In the end, Ross Video’s total year-over-year revenue gain amounted to just three per cent – far below the company’s annual growth average of 17 per cent over the previous three decades. But it was an increase nonetheless, and the streak remains intact at 34 years and counting.
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Hours before millions of Canadians were glued to their screens in the hope of witnessing the Toronto Blue Jays clinch a World Series championship on Oct. 31, David Ross was engrossed in a different kind of live drama.
The CEO of Ross Video was watching his firm’s incoming sales figures with an eagle eye. The company’s fiscal year happens to end on the final day of October, and on that Friday morning, Ross Video’s impressive streak of 33 consecutive years of revenue growth was at risk of ending.
Unlike the Blue Jays, who saw their dreams of a title die with losses to the Los Angeles Dodgers that Friday evening and the following night, Ross Video came through when it mattered. The company churned out $20 million in sales on the final day of the fiscal year, squeaking past 2024’s final revenue total by just a few million dollars.
In the end, Ross Video’s total year-over-year revenue gain amounted to just three per cent – far below the company’s annual growth average of 17 per cent over the previous three decades. But it was an increase nonetheless, and the streak remains intact at 34 years and counting.
“I think I might have had a drink at the end of the night because it was just so nerve-wracking,” Ross said with a chuckle during an interview with OBJ on Wednesday afternoon. “It felt a little like the Jays game, except we won. The stakes were high.”
Indeed, while Ross Video technology can be found in sports stadiums around the world, the ultra-competitive space it inhabits isn’t all fun and games. The company founded by David’s father John more than 50 years ago has gained a global reputation for its cutting-edge video production technology, but its fiscal 2025 did not get off to a promising start.
“We had plans, and then Trump got elected,” Ross said flatly. “It became pretty interesting, actually.”
The incoming U.S. president quickly threatened to levy tariffs against many of the country’s biggest trading partners, including Canada. That dealt a heavy blow to companies such as Ross that export most of their products.
“A lot of our customers played a (game of) wait-and-see,” Ross explained. “I think there was probably a bit of a worry that if they ordered a product from Canada, that suddenly they’d be paying tariffs. There was a lot of confusion.”
And so a roller-coaster 2025 began.
“Our first four months (sales) were seriously down,” Ross said. “The next four months were the best in our company's history. We were just banging out record months one after another. And then it sort of levelled out to something that looked like we might not grow. That’s a significant thing when we’ve been doing it for 33 consecutive years. I didn’t want to see that string break.”

