Would a seller show you a test result that hurts their sales?
Of course not. Yet millions of buyers trust COAs that come directly from the people selling the product.
The uncomfortable truth
A self-issued COA is a marketing document
COA #1Purity: 99.2%
BIASED
COA #2Purity: 98.7%
BIASED
COA #3Purity: 99.5%
BIASED
They choose the sample. They choose the lab. They choose which results to publish. Failed tests? Deleted. You will never see them.
How manipulation works
The seller controls every step
Seller picks best sample
→
Sends to their own lab
→
Gets results back
→
Publishes only if good
This is not verification. This is self-promotion disguised as science.
???
How do you know what you are actually buying?
Without independent testing, you are trusting the seller with your health, your research, and your money. That is a gamble you should not have to take.
The solution exists
Independent.Random.Transparent.
GMP Analytics removes the seller from the testing equation entirely. No cherry-picking. No hidden results. No conflicts of interest.
How real verification works
The seller has zero control
Full batch delivered
→
Random sampling by us
→
ISO clean room HPLC
→
Results published or rejected
If a batch fails, it is never published. No exceptions. That is real integrity.
See the difference
Self-Issued COA
✗ Seller picks the sample
✗ Failed tests hidden
✗ Financial conflict of interest
✗ No way to verify
✗ Could be completely fabricated
VS
GMP Analytics Verified
✓ Random sampling from full batch
✓ Failed batches never published
✓ Zero ties to any manufacturer
✓ Publicly verifiable results
✓ ISO clean room, GMP procedures
Transparency benefits everyone serious
Good for buyers. Good for serious sellers.
Bad for those with something to hide.
BuyersKnow exactly what they are getting
ManufacturersProve quality with independent data
DistributorsEarn trust through transparency
The only people who will not like our transparency are the ones who have been getting away with selling untested or substandard products.
Quality is not a claim. It is a proof.
In an industry where anyone can write numbers on a piece of paper and call it a Certificate of Analysis, the only thing that matters is who did the testing and whether anyone could have influenced the outcome.