Skip to main content

Redflex names new European Business Development Manager

Redflex Traffic Systems has announced that Dudi Cohen will become the company’s European Business Development Manager. Dudi will relocate to the United Kingdom to take up his new position. Dudi has been with Redflex for more than six years, starting in the research and development team and later as US Support Manager, liaising with Redflex’s sister office in the United States covering technical support, project management, pre and after sales support, back office operation, training, supply chain management
April 17, 2013 Read time: 1 min
112 Redflex Traffic Systems has announced that Dudi Cohen will become the company’s European Business Development Manager. Dudi will relocate to the United Kingdom to take up his new position.

Dudi has been with Redflex for more than six years, starting in the research and development team and later as US Support Manager, liaising with Redflex’s sister office in the United States covering technical support, project management, pre and after sales support, back office operation, training, supply chain management, production and implementation.

Redflex already has UK and European approvals for its mobile and fixed enforcement systems and Dudi Cohen’s appointment will allow the company to further expand its presence in the region. “I am looking forward to entering the European market and its many challenges, while also expanding all aspects of the Redflex business,” he said.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Growth of ANPR applications for enforcement, tolling and more
    February 1, 2012
    Automatic number plate recognition continues to find new applications beyond the traditional. In coming years, we can expect the application set to grow significantly Moore's Law has seen to it that computer processing power has improved out of all comparison in the 30-plus years since the first working Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) system was created by the UK's Police Scientific Development Branch. The attendant increases in systems' capabilities have resulted in ANPR being deployed globally
  • National funding cuts cause fragmentation of US ITS market
    February 1, 2012
    Paul Everett, Research Director with IMS Research, looks at how ITS deployment varies across the US and what this means in terms of market potential for systems manufacturers and suppliers At the end of 2010, the US will have a total resident population of close to 310 million, rising to an estimated 439 million by 2050.
  • Average speed enforcement, a huge impact on reducing speed
    January 31, 2012
    A guaranteed way to get drivers to slow down and comply with work zone speed limits is to use average speed cameras. Deployed in the UK for over a decade now, they have had a huge impact, not least in achieving around 99 per cent compliance with speed limits. It's not difficult to understand: when someone knows that if they speed through a work zone it is absolutely guaranteed that they will be caught, fined and have points on their licence, only a total fool would. In the UK, SPECS average speed cameras we
  • Loop detection still has a part in traffic management
    March 2, 2012
    Bob Lees, co-founder of Diamond Consulting Services, on why the loop detector just refuses to go away. The more strident proponents of newer and emergent detection technologies are quick to highlight what they see as the disadvantages, and hence the imminent passing, of the humble inductive loop. The more prosaic will acknowledge that loops continue to have a part to play in traffic management, falling back on the assertion that it is all a question of application. And yet year after year the loop, despite