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	<title>Dr. Richard George &#124; Food Marketing Customer Service Expert</title>
	<link>http://www.rjgeorge.com</link>
	<description></description>
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		<title>Forget Clipping! Digital Coupons are the Future - NBC10 Philadelphia Interview</title>
		<description>View more news videos at: http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/video [1].

[1] http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/video</description>
		<link>http://www.rjgeorge.com/archives/867</link>
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		<title>Russell C. Reading, Secretary, Pennsylvania Dept. of Agriculture</title>
		<description>"I enjoyed your presentation on the next trends facing the food industry - and especially meaningful for the group who works hard each day to produce the food we market and enjoy.

Thank you for your continued commitment to our food industry and your willingness to engage the production agriculture sector in the movement to better educate consumers about where their food comes from."
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		<link>http://www.rjgeorge.com/archives/864</link>
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		<title>RateMyProfessor.Com - Recent Ratings</title>
		<description>"Best professor I have had. He really knows what he's talking about and all he wants to do is impart that knowledge to you. I loved going to his class. Take him as many times as you can while at SJU."

"Dr. George is a great professor with a lot of experience in the food marketing field. He brings real life examples and issues into the classroom, promotes creativity and outside the box thinking. I've never had a teacher with more energy and enthusiasm for the subject! Definitely recommend!"

"Professor George is enthusiastic and definately enjoys teaching students. He definately keeps your attention for the whole time which is good especially since I had him for a 3 hour night class. He is a fair grader and gets to know his students. I would definately recommend taking him."

"The best teacher I have had at SJU...his energy really helps during a long night class and he cares about every one of his students."

"The most entertaining class I've had at St. Joe's. Discussion in class was really useful to bring up as conversation during interviews. Highly reccomended."

"Great teacher with a lot of experience that he incorporates in the classroom. He wrote the book used in class so he knows it inside and out, which helps. He knows how to not make it boring by bringing in current, real world examples to apply to what we're learning. I would highly recommend taking. No tests, just class participation and two papers."

"The best teacher i've ever had. TAKE HIM! Class is fun!"

"He is the nicest guy you will ever meet. He is really smart and knowledgable about the business. Interesting stories."

"Every food marketing major should take him. He has a lot to offer you. you will succeed in the market just by listening to his success stories. He gets paid hundreds of dollars a day to speak..and you can have it for free..well for 38,000 a yr!"
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		<link>http://www.rjgeorge.com/archives/856</link>
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		<title>“School Day Eating Habits of Inner-City, African American Adolescents.”</title>
		<description>Journal of Negro Education, Volume 78, Number 2, pp 114-122 (Spring 2009) (with Dr. Thomas McDuffie)


What food attributes drive minority adolescents’ food choices? What do these adolescents consume during the school day in terms of “energy” dense versus “nutrient” dense foods? What knowledge do their parents or guardians’ have regarding their food consumption during the school day? What “energy” and “nutrient” dense foods are available on school premises? Adolescents are human “eating and drinking machines.” As such they represent a significant opportunity for food providers. Alternatively, the childhood obesity crisis especially minority youth represents a real crisis to school administrators and school food providers. School administrators and food providers need to better understand what drives these young consumers in order to keep them as customers and avoid a potential backlash from parents, the community, and public policy makers. This paper reports the findings of a study on African-American adolescents and food, specifically their attitudes, constraints and behaviors during the school day. The study is based on data collected in two Philadelphia,  PA public schools--one middle schools and one high school—with very high African-American student presence. Three areas of the findings have implications for improving the school day diet of African-American adolescents. These are related first to the parental role in constraining what students eat during the school day. Second, the sensory reality food providers must factor into any change in menus. Lastly, the nutrition standards need to be addressed during the instructional day. 
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		<link>http://www.rjgeorge.com/archives/853</link>
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		<title>&#8220;Career Builders (cover story): Management Material.&#8221; Richard Turcsik, Grocery Headquarters, December 2009.</title>
		<description>
	“The biggest issue with our students, and its one we’ve been attempting to address at the university, is perception.”
	“A lot of them worked through high school as a bagger or at checkout and didn’t see it as a career path. And unfortunately some of the retailers they worked for were not real fans of higher education because they came up the hard way by working their way through the ranks.”
	“It is not simply money, food retailers should figure out how they could work in a car with these kids. They would be king! This is the kind of thing which the CPG companies do a great job with and we struggle on the food side and ask how did they do that?”

</description>
		<link>http://www.rjgeorge.com/archives/848</link>
			</item>
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		<title>Mature Millennials: Food Retailing Attitudes and Behaviors</title>
		<description>[caption id="attachment_835" align="alignleft" width="88" caption="Mature Millennials"] [1][/caption]

Author: FMI Research

Year Published: 2009

Description:
This report [2] takes an in-depth look at the older members of Generation Y, which have been labeled as the Mature Millennials. In particular, food retailers can benefit from understanding the lifestyles, food eating behaviors, as well as the food shopping attitudes and behaviors of this population that will rival the Baby Boomers in terms of the scope and depth of their influence on American food retailing.

Specifically, the study collected the following information:

	Meal and snack consumption (weekday vs. weekend)
	Source of meals and snacks (weekday vs. weekend)
	Food shopping alternatives
	Food shopping frequency
	Food shopping spending
	Food shopping importance factors
	Food shopping/eating psychology

Developed in cooperation with St. Joseph's University [3], this report is the final installment of the three-year Gerald E. Peck research fellowship.


[1] http://www.fmi.org/forms/store/ProductFormPublic/search?action=1&#38;Product_productNumber=2306
[2] http://www.fmi.org/forms/store/ProductFormPublic/search?action=1&#38;Product_productNumber=2306
[3] http://www.sju.edu/academics/hsb/foodmarketing/academy/index.html</description>
		<link>http://www.rjgeorge.com/archives/840</link>
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		<title>Paulo Goelzer, Ph.D., IGA/Coca Cola Institute</title>
		<description>I would like to personally thank you for your presentation at the International Supermarket Management Class (ISMC) in Atlanta. We received many positive comments ... The class was very successful, and that is due in part to your presentation.
</description>
		<link>http://www.rjgeorge.com/archives/830</link>
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		<title>Winning Marketing Strategy: The Rules</title>
		<description>[caption id="attachment_838" align="alignleft" width="108" caption="Winning Marketing Strategy"] [1][/caption]
by Richard J. George &#38; John L. Stanton
Raphel Publishing, Atlantic City, NJ (2009)
$24.95 plus $2.50 shipping and handling

Order Direct from rjgeorge.com [2]

 

[1] http://www.rjgeorge.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/winning_mktg_strat.jpg
[2] http://www.rjgeorge.commailto:rgeorge@sju.edu</description>
		<link>http://www.rjgeorge.com/archives/821</link>
			</item>
	<item>
		<title>Sharon Boyle, Foodservice Sales &#038; Marketing Association</title>
		<description>"Our attendees enjoyed your presentation at the recent Top2Top Conference.  Approximately, ninety percent of the respondents rated your presentation in the top two boxes in terms of content, delivery, and value.  Thank you for helping making Top2Top an outstanding event."
</description>
		<link>http://www.rjgeorge.com/archives/799</link>
			</item>
	<item>
		<title>Jim Corcoran, National Confectioners Association</title>
		<description>"Thanks again for everything.  The New Items Trend session at the All Candy Expo turned out great.  We had a number of exhibitors tell us that buyers were looking for items mentioned in the session."
</description>
		<link>http://www.rjgeorge.com/archives/796</link>
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