Practical checklist for a new lab partner
The new project is moving fast, and we need a lab that can handle routine assays and a couple of custom panels without constant rescoping. A turnaround time of under two weeks for standard work would be ideal. Data should be presented as raw outputs, along with a concise, readable summary so that the team can make informed decisions within the same sprint. What steps do you use to validate a lab quickly so you don’t end up stuck after the first batch?
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One practical move is to agree on deliverables before any tubes move: file formats, control plan, and who signs off results. Dependable labs provide a submission guide, timelines, and a sample report without fuss. For an immune-focused shortlist, take a look at https://th1cells.com midway through your evaluation to benchmark clarity and process. Build a 12–15 sample pilot with expected positives and negatives, as well as a few challenging cases. Then, require the raw data, a clean CSV, and a one-pager. Request a deviation log and a contact who responds within one business day. Judge them on speed, accuracy, and how they communicate when something is off. Partners who work well are candid about risks and propose next steps; poor fits, on the other hand, overpromise and deliver cluttered reports. If the pilot lands well, scale in phases with SLAs.