A foundational onboarding module that equips clinic owners and staff to explain what the Triple-G Method is, why it is different from a med-spa or a diet, and how a partner clinic delivers it with airtight compliance.
- By the end you will be able to describe the Triple-G Method in plain, compliant language to any patient who walks through the door.
- By the end you will understand how the program differs from a med-spa visit and from a diet, and be able to articulate that difference confidently and accurately.
- By the end you will know your specific role in delivering the program across the five phases, and the handoffs between front desk, coach, and provider.
- By the end you will be able to use approved scripts and avoid the words and claims that put the clinic and the patient at risk.
What the Triple-G Method actually is
The Triple-G Method is a 20-week, physician-guided, non-prescription weight-reset program. It is built around Triple-G (GLP-3), a nutritional-support peptide that helps the body restore healthy satiety signaling and gently lower its biologically defended set point. Around that peptide, we wrap the things that help change last: structured coaching, nutrition guidance, movement, and real accountability.
The single most important sentence for every staff member to internalize: this is not a drug, a medication, or a prescription. It is a non-prescription peptide paired with a coaching program. When you speak about it, you are speaking about nutritional support and lifestyle change, guided by a clinical team. You are not speaking about treating, curing, or diagnosing any condition.
The program runs in five 4-week phases. Foundation (weeks 1 to 4) establishes baseline habits and helps the patient get comfortable with their Triple-G protocol. Ignition (weeks 5 to 8) builds momentum as routines take hold. Momentum (weeks 9 to 12) is where those routines start to feel like second nature. Recomposition (weeks 13 to 16) shifts the focus toward body composition, strength, and movement. Stabilization (weeks 17 to 20) reinforces the new habits and helps the patient prepare to sustain their progress independently. Individual results vary, and the arc is a structure, not a guarantee.
Whenever you mention any outcome, you pair it with 'individual results vary.' We never promise a number of pounds, a percentage, or a timeframe to a result. We describe the structure and the support, and we let the patient's own care team personalize the rest.
- 20 weeks, five 4-week phases: Foundation, Ignition, Momentum, Recomposition, Stabilization.
- Built around Triple-G (GLP-3), a non-prescription nutritional-support peptide, plus coaching, nutrition, movement, and accountability.
- Not a drug, not a medication, not a prescription. Say 'your Triple-G protocol' or 'your weekly support,' never 'dose.'
- Always pair any outcome talk with 'individual results vary.' Never promise a number or a timeframe.
Why it is different from a med-spa or a diet
Patients will often arrive with a mental model shaped by a med-spa visit or by a lifetime of diets. Part of our job is to gently reset that expectation, because the difference is the whole point.
A med-spa is transactional. You book, you receive a service, you leave, and the relationship resets at the next appointment. The Triple-G Method is a guided 20-week relationship. There is a structured arc, a coach who knows the patient's name and history, and a clinical team that personalizes the path. Nobody is left to figure it out alone between visits.
A diet often asks the patient to white-knuckle their way against their own biology, and willpower alone tends to run out. The Triple-G Method is designed to work alongside the body rather than against it. The Triple-G peptide is intended to help the body restore healthy satiety signaling and gently lower its defended set point, and the coaching, nutrition, and movement components are built to help new habits hold once the program is complete. Individual results vary, and your clinical team personalizes this for each patient.
When a patient says 'so it's like the shots my neighbor got' or names something they saw on TV, do not confirm, deny, or compare. Redirect to what the Triple-G Method is. You never use brand or drug names, and you never position Triple-G as an equivalent or alternative to any named product. The honest, compliant answer is always to describe our own program on its own terms.
- Med-spa = transactional service. Triple-G Method = a guided 20-week relationship with a coach and clinical team.
- Diet = relying on willpower against your biology. Triple-G Method = designed to work alongside the body to support satiety signaling and the set point; individual results vary.
- The peptide is one part of a system: peptide, coaching, nutrition, movement, and accountability.
- Never compare to or name any other product, brand, or drug, even if the patient brings it up first.
How a partner clinic delivers it: roles and handoffs
Delivery is a team sport. Each role owns a clear piece, and the handoffs between them are where the patient experience is won or lost.
