
In the U.S, the system demands more energy than the average body can naturally provide.
The baseline output of the body (focus, stamina, alertness) often isn’t enough to keep up with work demands.
But hospital care is extremely expensive.
People don’t casually walk into clinics for fatigue, brain fog, or burnout.
At the same time, these are science-trusting people. They avoid pseudoscience and vague herbal remedies.
So they look for interventions that are both accessible and backed by research.
This is the foundation of the U.S. supplement market.
It didn’t grow because people were curious. It grew because people were cornered.
They needed to feel better, perform better, and avoid the high cost of failure, both medically and professionally.
The supplement market thrives where hospital care is too costly, and people still need support.
This same dynamic can be recreated anywhere with three conditions:
- A population rich enough to buy supplements
- A work culture that pushes people to the limit
- A healthcare system that is too expensive or out of reach (Maybe even lack of belief in the health care industry or isolation by insurance providers can work)
These people can be persuaded by showing them what is at stake.
You can promise them a better life.
And you can remind them of the future cost of doing nothing.
If they don’t take action now, the price they may pay later can be very high.
If their body breaks down, they may lose their job.
If their energy drops, they may not be able to keep up.
And if that happens, it will be too late to fix quickly.
So they need something now. Something small, affordable, and helpful.
That is what supplements can be.