantee they’ll continue.
Traffic changes. Products get discontinued. Seasons affect what people search for.
So if something gets promoted as a "best seller" or a "popular choice," that refers to how it’s performed historically, not a promise of future results.
Transparency means being honest about what works today without pretending it’ll always stay that way.
12. Updates to Disclosure Terms
As new affiliate partners join, ad networks change, or sponsorship opportunities come up, this page gets updated. A timestamp at the top shows when changes go live.
Major updates also get shared in the site's newsletter. Minor edits such as typos, rewording, broken link removals happen quietly but still follow the spirit of this policy.
Consistency means keeping this page as fresh as the blueberries in those breakfast bowls.
13. Effective Date
This version of the Disclosure Policy took effect on May 5, 2025. It replaces any older statements previously posted or linked.
All existing content complies with this version. Moving forward, any new affiliate or sponsored content will follow these updated standards.
14. Contact for Clarifications
Got questions? Wondering whether a product was sponsored? Found an unclear link? Want a plain-English answer to something technical?
Email the team at contact@coocaca.sg and someone (usually Maya, sometimes Elias) will get back within a few days.
The team welcomes all feedback especially from sharp-eyed readers who help keep this space honest, open, and real.