Front desk owns first impression and rhythm. You greet, you schedule the cadence of visits that the program requires, you collect intake paperwork, and you keep the patient feeling expected and known. You do not give clinical guidance. When a patient asks a clinical question, your job is to warmly route it to the coach or provider.
Coaches own the relationship and the habit work. You run the structured check-ins across all five phases, you reinforce nutrition and movement, and you hold the patient accountable in a warm, non-judgmental way. You deliver general education and lifestyle guidance; your clinical team personalizes the rest. Anything that veers into a clinical judgment, a symptom, or a change to the patient's protocol goes to the provider.
Providers own clinical oversight and personalization. The provider reviews suitability, oversees the Triple-G protocol, personalizes the plan, and handles anything clinical. The program is physician-guided, and the provider is the only person who makes clinical decisions.
The golden rule for every handoff: when in doubt, route up. Front desk routes to coach, coach routes to provider. No one improvises clinical answers. A patient is always better served by 'let me get the right person for that' than by a confident guess.
- Front desk: greeting, scheduling the program cadence, intake, keeping rhythm. Routes clinical questions up.
- Coach: the relationship, check-ins, nutrition and movement reinforcement, accountability, general education.
- Provider: suitability review, oversight of the Triple-G protocol, personalization, all clinical decisions.
- Golden rule: when in doubt, route up. No one improvises a clinical answer.
The first conversation: setting expectations honestly
The first conversation sets the tone for 20 weeks. Your goals are simple: make the patient feel welcomed, give them an accurate picture of the journey, and establish the honest, grounded voice of the program.
Lead with the relationship, not the product. Patients are not buying a peptide; they are joining a 20-week program with people who will walk alongside them. Describe the five-phase arc so they understand this is a progression, not a quick fix.
Be honest about what the program asks of them. It asks for consistency: showing up to check-ins, engaging with the nutrition and movement guidance, and being open with their coach. The peptide supports the body, and the patient's effort paired with the team's support carries the rest.
Manage outcome expectations carefully and compliantly. You may say the program is designed to help the body restore healthy satiety signaling and to support sustainable lifestyle change, and you always add 'individual results vary.' You never say how much, how fast, or guarantee anything. If a patient pushes for a number, the honest answer is that results are individual and their clinical team will talk with them about what is realistic for their situation.
- Lead with the 20-week relationship and the five-phase arc, not with the peptide.
- Be honest that the program asks for consistency and engagement, not just a weekly protocol.
- Frame outcomes as 'designed to support' plus 'individual results vary.' Never quote a number or timeframe.
- If pushed for a guarantee, redirect to the clinical team and to the individual nature of results.
Compliance: the words you use and the words you never use
Staff language is the clinic's biggest compliance exposure, because patients copy the words we use. Treat this section as a standard you apply on every call, in every room, in every text message.
Name the therapy only as 'Triple-G (GLP-3),' 'the Triple-G peptide,' or 'Triple-G.' Never use any other peptide name, brand name, or drug name, even to say we are not that thing.
Never use the words drug, medication, medicine, prescription, Rx, or dose. Say 'your Triple-G protocol' or 'your weekly support' instead of dose. Say 'non-prescription peptide' or 'nutritional-support protocol' instead of medication.
Never promise outcomes. No pounds, no percentages, no timeframes to a result, and no invented statistics, study figures, patient counts, or testimonials. Always pair any outcome language with 'individual results vary.'
Never state or imply a price or cost. Any conversation about cost belongs with the appropriate person at your clinic, following your own approved process, and never in a way that ties a result to a cost.
Stay in your lane: this is education and lifestyle guidance, not medical advice or diagnosis. Frame clinically adjacent topics as 'general education; your clinical team personalizes this for you,' and encourage the patient to talk with their care team. No emojis, ever, in any patient-facing communication.
- Approved names only: 'Triple-G (GLP-3),' 'the Triple-G peptide,' 'Triple-G.'
- Banned words: drug, medication, medicine, prescription, Rx, dose. Use 'protocol' or 'weekly support.'
- No promised numbers, percentages, timeframes, stats, or testimonials. Always add 'individual results vary.'
