Most consumers assume that supplement labels function like nutrition facts: precise, verifiable,
and designed to inform. In practice, many labels operate more like narratives, carefully
constructed stories that emphasize branding while obscuring meaningful detail. Nowhere is this
more apparent than in the widespread use of proprietary blends.
Originally, proprietary blends were introduced to protect formulation intellectual property and
simplify ingredient disclosures. Over time, however, they have evolved into a structural
weakness within the performance nutrition category. By grouping ingredients without disclosing
exact quantities, brands have made it difficult for consumers, practitioners, and retailers to
assess whether products are meaningfully dosed or supported by evidence.
As the category matures and increasingly overlaps with recovery science and preventative
health, this lack of clarity has become more than a consumer concern, it has become a
credibility issue.
How Proprietary Blends Became the Default
The rise of proprietary blends coincided with the rapid expansion of the supplement industry in
the early 2000s. As competition intensified, brands sought differentiation without exposing
formulations that could be easily replicated. Regulatory flexibility allowed for this approach, and
proprietary blends quickly became normalized.
Over time, that flexibility shifted from protection to ambiguity. Products began listing
research-backed ingredients without indicating whether they were present at effective levels.
The result was a marketplace where claims increased while visibility declined—a system that
rewards presentation over precision.
The Practical Consequences of Opaque Labeling
From a functional standpoint, hidden dosing creates measurable limitations. Without
transparency:
● Consumers cannot objectively compare products
● Practitioners cannot evaluate formulation logic
● Athletes cannot reliably replicate outcomes
● Retailers cannot articulate value beyond branding
In many cases, products include ingredients supported by strong research—but at quantities too
low to deliver meaningful results. Without disclosure, there is no accountability mechanism to
address this gap.
This is not simply a matter of consumer education. It is a systems-level issue.
Transparency as Infrastructure, Not Marketing
Transparency in performance nutrition should function as infrastructure, not positioning. Similar
to standardized nutrition facts or manufacturing disclosures, it provides a baseline that allows
the category to operate with consistency and trust.
According to Shivam Vohra, founder of MYONIQ LLC, transparency should be treated as a
design principle rather than a marketing decision.
“When formulation logic is clear, products no longer need to rely on exaggerated claims. The structure speaks for itself.”
-Shivam Vohra
A functional transparency standard would include:
● Full ingredient disclosure, listing exact quantities rather than grouped blends
● Evidence-aligned dosing, consistent with published research or clearly disclosed
deviations
● Defined functional purpose, where each ingredient serves a specific physiological role
● Verifiable manufacturing context, such as FDA-registered, GMP-certified facilities
● Consistency across product lines, rather than selective disclosure
These principles do not restrict innovation. They clarify it.
Why This Matters for the Category’s Future
As performance nutrition continues to intersect with healthcare and long-term wellness,
credibility becomes non-negotiable. Markets that rely on opacity struggle to earn institutional
trust, while those that adopt clear standards tend to attract higher-quality participation and more
sustainable growth.
Transparency is not a competitive disadvantage, it is a filtering mechanism that rewards
disciplined formulation and honest design.
A Shift From Products to Systems
The next phase of performance nutrition will not be defined by the number of products released,
but by the systems behind them: how ingredients are selected, how formulations are structured,
and how outcomes are evaluated over time.
Brands that adopt transparency as a baseline will not need to over-explain their value. Their
labels will do the work for them.

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