Nice story about Daktronics in the Argus. They talk to Kirk Simet who is their national sales manager. He was a heck of a wrestler at State. I think he is in the SDSU Hall of Fame. Hope the Big D can help State with some new scoreboards/video boards. Anyone heard anything new lately?
http://www.argusleader.com/business/...yfeature.shtml
Daktronics scores big with stadium screens
By MICHAEL HIESTAND
USA Today
published: 5/4/2004
Brookings firm takes spotlight in strong sales
BROOKINGS - Nothing about Daktronics' no-frills industrial park suggests its flamboyant mission. The company, across from the Kum & Go in this town of 18,504, is built on bright lights and firing up emotions.
Kirk Simet, national sales manager, says, "We're in the 'wow' business."
It didn't start that way. Daktronics began in 1968 when Aelred Kurtenbach and Duane Sanders, electrical engineering professors from South Dakota State University, wanted to create jobs so their best students wouldn't have to go out of state to find work. They peddled $5 stock to anybody interested - shares now worth, after splits, about $2,700 - and took years before finding their calling: scoreboards and video screens.
Now those 65,000 boards and screens across America turn sports into sound and light shows. The screens or scoreboards are in stadiums or arenas used by at least 85 pro teams and will be making an eighth appearance in the Olympics this summer in Athens.
Sales are expected to reach $200 million this year, having more than tripled in seven years.
Houston's Toyota Center opened last year with a $6 million Daktronics system that includes a scoreboard needing 19 workers to operate it during games and featuring 13 video screens, some displaying more than 4.3 trillion shades of color.
"The first time we fired it up, it was mind-blowing," says Doug Swan, who directs the center's scoreboard operations. "People are absolutely overwhelmed." . . .
Facts about daktronics
Product: Electronic scoreboards, computer-programmable display systems and large video displays for sport, business and transportation applications.
Location: Brookings.
Founded: 1968.
Employees: 843.
2003 Revenue: $177.76 million.
Competitors: Mitsubishi in Japan, Barco in Belgium
http://www.argusleader.com/business/...yfeature.shtml
Daktronics scores big with stadium screens
By MICHAEL HIESTAND
USA Today
published: 5/4/2004
Brookings firm takes spotlight in strong sales
BROOKINGS - Nothing about Daktronics' no-frills industrial park suggests its flamboyant mission. The company, across from the Kum & Go in this town of 18,504, is built on bright lights and firing up emotions.
Kirk Simet, national sales manager, says, "We're in the 'wow' business."
It didn't start that way. Daktronics began in 1968 when Aelred Kurtenbach and Duane Sanders, electrical engineering professors from South Dakota State University, wanted to create jobs so their best students wouldn't have to go out of state to find work. They peddled $5 stock to anybody interested - shares now worth, after splits, about $2,700 - and took years before finding their calling: scoreboards and video screens.
Now those 65,000 boards and screens across America turn sports into sound and light shows. The screens or scoreboards are in stadiums or arenas used by at least 85 pro teams and will be making an eighth appearance in the Olympics this summer in Athens.
Sales are expected to reach $200 million this year, having more than tripled in seven years.
Houston's Toyota Center opened last year with a $6 million Daktronics system that includes a scoreboard needing 19 workers to operate it during games and featuring 13 video screens, some displaying more than 4.3 trillion shades of color.
"The first time we fired it up, it was mind-blowing," says Doug Swan, who directs the center's scoreboard operations. "People are absolutely overwhelmed." . . .
Facts about daktronics
Product: Electronic scoreboards, computer-programmable display systems and large video displays for sport, business and transportation applications.
Location: Brookings.
Founded: 1968.
Employees: 843.
2003 Revenue: $177.76 million.
Competitors: Mitsubishi in Japan, Barco in Belgium
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