- Never state or imply price. Never give medical advice; frame as general education and route to the care team.
Putting it together: a day-one readiness check
Before any staff member speaks to a patient, they should be able to do three things cleanly: describe the program in compliant language, explain how it differs from a med-spa and a diet, and know exactly when to route a question up to the next role.
Use the checklist below as a self-test and as a manager's sign-off before a new hire takes patient conversations. If a team member cannot do every item without using a banned word or promising an outcome, they are not yet ready for live patient contact, and that is completely fine. Practice the scripts aloud first.
The voice we are training is consistent across every role: warm, credible, grounded, and empowering. A knowledgeable coach, never hype, never clinical-cold. When the voice and the compliance line up, the patient feels both cared for and safe, which is exactly the experience the Triple-G Method is built to deliver.
Welcome in, we're so glad you're here. You're joining the Triple-G Method, which is a 20-week guided program, so think of today as the start of a relationship, not a one-time visit.
I'm going to get your intake set up and walk you through the visit cadence so you always know what's next.
If you have any questions about how the program works for your body specifically, I'll make sure your coach or provider answers those directly, because they personalize it for you.
A lot of people come in expecting either a quick med-spa service or another diet. The Triple-G Method is neither.
Instead of relying on willpower against your own biology the way a diet does, Triple-G is a non-prescription peptide designed to help your body restore healthy satiety signaling and gently lower its defended set point. Individual results vary, and your clinical team personalizes this for you.
And instead of a one-and-done service, you and I work together across five phases over 20 weeks, so the habits have a real chance to hold.
I hear that question a lot, and I want to be straight with you: I'm not going to compare us to anything else, because I want you to understand the Triple-G Method on its own terms.
Triple-G is a non-prescription, nutritional-support peptide that's paired with coaching, nutrition, and movement over 20 weeks. It's not a medication and it's not a prescription.
Your provider is the right person to talk through whether it's a good fit for you, and I can set that up.
That's the question everyone wants answered, and the honest answer is that results are individual and vary from person to person.
What I can tell you is how the program is designed to support you: it's built to help your body restore healthy satiety signaling, and the coaching and habit work are there to help make the change sustainable.
Your clinical team will talk with you about what's realistic for your specific situation, because they personalize this for you.
Each week we'll stay consistent with your Triple-G protocol and check in on how you're feeling and how your routines are going.
I'll never call it a dose or a medication, because it isn't one; it's your weekly support as part of the program.
If anything feels clinical, or if there's a change to your protocol, I'll bring your provider in, since they oversee that side.
Checklist
- I can describe the Triple-G Method in one or two sentences using only approved language.
- I can name the five phases in order: Foundation, Ignition, Momentum, Recomposition, Stabilization.
- I can explain how the program differs from a med-spa and from a diet without naming any other product.
- I never use the words drug, medication, medicine, prescription, Rx, or dose; I say 'your Triple-G protocol' or 'your weekly support.'
- I pair every mention of outcomes with 'individual results vary' and never quote a number, percentage, or timeframe.
- I never state or imply a price, and I follow my clinic's approved process for any conversation about cost.
- I know my role's boundary and I route clinical questions up to the coach or provider.
- I frame clinically adjacent topics as general education and encourage the patient to talk with their care team.
Key takeaways
- The Triple-G Method is a 20-week, physician-guided, non-prescription program built around the Triple-G (GLP-3) peptide plus coaching, nutrition, movement, and accountability. It is not a drug, medication, or prescription.
- It differs from a med-spa because it is a guided relationship, not a transaction, and from a diet because it is designed to work alongside the body to support satiety signaling and the set point rather than rely on willpower; individual results vary.
- Delivery is role-based: front desk owns rhythm and routing, coaches own the relationship and habit work, providers own all clinical decisions. When in doubt, route up.
- Language is the clinic's biggest compliance exposure. Use only the approved names, never say drug, medication, prescription, or dose, never promise outcomes, never state or imply price, and always pair outcomes with 'individual results vary.'
- The voice is warm, credible, grounded, and empowering, and compliance is built into that voice, not bolted on after.