What does a vendor provide for catalog setup?
Product names, mg sizes and pack options, pricing, stock information, lab reports, and any preferred category logic. Premium Peptide Studio structures those inputs into a consistent catalog.
Service
A research peptide catalog is more than a list of products. It is the structure buyers use to compare sizes, read pricing, check availability, and find the right lab report before they order. When that structure is inconsistent, even a good product range looks disorganized. Premium Peptide Studio sets up the catalog layer so the store is clear to inspect, consistent across products, and easier to maintain. This is storefront structuring work, not peptide sales or medical advice.
Variant architecture and consistent pricing display make products easy to compare.
Clear stock states and taxonomy help buyers navigate without guessing.
Each product links to the right COA so documents map to what is on the page.
The core of a research peptide catalog is how variants and pricing are structured. Products usually come in different mg sizes and sometimes in multi-vial packs, and those need to be modeled as clean variants rather than separate, disconnected listings that fragment the catalog and confuse buyers. A well-structured product groups its sizes and packs under one page so a buyer can switch between them and understand what changes. Pricing display is part of the same job. Showing price per vial is expected, but research buyers frequently compare on a per-mg basis, and a catalog that surfaces both removes a calculation the buyer would otherwise do by hand or skip entirely. Consistent variant and pricing structure across the whole catalog is what makes a store feel considered rather than assembled one listing at a time.
Around the variant core, three details determine whether the catalog is usable. Stock states have to be honest and legible: a buyer should be able to tell at a glance whether a size is available, low, or out, rather than discovering it at checkout. Category taxonomy is how buyers navigate a range of any size; a clear structure lets someone move from a broad grouping to a specific product without guessing, and it keeps the catalog coherent as the range grows. Batch and COA linkage is the trust layer that ties the catalog to documentation. Each product, and where relevant each batch, should link to the lab report that belongs to it, so the document on the page matches the product on the page. When COAs are linked per product instead of dumped in a single folder, buyers verify faster and operators avoid the confusion of reports that no longer map to what is for sale. Done consistently, these three details turn a product list into a catalog buyers can actually work through.
Premium Peptide Studio builds the catalog structure from the inputs a vendor already has: product names, mg sizes, pack options, pricing, stock information, lab reports, and any category logic the operator wants. The output is a catalog with consistent variant architecture, per-vial and per-mg pricing display, clear stock states, a workable taxonomy, and COAs linked to the products they belong to. The store stays factual and research-scoped throughout; the catalog describes what products are, not what they do. The result is a base the operator can maintain, because a consistent structure is far easier to update than a set of one-off listings. Premium Peptide Studio does not sell peptides, supply products, or provide legal or medical advice. It sets up the storefront and catalog layer so the vendor's own range is presented clearly.
Send the product list, lab documents, support details, payment instructions, and brand assets in one pass. Premium Peptide Studio shapes them into a launch-ready storefront.
Product names, mg sizes and pack options, pricing, stock information, lab reports, and any preferred category logic. Premium Peptide Studio structures those inputs into a consistent catalog.
No. It structures the catalog and pricing display from the vendor's own data. The vendor owns products, pricing decisions, fulfillment, and applicable rules.