Veteran produce marketer Tom Tjerandsen remembered

Tom Tjerandsen
Tom Tjerandsen
(Photo: Courtesy of the Tjerandsen Family)

Long-time produce marketer Tom Tjerandsen, 80, died Nov. 8 in Sonoma, Calif.

From 2004 to 2012, Tjerandsen directed the Chilean Fresh Fruit Association, the North American marketing agency of The Chilean Exporters Association. Since 2012, Tjerandsen worked with pomegranates and other commodity groups in marketing efforts.

Karla Stockli, president of the California Agricultural Export Council, said Nov. 22 that she had worked with Tjerandsen for the last 16 years through their work with the California Agriculture Export Council. 

“I've always admired his selfless approach to the organization, which speaks volumes to how he lived his life,” she said. “I will miss my friend and mentor, and this industry will miss him immensely as well."

Working with Tjerandsen was a great opportunity to learn, said Gustavo Yentzen, founder and manager of the Yentzen Group.

"He had a way of doing things, of balancing work and life at the same time, wisely putting things in perspective without ever compromising the excellence in his work,” Yentzen said.

In an October 2012 interview with The Packer, Tjerandsen recounted growing up in Kansas, attending elementary and middle school in Manhattan, Kan.


From that October 2012 story in The Packer:

His high school years were split between New York and Chicago. After earning an undergraduate degree at Hobart College in upstate New York and serving a two-year stint in the Army, Tjerandsen switched coasts, enrolling in an MBA program at San Francisco State.
"I had every intention of bringing the Big Apple to its knees" after graduation, Tjerandsen said, but it didn't take long for him to feel the pull of California.
While at San Francisco State, Tjerandsen won an internship at a local advertising agency. That led to a job at another agency, one of whose clients was a man named Barney McClure, a produce veteran who would later become Tjerandsen's business partner.
Tjerandsen held a variety of jobs at advertising agencies, working mostly on food accounts and in the marketing departments of a coffee company and of Tri-Valley Growers, a specialist in canned fruit.
While at Tri-Valley, Tjerandsen noticed the huge amount of interest among produce industry advisory boards in doing more to help growers move their products.
"I thought it was an area where I could help," he said. The clients at an agency Tjerandsen ran in the mid-1980s included trade groups representing California apricots, Hawaiian papayas and other commodities.
It was at this point in his career that McClure re-entered Tjerandsen's life. McClure had been hired by the Chilean fruit industry as a consultant, and he in turn hired Tjerandsen's agency.
That arrangement lasted four years, after which Tjerandsen and McClure chose to strike out on their own.
"Barney and I decided it would be entertaining to form an agency specializing in the promotion of produce."
San Francisco-based McClure and Tjerandsen went on to establish many of the marketing programs that propelled the Chilean produce industry to the success it enjoys today.
The firm also served as headquarters of the California Fresh Apricot Council and the Pomegranate Council, provided marketing support for California asparagus and papaya and developed programs for Sun-Maid Growers of California, Kingsburg Orchards and Del Monte's canning division.
One of Tjerandsen's biggest successes occurred in the prune industry in the early '90s. He had the idea of creating "fiber fairs" at grocery stores - displays where prunes were sold alongside cereals and other high-fiber foods.
Retailers who participated received cash prizes of up to $500. "We told everyone who sent in an entry that they would get a check," he said. Most of the checks were for $5, to go with a handful of $50 checks and a very few $500 ones. But the buzz about winning $500 sent participation through the roof. Between 8,000 and 15,000 retailers participated in each of the four years the promotion ran, and the results were impressive.
"The sales increases were astonishing, and growers had despaired of that ever happening," he said.
After McClure died in 1996, Tjerandsen kept the company name, in part in tribute to his partner and mentor, in part because the name McClure was much easier to remember than Tjerandsen.
In 2004, Tjerandsen was named interim director of the Chilean Fresh Fruit Association. Before long, he assumed the permanent title of North American marketing manager.
Looking back, Tjerandsen said he's fortunate to have chosen an industry full of challenges and interest, and one that's "a collecting place for a lot of very nice people."
He said he's grateful to have worked with and learned from people like Gene Stokes, Paul Yoder, Mark Bagley, Jim Halloran, Ken Snyder, David Simonian and Ronald Bown.


No service has been scheduled as of Nov. 22, according to an obituary. Friends can leave remembrances of memories of Tjerandsen online.


 

 

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