This workbook is for any dietitian wanting to cut back on non-billable hours by having a ready-made meal planning & grocery store guide in one. It’s great for meal planning education during your session and for on-site supermarket tours.

This tool is different than other meal planning tools because it approaches meal planning as an effective tool for grocery shopping and staying organized instead of a temporary fix for the sake diet or weight loss. With this guide, meal planning feels more like one extra step of something your client already does on a regular basis instead of something they have to find extra time for. 

What’s new:

  • Now a Canva template! You can make changes to add your own branding or be more specific to your client niche

What’s included?

  • Meal planning and shopping list guides
  • Grocery store education

Benefits:

  • Cut down on non-billable hours
  • Organized meal planning tool for your clients
  • Organized grocery store tour

If you like this guide and would like more for your clients, visit my store page to see all my listings and to contact me about custom products.  Click the “view all downloads” link below.

Important: This is a Canva template. After purchasing, you’ll receive a one page pdf with information on accessing the template.

Reviews

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  • Not What I Expected

    This “Guide” was not what I expected. It shunned foods that were canned or frozen and referred to organic to be the best option to “avoid” added hormones and antibiotics and other “harmful additives”. It shunned full fat dairy products and only noted to buy “low fat” or “lean cuts” and didn’t even mention anything about fish. Also it said to avoid processed meats but if you were buying them to buy natural and organic brands?? Okay. Those two are 2 different things first of all. Second of all you should focus more on lower sodium, no nitrates/nitrites, etc. AND it referred to the Dirty Dozen and the Clean 15… perfect another diet culture reference that someone created to put FEAR in food. SO yeah, I would never show this to my clients or use this and I am a little upset that I wasn’t able to see a preview of this before purchase. It’s only $3.00 but now I’m hesitant to purchase anything else off of this website since I can’t actually see what I am getting and the description is very different from the actual product.
    And it has the RDs logo and website all over it. Why would I use this in my private practice if it’s got another RD’s practice all over it? That would just confuse my audience. You can put a reference at the end by who created it but to include your full name and website on every page just doesn’t work if you’re trying to sell this as content for other RDs to use in their practice.

    • Hello. I apologize I am just now seeing this review. I somehow missed it before. Your version is a very old one and was the first product I had ever made for this site. I have since learned a lot about creating content for other RDs and I no longer include my logo (unless it is an editable template just to show format). I have also realized how unhelpful some of the info you mentioned is to clients and removed most of what you are talking about. Although I do not remember ever shunning full fat dairy, I believe you and feel that maybe things were improperly worded and confusing. I do remember encouraging fresh lean cuts of meat, so maybe that got intertwined somehow with dairy, either way, I appreciate the feedback as I don’t believe in avoiding full fat anything. I no longer include what to “toss” or avoid, but do include what is considered “best practices” information. It is not meant to instill fear, and I feel it is up to the dietitian to set the tone for how much this info is focused on. For instance- I mention briefly to check for added sugars on yogurts. If your specific client simply needs more calcium and struggles to find food he/she likes, as the dietitian, I would tell my client to not worry about that right now and to just eat his/her favorite yogurt. Or if a person simply needs more protein but struggles to enjoy protein foods, I would encourage any kind of meat, even if it was processed and guide that person to make the low sodium choices myself. The current version focuses more on the planning and organizing that goes into grocery shopping to help set them up for success as opposed to what not to buy, with a brief one page guide on each section of the grocery store. If you would like to see the new version, please contact me and I will send you a free copy as a courtesy. Again, I apologize for not seeing this review sooner. Thank you so much for your feedback, and I hope you had already found a new product you feel was better suited to your clients!

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