SYRACUSE — The Central New York Sales & Marketing Executives (CNYSME) has chosen Robert Daino, president and CEO of WCNY, the area’s public broadcaster, as the 2015 recipient of the Crystal Ball Award. The organization annually bestows the award to a local businessperson who has contributed to the sales and marketing profession and has […]
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SYRACUSE — The Central New York Sales & Marketing Executives (CNYSME) has chosen Robert Daino, president and CEO of WCNY, the area’s public broadcaster, as the 2015 recipient of the Crystal Ball Award.
The organization annually bestows the award to a local businessperson who has contributed to the sales and marketing profession and has worked in community development and support.
CNYSME will present Daino with the Crystal Ball Award on April 16 at the 39th annual Crystal Ball and Sales & Marketing Excellence Awards (SMEA) ceremony at the Holiday Inn Syracuse-Liverpool on Electronics Parkway in Salina.
Michelle Fontaine, who serves as the co-chair of the Crystal Ball and SMEA ceremony, says CNYSME liked Daino’s investment in the Central New York community.
“He’s very engaged with the community,” she says.
Fontaine also cites WCNY’s education center, which includes Enterprise America, a “hands-on co-curricular program for middle-school students” in which they learn how to operate a city and its businesses.
Fontaine calls the student program “huge [from] a sales and marketing perspective.”
Besides her role with CNYSME, Fontaine is also a sales coordinator for Visual Technologies at 1620 Burnett Ave. in Syracuse.
In an email message to CNYBJ, Daino said he is “personally humbled” that CNYSME selected him as the 2015 recipient of the Crystal Ball Award.
“But I am also proud to share this honor with past and future recipients, to be one of many who strive to make Central New York an outstanding community,” said Daino.
Daino has served as the top official at WCNY-TV/FM since June 1, 2005.
“It’s been energizing to be part of a community of people who consistently come together with commitment and passion, working together to create, revitalize, and reinvent the place we call home,” he added.
Daino will join a list of past Crystal Ball winners that includes the 2014 recipient, Howard Dolgon, owner, president, CEO, and team governor of the Syracuse Crunch minor league hockey team; and the 2013 winner, Peter Belyea, president of CXtec and TERACAI.
Other past winners include Debbie Sydow, former president of Onondaga Community College in 2012; John Stage, founder and CEO of Dinosaur Bar-B-Que in 2011; Peter Coleman, the publican of Coleman’s Authentic Irish Pub in 2010; and Edward (Ed) Levine, president and CEO of Galaxy Communications, LLC in Syracuse in 2009, according to the CNYSME website.
Accomplishments
Among his accomplishments, Daino helped lead the organization in its recent move to a new location on Syracuse’s Near Westside.
WCNY, Central New York’s public-broadcasting company, on Oct. 30, 2013 formally opened its new, 56,000-square-foot broadcast and education center at 415 W. Fayette St. in Syracuse.
WCNY moved into the new facility earlier that year, after having previously operated at 506 Old Liverpool Road in Salina.
The project’s construction and capital costs totaled about $20 million, according to a WCNY fact sheet on the project. The organization used both private and public funding to finance the project.
Two buildings make up the campus, including the refurbished 30,000-square-foot former Case Supply building, and the new 26,000-square-foot technology building that includes studios and the space leased to Centralcast, LLC that provides television-content delivery services for all stations in New York and New Jersey, WHYY in Philadelphia, WTVI in Charlotte, and several other stations.
The facility also includes WCNY’s 10,000-square-foot education center, which occupies the third floor. The center features education programs including Enterprise America, described as a hands-on learning program for high-school students to learn about entrepreneurship in a “simulated city,” the organization said.
About WCNY
WCNY is a private, nonprofit organization and member-supported PBS affiliate that employs close to 70 people, according to the organization.
Its broadcast area encompasses about one-third of upstate New York and reaches more than 1.8 million people in 19 counties, the organization said.
WCNY broadcasts five digital television channels, including WCNY, Create, World, Plus, and HowTo.
It also broadcasts three primary radio channels, including Classic FM (91.3 in Syracuse, 89.5 in the Utica–Rome area, and 90.9 in Watertown and the North Country) and its ReadOut channel, which delivers content for the visually impaired.
Its Classical, Jazz, and Oldies formats are available in high-definition (HD) via online streaming, according to WCNY.