Application fit
Capsules may prioritize documentation and active-language clarity. Gummies, beverage powders, and functional food concepts should also evaluate color and sensory impact. If the finished product has strict appearance expectations, the buyer should state those expectations in the first inquiry.
A supplier can give a better recommendation when the buyer names the dosage form or finished product format. Capsules, tablets, gummies, stick packs, beverages, powders, foods, and personal-care applications can put different pressure on solubility, color, taste, carrier, microbiology, and document review.
When the application is still uncertain, the buyer should say so directly. A good supplier response can then separate what is already known from what needs sample work, formula review, or QA confirmation. This is especially useful for teams that are comparing several botanical ingredients for the same launch window.
Quality documents to request
A TDS can help product development screen form and specification. A COA can support sample or lot review. Buyers should also clarify whether they need allergen, microbiology, heavy metals, or other QA attributes in the first response.
The cleanest request names whether the file is needed for screening, sample approval, internal QA comparison, first purchase planning, or ongoing supplier qualification. That context helps avoid sending a file that does not answer the buyer's actual question.
For early screening, ask whether a TDS and representative COA path can be discussed. For sample or first purchase review, ask how documents connect to the material path under evaluation. This distinction keeps procurement, QA, and product development from treating unrelated files as if they represent the same grade.