![]() ![]() Members will receive their first board within a week of placing an order, and a new snowboard annually to add to their collection at the beginning of each winter season. Subscriptions at start at just $35 a month. The crew is vertically integrated and every board is made in-house and shipped to customers within a week from the time of order. Additionally, longtime Burton product developer Ben Hayes has recently come on board to help shape the future of the snowboard factory while snowboard-building veteran Marc Wierenga now heads up the media arm of the business. Veteran pro snowboarders Dave Lee and Billy Anderson bring decades of experience both on snow and in the industry. Located in Huntington Beach, Signal’s business and factory have been stacking the talent with the best in the snowsports industry. ![]() Today they released a new video that introduces the new subscription service. The Signal Subscription Service does just that by offering snowboarders an online platform at to purchase a board for as little as $35 a month along with extras like warranty and demo programs and strong customer service that gives subscribers a direct line to the brand. The Orange County, California snowboard company’s core mission is to offer the ultimate access to snowboards and snowboard culture along with the best buying experience and customer service. The Signal Subscription Service (SSS) is a new way for consumers to buy brand new snowboards at a low monthly payment while being part of the online Signal Snowboard community. Huntington Beach, CA (November 14, 2016)– Signal Snowboards is introducing the world’s first-to-market snowboard subscription service. "Digital media is a lot of fun," says Lee, "but it's blue collar work and it takes a lot of commitment and dedication to keep it up.Southern California Snowboarding Veterans Make The Sport More Accessible By Using The Best Technology To Create an Online Platform to Buy California-Made Snowboards While Building Community "We're used to making snowboard videos, trick tips and other content based around snowboarding, but ETT is the first web series of its kind to build a real show revolving around an entire company and its building processes," says Lee, who adds that the glamorous world of video and the prosaic practice of manufacturing aren't that different. ![]() Signal Snowboards continues that tradition, but is also helping to make manufacturing cool. Epic runs and humorous skits were shared on VHS cassettes and chronicled the daring evolution of the extreme sport. Snowboarding and skateboarding became popular in the 1980s partly because of a culture of video production. "Coming from a pro rider background it's important to us that we work with our riders and use our experience to evolve designs that keep up with progression of the sport." says Lee. The crazy prototypes also keep Signal enmeshed in the counter culture mindset that spawned them. Some of the designs seem far fetched, but a wheel chair rig designed for a paralyzed rider and a board covered in solar panels to charge gadgets seem like the start of interesting product lines. ETT has absolutely given way to lower prototyping cost and faster fabrication methods." "We have also updated a lot of core profiles in our snowboards because of the show and its constant access to R&D. "A few of the production boards have ETT ideas built in to them or around them," says Lee. While irreverent, the ideation process has had a big influence on the company's standard designs. ![]()
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