'Innovative Audio' represents a problematic database entry containing multiple unrelated companies rather than a single audiophile manufacturer. Research reveals at least three distinct businesses using this name: 1) Innovative Audio (Utah) - a car audio installation company founded in 1979, owned by Brad Denson, employing 2-10 staff specializing in custom automotive entertainment systems, Bluetooth integration, and navigation; 2) Innovative Audio Video Showrooms (NYC) - an established 1972 high-end audio retailer at 150 East 58th Street operating five acoustically-controlled showrooms representing premium brands like Wilson Audio, Dynaudio, and ATC rather than manufacturing equipment; 3) Innovative Audio (Canada) - described as 'Canada's Largest Vintage Audio Emporium' focusing on vintage equipment sales and repair services in Vancouver. None of these entities match the database description of a high-fidelity audiophile manufacturer producing speakers and amplifiers. This database contamination exemplifies the systematic data integrity problems affecting audio industry commercial intelligence, where generic company names create confusion and research inefficiency by conflating unrelated businesses across different market segments (automotive, retail, vintage repair) under a single non-specific brand entry.
'Innovative Audio' represents a problematic database entry containing multiple unrelated companies rather than a single audiophile manufacturer. Research reveals at least three distinct businesses using this name: 1) Innovative Audio (Utah) - a car audio installation company founded in 1979, owned by Brad Denson, employing 2-10 staff specializing in custom automotive entertainment systems, Bluetooth integration, and navigation; 2) Innovative Audio Video Showrooms (NYC) - an established 1972 high-end audio retailer at 150 East 58th Street operating five acoustically-controlled showrooms representing premium brands like Wilson Audio, Dynaudio, and ATC rather than manufacturing equipment; 3) Innovative Audio (Canada) - described as 'Canada's Largest Vintage Audio Emporium' focusing on vintage equipment sales and repair services in Vancouver. None of these entities match the database description of a high-fidelity audiophile manufacturer producing speakers and amplifiers. This database contamination exemplifies the systematic data integrity problems affecting audio industry commercial intelligence, where generic company names create confusion and research inefficiency by conflating unrelated businesses across different market segments (automotive, retail, vintage repair) under a single non-specific brand entry.