Retailers win big with T&A's Iceberg promotion
Rick Antle, chief executive officer of Tanimura & Antle Inc. in Salinas, CA, gave his marketing department a tall order this spring: He wanted Tanimura & Antle to own Father's Day.
So the company launched one of its more successful retail promotions ever, the "Hit A Home Run This Father's Day" retail promotion, which took the dad- friendly sport of baseball and combined it with Iceberg lettuce and the iconic Iceberg wedge salad.
NPD and Fusion announce alliance
Fusion Marketing, a Los Angeles-based full-service marketing company, and the NPD Group, a New York-based international consumer research firm, announced the formation of a perishables industry-focused alliance.
Rainier employees participate in the largest running relay race in the world
When a few employees of Selah, WA-based Rainier Fruit Co. and some of their family and friends looked for ways to improve their fitness level in a team- building environment, they looked for something fun and challenging.
Carter to spearhead food safety at CMI
Wenatchee, WA-based Columbia Marketing International has hired Bob Carter as food-safety coordinator. Mr. Carter reports to Mike Hambelton, former CMI vice president of marketing, who is now in charge of special company projects.
"The commitment to do food safety -- it's all or nothing," Mr. Carter told The Produce News in a recent interview.
Idaho Potato Commission celebrates 70th anniversary
The Idaho Potato Commission is marking its 70th anniversary this year. Formed in May 1937 and originally (and only briefly) known as the Idaho Fruit & Vegetable Advertising Commission, the IPC has been actively promoting Idaho potatoes since its inception.
It was "the first organization formed in Idaho to promote any type of produce" and "one of the earliest commodity organizations" formed in the United States, said Frank Muir, the commission's president.
Fragmented marketplace creates opportunities for produce suppliers
PLEASANTON, CA -- Consumers have never had more choices than they have today regarding where to buy fresh produce, according to research gleaned from scan data, interviews and focus groups.
This is one of the major messages delivered to attendees of a recent Fresh Produce & Floral Council luncheon meeting by keynote speaker Steve Lutz of the Perishables Group. Mr. Lutz was speaking on trends with regard to fresh produce that his company has noted from the material it reviews on a regular basis.
Is there a link between <i>E. coli</i> outbreaks and time of year?
Fact: Nineteen of the 22 E. coli 0157:H7 discoveries associated with leafy greens that have resulted in confirmed illnesses since 1995 took place in late summer or early fall.
Conference digs into the science of spinach
SEASIDE, CA -- About 200 people on or near the front lines of spinach science research congregated Sept. 24 for the International Spinach Conference, which was held at the Embassy Suites Hotel Monterey Bay- Seaside, here.
Although discussion of food-safety and E. coli outbreaks in spinach were inevitable, the purpose of the conference was to give plant scientists an opportunity to interact, compare notes and share areas of study and progress.
California Navels on track for good season despite January freeze
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Agricultural Statistical Service, in cooperation with the California Department of Food & Agriculture, has released its estimate for the 2007-08 California Navel crop, and the numbers are good news for the industry.
The estimate calls for a Navel orange crop of 86 million cartons (37.5-pound equivalents), which is 26 percent above last season's freeze-shortened crop of 68 million cartons and is considered to be in the normal range.
Specialty crop producers await Senate action on farm bill
WASHINGTON -- With the Senate yet to mark up a farm bill, the resignation of the secretary of agriculture and President Bush threatening a veto, new funding for specialty crop programs in a 2007 farm bill remains uncertain.
Reaction was mixed on the timing of former Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns' departure for the Senate seat in Nebraska vacated by retiring Republican Chuck Hagel.