The Johnson Story
Henri Johnson is actually the creator as well as chief executive officer of FlightScope, the leader of 3D Doppler radar monitoring modern technology in golf. He introduced the firm in 1989, initially cultivating phased-array radar devices for the self defense field just before administering that preciseness scientific research to sporting activity.
Under his management, FlightScope created past history in 2004 as the initial firm to provide real-time ball-flight velocity records on tv. He is actually headquartered in Orlando, Fla, as well as remains to individually steer all item development at the firm.
His job has actually been actually specified through one view: if you may assess one thing precisely, you may enhance it.

The Johnson Journey
In 2004, I was actually standing up alongside a golf course at the Fight at the Bridges — a made-for-television occasion show through CBS — checking out records coming from our FlightScope radar device show up survive on display for the very first time in the past history of golf.
Ball rate. Release slant. Lug range. Turn. Directly. I had actually invested fifteen years creating radar devices for the self defense field, tracking shells at excessive speeds for major, asking for treatments.
But nothing prepared me for that moment. Golfers, commentators, and broadcasters gathered around the screens with the same expression: they had never seen the invisible made visible before.
That day crystallized everything. The technology we had developed to serve the military had an entirely different — and in many ways more personal — application. Golf is a game played largely in the dark. Golfers work for years on feel, on instinct, on imitation, without ever knowing what is actually happening at impact or in the air. We had the tools to change that. The question was no longer whether we should bring this technology to golf. It was how quickly we could do it, and how broadly we could make it available.
FlightScope today spans the full range — from the X3C used by tour professionals and their coaches, to the Mevo Gen2 that puts meaningful data in the hands of everyday golfers.
The mission has never changed: close the gap between what golfers think they are doing and what they are actually doing. Data doesn’t make golf easy. However it makes it honest. And for me, that has always been the starting point for any real improvement.

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You wake up in the morning — what is the driving passion?
Precision.
I am obsessed with the idea that if you can measure something accurately, you can improve it. When I see a golfer — amateur or touring professional — look at their data and have a genuine “aha” minute about their game, that’s the fuel.
It’s about giving people the truth about their performance, as well as the power to act on it.
What was the genesis for FlightScope?
FlightScope was founded in 1989 to develop phased-array 3D Doppler radar for the defense industry — tracking high-velocity projectiles along with extreme precision. At some point, we asked ourselves: what else moves through the air that people desperately want to measure?
The answer was a golf ball.
In 2004, we delivered the first live ball-flight data ever seen on television. That moment told us we were onto something the game genuinely needed.


How does FlightScope differ from what others are doing in the very same category?
FlightScope measures — it does not estimate.
Our patented Fusion Tracking technology combines 3D Doppler radar with synchronized image processing, delivering genuinely measured data rather than calculated assumptions. We are also the only company in this space that came from defense and aerospace.
That heritage demands a standard of accuracy that shapes everything we build. And we don’t believe in subscription walls: you buy FlightScope, and you own the experience.
How is data collection and analysis changing the golf landscape for those in the broader golf population?
We are democratizing golf intelligence. Data that once required a professional team is now accessible to any golfer on any range.
That changes how people practice, how coaches teach, and how club fitters do their work.
The conversation between teacher and student has shifted from subjective feel to objective evidence — and the results speak for themselves.

Who is your consumer?
Anyone serious about performance — which spans a wider range than you might expect. Tour players and coaches rely on our X3C for the highest-stakes measurement in the world. Teaching professionals and club-fitting studios depend on our mid-range systems daily.
And the Mevo+ and Mevo Gen2 bring meaningful accuracy to dedicated amateurs and recreational golfers. What unites them all is a belief that understanding your game is the first step to improving it.
Plenty of companies talk about customer service and how important it is. Define the term and the approach followed at FlightScope.
Customer service at FlightScope is a cultural commitment, not a department. When someone invests in our technology, they are entering a relationship — and we take that seriously.
In practice, it means investment in education through the FlightScope Academy, standing behind our products without excuses, and listening to feedback. Some of our best product improvements came directly from customers.
When someone tells us what they need, we consider that a gift.


How is FlightScope leveraging AI and how do you see it evolving in the future of golf technology?
We are already well into it. Our i4 rangefinder integrates AI to give golfers not just yardage but smart shot recommendations based on wind, elevation, and conditions.
On the software side, we are developing AI that identifies performance patterns over time and delivers coaching insights that would once have taken hours of manual analysis.
I believe AI will transform the launch monitor from a measurement tool into a genuine coaching partner — one that learns your game and grows with you.
What future innovations do you see taking place in the next 2-3 years?
AI-driven coaching integrated directly into our software ecosystem. Further miniaturization of our hardware without compromising measurement quality. Continued multi-sport expansion — our radar has compelling applications in cricket, tennis, and baseball.
And significant advances in simulation and connected course experiences. The future of golf practice is intelligent, immersive, and data-driven. FlightScope intends to lead it.


If you could change one thing in golf unilaterally — what would it be and why?
The most important thing for a golfer is very personal — and it is definitely not to try and look like a swing from a YouTube video or a tour professional. Every golfer has their own perception of what they are doing during a swing, but that is rarely reality.
I would make data literacy a core part of how golf is taught at every level. My personal goal is to close the gap between perception and reality for every golfer, with a clear data-driven path to improve. Golf is hard. Data doesn’t make it easy — but it makes it honest. And honesty is where real progress begins.
Best advice you ever received — what was it and who was it from?
“Build what the world needs, not what is easy to build.” It came from a mentor early in my career in defense technology, and it has shaped every major decision since. When we transitioned into golf, the temptation to build something “good enough” was real.
We chose precision instead — and it defined us. FlightScope exists because we believed in building what the game needed just before the game knew it needed it.
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Portable Golf Launch Monitors as well as Simulators – FlightScope
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