Business Technology Advisors
Digital Signage in Los Angeles, CA.
Entertainment industry offices use commercial displays for pitch presentations, talent portfolios, and client showcases that demand color accuracy and resolution beyond basic corporate signage. Production facilities show call sheets, shooting schedules, and location information that changes daily. Creative agencies in Culver City and Venice display portfolio work and client campaigns on screens throughout their offices.
Samsung’s technology serves these diverse LA County needs through models with different specifications. Some businesses prioritize color reproduction for creative work. Others need extreme brightness for outdoor covered areas or spaces with floor-to-ceiling windows facing western afternoon sun. Screen selection depends on specific use case rather than one-size-fits-all recommendations.
We Service
Retail Restaurants Hospitality Corporate Offices Healthcare Banking Schools Government
Digital Menus
Transform your Los Angeles restaurant or café with dynamic menu boards.
✓ Update pricing instantly
✓ Reduce wait times
✓ Increase check averages
Info Displays
Information displays keep your space organized and standardize the experience across California and any of your other locations.
✓ Wayfinding digital screens
✓ Emergency alerts
✓ Visitor management
Art Displays
Stand out with incredible showcases of rotating artwork or a digital marquee.
✓ Rotating galleries
✓ Branded content
✓ Atmosphere
Hardware & Software
Features
Synced Playback
Conditional Displays
Publish Date Control
Bulk Screen Setup
Preset Configurations
Auto-Dimming Timers
Proactive Alerts
Energy Use Monitors
What We Help With:
We help at every stage, at no extra cost. Let us know what you need and we’ll walk you through the rest. It doesn’t matter if you’re a small or enterprise size business, we partner with a large range of companies.Â

Planning

Purchasing

Installation
LA’s business culture embraces visual communication differently than other markets. Creative industries expect displays to look exceptional, not merely functional. Tech companies in Silicon Beach use screens as cultural statements about innovation and design sensibility. Entertainment venues treat displays as part of their brand presentation to clients and visitors.
Multilingual content matters throughout LA County more than most US cities. Businesses serve customers and employees who speak Spanish, Korean, Armenian, Mandarin, and numerous other languages. Content management systems need multilingual capabilities built in rather than added as afterthoughts.
The sprawling geography means businesses frequently operate locations in completely different municipalities with different installation requirements, building codes, and permitting processes. A restaurant group might span Santa Monica, Downtown LA, Pasadena, and Long Beach, each jurisdiction with unique compliance requirements affecting installation approaches.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What is digital signage?
Digital signage is a screen that displays dynamic content instead of static printed signs. They are digital signs where you control what appears on the screen remotely through software, so you can update pricing, promotions, announcements, or visuals without printing anything or physically visiting the location. Common uses include restaurant digital menus, retail advert displays, lobby directories, and corporate communication screens.
How much do business displays cost?
It varies wildly depending on your needs, which is why we must do a consultation first. For Samsung commercial displays, expect $1,000 to $3,000 per screen depending on size and model. A 65″ QB series (350 nit, 16/7 rated) runs around $1,100 to $1,300. A 65″ QH series (700 nit, 24/7 rated) runs $1,700 to $2,000. Installation adds $200 to $400 per screen. Content management software like Samsung VXT starts at $10 per screen per month ($120 annually) for the S Series. Total cost for a single-screen setup typically ranges from $1,500 to $4,000. Our consulting and planning services are free. You only pay for hardware and installation.
Do I need a separate media player?
No. Samsung’s commercial displays have built-in Tizen processors that run content directly on the screen. You upload content through cloud software and the screen handles playback. This eliminates the need for external computers, media boxes, or USB drives. It also means fewer cables and fewer points of failure.
How long does installation take?
Typically 2 to 3 hours per screen. This includes mounting the display, running power, connecting to WiFi, configuring the software, and loading initial content. Multi-screen installations or complex setups like video walls take longer.
Can I update content myself?
Yes. Samsung VXT and similar platforms let you log in from any computer or phone to change what’s on screen. You can update text, swap images, adjust schedules, or push new content to multiple locations simultaneously. No technical expertise required. Most updates take less than five minutes. VXT is currently considered to be one of the best digital signage software in 2025/2026.
What's Samsung VXT?
Samsung VXT is Samsung’s cloud-based content management software. It lets you create, schedule, and deploy content to your displays from anywhere. Features include drag-and-drop content creation, automated scheduling, remote monitoring, and analytics on what content plays when. It integrates directly with Samsung’s commercial displays and requires no additional hardware.
What's the difference between a commercial display and a regular TV?
Commercial displays are built for extended operation (16+ hours daily), have higher brightness (350 to 500+ nits versus 200 to 300 nits for consumer TVs), include built-in content management, have no visible branding on the bezel, and carry commercial warranties. Consumer TVs are designed for 4 to 6 hours of daily home use and will fail quickly in commercial settings.
Do you service areas outside Los Angeles?
Yes. We install and support digital signage projects throughout North America. However, we have centralized support in specific cities around the US, like Los Angeles.
A professional services firm with offices in Downtown LA and Century City struggled with keeping employees informed about which conference rooms were available. Their booking system existed in Outlook, but people walking to meetings had no way to know if a room was actually occupied or if the previous meeting ran over. This led to awkward interruptions and wasted time searching for available space.
They installed six Samsung QB60C displays outside their most-used conference rooms across both locations. The 60″ screens integrate with their existing Outlook calendar system.
Employees now see real-time room availability before walking to meetings. The screens show current meeting names, next scheduled booking, and remaining time. Meeting interruptions dropped substantially, and the facilities team reports better overall space utilization since people can quickly identify open rooms during unscheduled collaboration needs.