The exact, copy-ready language every team member uses so that Triple-G (GLP-3) is always described as a non-prescription nutritional-support peptide, any mention of outcomes always carries "individual results vary," and no one ever names a drug, quotes a price, or invents a result.
- By the end you will name the therapy correctly every time, using only "Triple-G (GLP-3)," "the Triple-G peptide," or "Triple-G."
- By the end you will frame Triple-G as a non-prescription, nutritional-support peptide protocol and avoid every prescription and drug word.
- By the end you will attach "individual results vary" to any mention of outcomes and never promise a number, percentage, timeframe, or price.
- By the end you will redirect any clinical question to the care team using compliant, reassuring language you can say word-for-word.
Why this module exists
Everything you say to a patient becomes the clinic's promise. A warm sentence at the front desk carries the same weight as a signed document, because the patient remembers what a person told them, not what the fine print said. This module gives you the exact words to use so that every team member, from the front desk to the coaching room to the provider, describes the Triple-G Method the same way.
The rules below are not suggestions, and they are not about sounding cautious. They protect the patient, the clinic, and the integrity of the Method itself. The Triple-G Method is education and lifestyle guidance built around a non-prescription, nutritional-support peptide, with your clinical team personalizing the plan for each person. When we describe it accurately, we are also describing it honestly, and honesty is what earns long-term trust.
Read this as if a compliance officer reviews every word you say, because in practice one does. When in doubt, slow down and use the scripted language in this module. It is always safe to repeat the approved words.
- Patients act on what staff say out loud, not on disclaimers.
- Consistent language across every role is what makes the clinic credible.
- When unsure, repeat the approved scripts verbatim. Repetition is never a compliance error.
Rule 1 — Name the therapy correctly, every single time
There is exactly one family of names you may use: "Triple-G (GLP-3)," "the Triple-G peptide," or simply "Triple-G." That is the complete list. The first time it comes up in a conversation or document, use "Triple-G (GLP-3)" so the patient learns the full name, and "Triple-G" is fine after that.
Never substitute, compare to, or abbreviate toward any other peptide class, brand name, or product, even when a patient asks directly or names one themselves. If a patient says a brand or product name, you do not repeat it back, confirm it, or contrast it. You gently bring the conversation back to Triple-G.
This matters because the moment a comparison is spoken, the patient hears an implied claim that Triple-G is the same as, or a replacement for, something else. It is not, and we never frame it that way.
- Approved names only: "Triple-G (GLP-3)," "the Triple-G peptide," "Triple-G."
- Never write or say any other peptide class, brand, or product name, even to deny it.
- If a patient names a brand or product, do not echo it. Redirect to Triple-G (see scripts).
- Do not shorten to "GLP," "the shot," or any nickname. Use the approved names only.
Rule 2 — Always non-prescription, never a drug
Triple-G is a non-prescription, nutritional-support peptide that works alongside structured coaching, nutrition, movement, and accountability. It is not a drug, medication, medicine, or prescription, and we never use those words to describe it.
There is a banned-words list you should know cold, because these slip out by habit. Do not say drug, medication, medicine, prescription, Rx, dose, or dosing. When you need to refer to the patient's weekly peptide support, say "your Triple-G protocol," "your weekly support," or "your Triple-G schedule." When you mean the overall plan, say "the Triple-G Method" or "your program."
This is not word games. The framing is accurate: this is a nutritional-support protocol, personalized and overseen by the patient's clinical team, not a pharmacy product. Saying it correctly keeps both the description and the patient's expectations honest.
- Banned: drug, medication, medicine, prescription, Rx, dose, dosing.
- Use instead: "your Triple-G protocol," "your weekly support," "your Triple-G schedule."
- Triple-G is a non-prescription, nutritional-support peptide, full stop.
- Frame the peptide as one part of a coaching, nutrition, movement, and accountability program.
Rule 3 — Outcomes always carry "individual results vary"
Any time you mention results, progress, weight, how the program supports the body, or what someone might experience, you pair it with "individual results vary." No exceptions. This is the single most-tested phrase in the entire Method, so build the habit until it is automatic. Even a supportive mechanism statement, such as how the program is designed to support healthy satiety signaling, is an outcome implication and must carry the phrase.
You may never promise a specific number of pounds, a percentage of body weight, or a timeframe in which a result will happen. You may never invent or repeat statistics, study figures, patient counts, before-and-after stories, or testimonials, even ones you believe are true. If you did not personally generate it and it is not in approved clinic materials, it does not get said.
What you can do is describe the structure of the program with confidence. The five phases (Foundation, Ignition, Momentum, Recomposition, Stabilization) are real, and you can speak about what each phase focuses on. That is process, not a promised outcome, and process is safe to describe.
- Attach "individual results vary" to every outcome mention and every supportive mechanism claim, every time.
- Never promise pounds, percentages, or a timeframe-to-result.
- Never quote or invent statistics, study numbers, patient counts, or testimonials.
- Describe the process and the five phases confidently; that is not a results claim.
- Keep all outcome language general education. The clinical team personalizes specifics for each patient.
Rule 4 — Never speak about price
Front desk, coaches, and providers do not state, imply, hint at, discount, or compare program cost in any conversation, text, email, or social post. This includes lines like "it pays for itself" or "cheaper than the alternative," or any framing that touches money.
