Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Eniva's Benjamin Baechler speaks about healthy foods

Here is a clip of Eniva's Vice President and Director of Nutritional Research, Benjamin Baechler, on KARE 11 News (NBC). He talks about healthy foods and what they can do for you, including how they can help to prevent future problems. He also mentions to be sure to talk to your doctor about any supplements you are taking, as some of them can effect medications.

http://www.eniva.com/exigo/media/KAREb.wmv

Clip is 6 minutes and 21 seconds long.

Take care, and eat your broccoli! :)

-April :)

Saturday, January 27, 2007

The MSNBC article is creating a HUGE buzz.

You know how they say that any publicity is good publicity? I'm thinking they might be right on this one.

The consumerlabs.com report on MSNBC is generating a LOT of buzz. I get Google alerts on my gmail, and every day a new website or three pops up mentioning that Eniva Vibe had 54% less Vitamin A than it says it does. Now, I'm sure many people who read those websites previously had no idea what Eniva Vibe was, and I'm sure at least some of them are looking it up.

It's going to be really great to see what happens when Eniva and consumerlabs.com work together to test a few new samples (did you know they only tested ONE in their previous test?!?!) and the results show that Vibe DOES contain what it says it does.

Hopefully the good news will spread as fast as the bad news has!


For more information on Eniva and Vibe, please visit www.potentliquidsupplement.com

Friday, January 26, 2007

Vibe on the 5 o'clock News

Here is a clip of Eniva Vibe being featured on a Minnesota news station.

http://www.eniva.com/Exigo/media/KSTPb.wmv

Keep in mind this is a wave file, so your media player should pop open and start playing when you click that link.

The video is about 2 minutes long and features short commentary by Andrew and Benjamin Baechler, as well as an Eniva representative.

Enjoy!

Saturday, January 20, 2007

Eniva Vibe contains what it says it does

There has been a bit of a "stink" going around lately about a recent article on msnbc.com. The article talks about vitamin supplements that were recently tested by consumer labs. It goes on to say that Eniva Vibe had only 54% of Vitamin A that it claims it does.

Now a lesser amount of Vitamin A isn't really a serious thing (at least not as serious as LEAD being found in a vitamin), but nevertheless, the labels should still always be correct, and the vitamins need to contain what they say they do. I think that's important.

I found out that the Eniva Vibe samples they had tested were ones that were almost expired (vitamins weaken as they age, and Vibe expires 6 months after it is made). This was verified with consumer labs and Eniva, by lot number. Apparentlly the samples left the company at full-potency, but of course they must've weakened before they were tested.

Eniva's labs are visited randomly and by appointment by the USDA and FDA, and of course the FDA is VERY strict about labeling, so they have proof that that particular lot left Eniva with full-potency, and I'm sure that all other Eniva Vibe bottles/samples contain the labeled amount when they are fresh.

I've also heard that Eniva is sending them a fresh batch of Vibe to test, or making arrangements to get it retested. (Since Eniva makes all of their Vibe fresh before they ship it out to customers, this would be more accurate).

If you have any questions, feel free to email me at getfour@gmail.com. I'm always happy to help.

Take care,

April :)