As a past tense claim, it really shines if you imagine what the logo could do for a product on a website. The link says “3rd Party Tested” and you click on it and it takes you to the open study. Simple and clean.
Downside: if the name overruns a pre-existing phrase because “third party tested” means something already, then you get confusing semantic collisions if someone has third party tested products that weren’t tested by Third Party Tested (the unique tool).
3rdpartytested.com
Acronym: 3PT is distinctive. TPT less so.
As a past tense claim, it really shines if you imagine what the logo could do for a product on a website. The link says “3rd Party Tested” and you click on it and it takes you to the open study. Simple and clean.
Downside: if the name overruns a pre-existing phrase because “third party tested” means something already, then you get confusing semantic collisions if someone has third party tested products that weren’t tested by Third Party Tested (the unique tool).