Daktronics was founded in 1968 by
Al Kurtenbach and Duane Sander, professors of electrical engineering at South Dakota State University in Brookings, South Dakota. The name is a
portmanteau of "
Dakota" and "elec
tronics". The company wanted to get into the medical instrument field, but the company's founders found that field too large for them, so they changed their focus to providing electronic voting systems for state legislatures; their first client was for the State of Utah's
legislature. Shortly after,
South Dakota State University's wrestling coach, Warren Williamson reached out to the company and asked them to devise a better scoreboard for wrestling. The result was Daktronics' first entry into the scoreboard field, developing the Matside wrestling scoreboard, the first product in the company's line. The company's scoreboards were later used at the
1976 Olympic Games. In 1980, Daktronics developed scoreboards which were used at the
1980 Winter Olympics in
Lake Placid, New York. Daktronics displays have since been used at the
1992,
1996 and
2000 Summer Olympics. In 1984, a new manufacturing facility was built. In 1987, the company developed a mobile scoring system for the
PGA tour. In 1994, Daktronics, Inc. became a publicly traded company, offering shares under the symbol DAKT on the
NASDAQ National Market system. The company also established an office in Germany in 2003, and in Hong Kong and the United Kingdom in 2004. In 2000, Daktronics acquired Keyframe services, and established an office in Canada. The following year, they installed their first LED video display in Times Square for TDK Financial Services Firm. The company upgraded the
"Zipper" sign in Times Square in 1997, and the first Prostar large screen video displays were installed that year.
Indianapolis Motor Speedway installed 18 Prostar displays in 1999. In 2004, the largest video board in North America was installed at
Jacobs Field in Cleveland, Ohio, by Daktronics. In 2005, Daktronics installed a multi-million dollar system in
Kuwait stock exchange. They also acquired Sportsound system designer and manufacturer. Daktronics acquired the Vortek family of products from New Yorkbased rigging company Hoffend and Sons. In 2008, Daktronics installed a high-definition LED video display for the
Kansas City Royals, and in 2014, Daktronics installed an HD display for the
Jacksonville Jaguars at
EverBank Field, which at the time was the largest such display in the world. Daktronics established an office in Brazil in 2012, and in 2013, the company acquired OPEN Out Of Home in Belgium. Sales of Daktronics products surpassed $600 million in 2015. In February 2023, a class action lawsuit was filed against Daktronics alleging securities fraud between March 10, 2022 and December 6, 2022. ==Operation==