Georgia Rickard
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Georgia Rickard is an Australian journalist, magazine editor, author and media commentator. Rickard is a former editor of an Australian magazine company, Australian Traveller,[1] and has contributed to News Limited, Conde Nast, Fairfax Media, BBC and several newspapers of note, including the South China Morning Post and The Times.[2][3][4]
Rickard began her career in sales for a recruitment agency.[5] She later credited this for the foundations of an entrepreneurial outlook as a magazine editor.[6] Under the tutelage of Valerie Khoo, she transitioned to journalism, contributing on a freelance basis to titles such as Cosmopolitan, CLEO, Women's Health, GQ, Prevention, and the Sunday Telegraph.[7][8][9]
At 23, Rickard became editor of Healthy Food Guide magazine, making her the youngest Australian editor of a national title at the time. It was her first formal role in publishing. Despite the globally declining climate of magazine sales, the title achieved consistent growth, going on to remain the nation's fastest growing food title for the four consecutive audits of her tenure.[10] Rickard assisted in the launch of the UK edition of the same title, was twice nominated for Best Health Magazine at the Australian Magazine Awards (2009, 2010) and appeared as a journalist and expert on Australian television programs such as Sunrise, Mornings with Kerri-Anne, Today Tonight and Channel Nine News. During that time, she presented regular segments on breakfast radio, most notably on Classic Rock FM's Sydney program Mornings with Anthony Maroon and 4BC's Brisbane breakfast program. She also worked as an industry advisor to the Australian Democratic Party, providing advice and an industry perspective on shaping government public health policies in 2010.[7][11][12][13][14][15][16]
At the time of her resignation, Healthy Food Guide's circulation had grown from 31,670 to 44,025, with her final issue closing at 50,000 copies.[17][18][19][20]
Her first book, Weight Training for Dummies (Australian and New Zealand edition), was released in 2011.[21]