Danny Grossman, chief executive of Slow Food for Fast Lives, has been named chief executive of the Jewish Community Federation of San Francisco, the Peninsula, Marin and Sonoma Counties. A member of the federation’s Board of Directors, he takes over from Jim Offel, who served as interim chief executive after Jennifer Gorovitz’s resignation last year.
Mr. Grossman founded Slow Food for Fast Lives, a company that sells nutritious energy bars, in 2013. He served as a foreign-service officer overseas for the Department of State in the mid-1980s before earning a master’s degree in business administration at Stanford University. He later worked at a toy company, Aviva Sports, before founding his own — Wild Planet Entertainment, which he sold in 2012.
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Danny Grossman, chief executive of Slow Food for Fast Lives, has been named chief executive of the Jewish Community Federation of San Francisco, the Peninsula, Marin and Sonoma Counties. A member of the federation’s Board of Directors, he takes over from Jim Offel, who served as interim chief executive after Jennifer Gorovitz’s resignation last year.
Mr. Grossman founded Slow Food for Fast Lives, a company that sells nutritious energy bars, in 2013. He served as a foreign-service officer overseas for the Department of State in the mid-1980s before earning a master’s degree in business administration at Stanford University. He later worked at a toy company, Aviva Sports, before founding his own — Wild Planet Entertainment, which he sold in 2012.
The organization Mr. Grossman now leads has been on a fundraising upswing: It raised $104.2-million in private support in 2013, the most recent year for which figures are available, a nearly 18-percent jump from the previous year.
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Anais Strickland is a copy editor at The Chronicle of Higher Education. She returns after spending five years at the not-for-profit NBCOT, which certifies occupational therapists. Previously, she managed the Gazette section of The Chronicle and the people listings for the Chronicle of Philanthropy.