Kinesix Announces Ryan
Ladisic
as Director of Business
Development
~Seasoned Sales Pro to Maintain Momentum
for
High-Flying Houston Innovator~
HOUSTON –
(March 8, 2007)
–
Kinesix
Software, a producer of graphical-user-interfaces for
command-and-control applications, has named Ryan Ladisic as
its Director of Business Development.
Ladisic, a seasoned
sales professional with more than 11 years of experience,
will help Kinesix introduce its latest software products to
new industries in need of real-time graphical-user-interface
technology.
“We’ve had a banner year in terms of
our growth and interest in our software,” said Russ
Jamerson, CEO of Kinesix. “With a skilled director of
business development on our team, we can continue this
upward momentum and better reach all of our worldwide
markets.”
Before joining
Kinesix, Ladisic held a sales-manager position with
Houston-based DataCert, where he managed the company’s
Midwest sales efforts and also expanded its Northeast sales
team.
Prior to joining DataCert, he held a
sales position with Palo Alto-based Integration Appliance,
serving as the company’s first remote employee. In this
role, he built an aggressive sales program serving New York
and the Northeast corridor.
Ladisic has also served in sales
positions with Nextel Communications and AT&T Wireless. In
addition, he boasts entrepreneurial experience, having
founded the ACC Group, a wireless telecommunications
business that helped Fortune 1,000 companies maximize their
corporate cell-phone plans
He holds a Bachelor of Arts from Ramapo
College of NJ Mahwah and a Master of Business Administration
from Mercy College of NY Dobbs Ferry.
About Kinesix Software
Kinesix Software is the developer of Sammi, an enterprise
and control-room graphics tool used by more than 20,000
mission-command and process-control workers. The Sammi
product, which was first launched in 1990, allows users to
build custom graphical displays that animate and manage
massive volumes of streaming data across dozens – or even
hundreds – of workstations.
With Sammi, users see full-color
dashboards, instead of rudimentary numeric readings or
basic, conventional GUIs. While Sammi is often categorized
as a graphics product, its real value lies in its proven
ability to display live data across a network of command and
control systems. Sammi is currently available for Unix,
Microsoft NT/2000/XP and Linux platforms. In addition,
Kinesix recently released KX EDGE, its next-generation
human-machine interface, based on Microsoft’s .Net platform.
Kinesix is based in Houston, Texas. To learn more visit
www.kinesix.com.
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