Ken Kisner

Board Member at NEXA3D

Ken Kisner started in Graphic arts in 1992 creating clear coats and coatings for the outdoor advertising industry. Ken along with his Brother Brad founded Triangle Digital LLC in 2001 focusing on growing the inkjet business globally. They established Inkjet manufacturing in California & China, and a sales office in Luxembourg Europe. Triangle Digital became a global leader in wide format and grant format graphic arts gaining nearly 22% global market share of the billboard business by 2005 and selling 1.6 million kilograms a year of inkjet inks and coatings. Ken and Brad sold Triangle Digital to INX/Sakata in 2006 where they continued in leadership roles for the Digital Division. In 2009 Ken became the President/CTO/COO of INX Digital overseeing all aspects of the business including manufacturing in Guangzhou China, Prague Czech Republic and Dixon CA. He additionally managed Global Sales with nearly 100 distributors and dealers and research and development. Ken has become fluent in business start-up, acquisition, management, international operations, international research and development, and international administration.

Ken founded Molecule Corp in 2014 as a uniquely creative, data-driven enterprise focusing on discovery and product innovation in industrial inkjet markets and 3D printing materials. In 2017 Ken and a partner Nick Talken Founded the Albert Software Platform, a chemical formulating software which allows Molecule to rapidly complete tasks and collect clean, normalized data. In May of 2019 Molecule Corp was Acquired by Henkel Corporation. Ken became the Head of Innovation and quickly set the new global strategy for the 108 person Additive Manufacturing group.

On May 1, 2021 Ken left the 3D printing team and took a new position as Global Head of Digital Innovation at Henkel. He is currently overseeing the Digital Transformation of the 2500 global Scientific community at Henkel. Within less than a year, the organization will be collecting over 1 million clean and structured data points per month. With more than 50 data scientists and programmers, the organization is changing the way the chemical industry will function in the future.