Pricing is handled only through the clinic's designated enrollment process and the person authorized to walk a patient through it. If a patient asks what it costs, you warmly hand that question to the right step rather than answering it yourself, even if you happen to know the figure.
The reason is simple: an offhand price comment can become a promise or a comparison the clinic never intended, and money questions deserve the full, accurate enrollment conversation, not a hallway estimate.
- No price, no estimate, no comparison, no "worth it" framing, ever, in any channel.
- Route all cost questions to the clinic's enrollment step (see scripts).
- Keep all cost language out of texts, emails, and social posts.
Rule 5 — Education, not medical advice
Everything you share is general education and lifestyle guidance, not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment direction. You are a knowledgeable, supportive guide, and the clinical team is who personalizes the medical side for each patient.
When a patient asks something clinical, such as how they will feel, whether Triple-G is right for their health situation, what to do about a symptom, or how it fits with anything else they are doing, that is a care-team question. You do not guess, reassure with specifics, or improvise. You use the redirect script and connect them to their care team.
This protects the patient most of all. Clinical personalization belongs with the people qualified to do it, and your role as a warm coach and guide is genuinely valuable precisely because you stay in it.
- You provide general education; the clinical team personalizes the medical side.
- Any symptom, health-history, or "is this right for me" question goes to the care team.
- Never diagnose, never improvise clinical reassurance, never freelance on safety.
- Saying "that's a great question for your care team" is a strong answer, not a weak one.
Putting it together — channels and quick self-check
These rules apply identically in person, on the phone, in text messages, in email, on intake forms, and on any social media the clinic posts. The medium never loosens the rules. A text message carries the same compliance weight as a consult.
Before anything goes out, especially written content, run the five-point self-check in the checklist below. It takes about ten seconds and catches almost every error. If any single box fails, fix the wording before you send or say it.
If you are ever unsure, the safest move is to use the scripted language exactly as written in this module, or to pause and ask your clinic owner or compliance contact. Slowing down is always allowed. Guessing is not.
- Rules are identical across in person, phone, text, email, forms, and social.
- Run the five-point self-check before any patient-facing message.
- When unsure: use the approved script verbatim, or escalate to your owner or compliance contact.
- It is always safe to say less and route the rest to the care team.
"The Triple-G Method is a 20-week, physician-guided, non-prescription weight-reset program."
"It's built around Triple-G (GLP-3), a nutritional-support peptide designed to support healthy satiety signaling, paired with structured coaching, nutrition, movement, and accountability. Individual results vary."
"It runs in five four-week phases: Foundation, Ignition, Momentum, Recomposition, and Stabilization."
"Individual results vary, and your clinical team personalizes the whole plan for you."
"I hear you. I want to be clear that the Triple-G Method is its own non-prescription program, so I can't speak to other products or compare them."
"What I can tell you about is Triple-G (GLP-3) and how the Method works."
"The best person to talk through your specific situation is your care team, and I'm happy to connect you."
"That's a great question, and the honest answer is that individual results vary."
"What I can tell you is how the program is structured. We work in five four-week phases, with weekly Triple-G support, coaching, nutrition, and accountability the whole way."
"Your care team sets realistic, personalized expectations with you as part of getting started."
"Great question. I want to make sure you get the full and accurate picture, so I'm going to connect you with the right step rather than give you a number off the top of my head."
"Let me set that up for you now so all your questions get answered properly."
"That's exactly the kind of question your care team is here for, and they'll personalize the answer to your health and your goals."
"What I share is general education. The clinical side is theirs to tailor for you."
"Let me get you connected with them so you get a real, personalized answer."
"Each week you'll have your Triple-G protocol, plus your coaching and check-ins."
"Your weekly support is one part of the program. The coaching, nutrition, and accountability are just as central."
"Your clinical team sets your Triple-G schedule and adjusts it for you over the phases."
Checklist
- Did I use only an approved name ("Triple-G (GLP-3)," "the Triple-G peptide," or "Triple-G") and no other class, brand, or product name?
- Did I avoid every banned word (drug, medication, medicine, prescription, Rx, dose, dosing) and use "your Triple-G protocol" or "your weekly support" instead?
- If I mentioned any outcome or supportive mechanism, did I include "individual results vary" and avoid any specific number, percentage, timeframe, statistic, or testimonial?
- Did I avoid stating or implying any price, and route cost questions to the enrollment step?
- Did I keep this as general education and send any clinical question to the care team?
Key takeaways
- Use only "Triple-G (GLP-3)," "the Triple-G peptide," or "Triple-G." Never any other class, brand, or product name, even to deny one.
- It is a non-prescription, nutritional-support peptide. Banned words: drug, medication, medicine, prescription, Rx, dose, dosing. Say "your Triple-G protocol" or "your weekly support" instead.
- Pair every outcome mention and every supportive mechanism claim with "individual results vary," and never promise a number, percentage, or timeframe, or repeat any statistic or testimonial.
- Never state or imply price in any channel. Route all cost questions to the clinic's enrollment step.
- You give general education, not medical advice. Send every clinical or "is this right for me" question to the care team.