Examine.com is a website I’ve come to know, form relationships with many of the higher level people involved in the site as well as the editors, and I’ve referred a lot of trainers and clients to their site. I’ve even written about them a few times in the past as well, and a lot of this points to a few simple reasons why you should be checking them out as well:
They offer distilled information on the entire body of research into supplements, how they work, whether they work, and what they work for. They purposefully turn down financial investment from supplement companies to remain as impartial as possible. They employ highly educated people from multiple disciplines to ensure the information they put out is qualified, cutting edge, and stuff that actually works.
Additionally, this isn’t some fly-by-night website that pushes their own supplements down your throat and creates fear-based marketing telling you everything is filled with toxins and unless you drink their special shakes made in their special blender and paid with their special money, you’re going to get all the toxins.
These are people who have intently studied their subject matter, spent years in formal education and actual labs studying what happens with specific compounds and biological processes. They most assuredly aren’t people who went to Google university and read a few third party blogs to form the body of their research.
Since they launched 5 10 years ago, they’ve garnered massive international recognition due to these business practices of hiring qualified individuals, putting out verified content, and turning down income from conflicts of interest. You’d think this would be more common by now, or at least not something so unusual.
How they’ve managed to afford to stay in operations is by putting out high quality content driven reference guides for both professionals and ley-people looking for information on supplements.
Their flagship product, the Supplement Reference Guide, was a game changer from the minute it was released. If you have questions about any supplement, you can look it up and see what it does. Want to know what supplements can help with a specific concept in health? You can look that up too. Want to find a date for Saturday night? I hear Tinder is good for that stuff, but maybe you can find a supplement to help out as well.
They’ve also released a “stack guide” which can show you how to combine supplements to get more enhanced results than just using one at a time, and also a regularly published Research Digest. Think of the digest as Time or People magazines, but more about how the current state of research in health and nutrition can impact your life.
The digest is one of the coolest productions I’ve seen, because they don’t look for opinions, just consensus as to what actually works and what’s just hype.
Click the link. I’ll wait.
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See what I’m saying? It’s incredibly well done, and written to make sure your eyes don’t cross and head explode from reading technical jargon. It’s so cool that they were willing to put out a completely custom edition for you, on their birthday.
They’ve also created a membership that sends updates on some of the most pressing, current research to your inbox each month. This info is distilled into different categories, picked by you for what you’re interested in, and pack a TON of information into a very readable pack.
Now because it’s their birthday, not only are they giving you this sweet edition of awesomeness shown above, but they’re going to put all of their products on sale for a very short period of time, and for a very steep discount.
Until midnight est tonight, March 21st 2021, you can get the following some slick discounts on all of their products.
The supplement guide by itself is well worth the cost, and if it keeps you from buying one worthless supplement, it will be well worth the investment. Looking past the media hype and seeing what the real research says can save you time, and also a huge amount of money.
Are you someone who spends hundreds of dollars a month on supplements? What if half of them don’t do what you think, and as a result you could save hundreds, if not thousands of dollars a year? I’d think 30 bucks would be a great investment to help reduce unnecessary spending, and it might even show you a couple of supplements that could do much better at helping you get to your results, meaning faster progress than ever before.
If you want to stay up to date with research in a way that helps you relate to clients when they ask questions about some crap they saw on Dr. Oz, the Research Digest is worth it’s weight in gold.
Whatever you decide to do, know you have some of the most comprehensive information at your hands, untouched by special interests or quack science. Examine.com is a fantastic resource that I use on a daily basis for myself and for my clients, and I have no problem recommending to anyone else, so get in on this before the sale price ends on March 17th at midnight est.