No. Keep in mind that all fertilizers are diluted considerably. While 10-0-0 fertilizer is composed of 10% Nitrogen, once you dilute it in enough water to avoid burning the plants, the resulting solution will have much less than 1% N by volume. Of all the nutrients found in Guanos, Potassium is commonly the least abundant when compared to the plants' needs. No Guano I've seen has more than 1% Potassium.
Lets assume for the moment that plants need exactly the same amounts of N, P and K. If you use, say, 10-10-2 Peruvian Seabird Guano, you have to dilute it to the point that the amounts of N & P aren't high enough to burn the plant. If the plant uses the same amounts of N, P and K, then giving it the maximum amount of N & P that it can handle without burning will still only provide 1/5 of the amount of K it needs when using 10-10-2 Guano. Because Guanos have so much more N or P than K, they can't be made strong enough to supply enough K without burning with the N & P.
What we end up looking for is the correct ratio of nutrients, rather than percentages. Each separate % doesn't really matter. 3-2-2 fertilizer will usually work just as well as a 6-4-4 fertilizer made of the same components, you just have to use twice the concentration. All fertilizer mixes need to be diluted so that the strongest nutrient in relation to the plant's needs is weakened enough to avoid burning the plant and doing so will bring down the other nutrient levels to less than the plant can handle.
Azomite is a micronutrient mineral supplement and doesn't supply considerable amounts of N, P or K. The tiny bit of K it has becomes practically useless once it is diluted enough to prevent harm from micronutrient toxicity.