There are few dealer success stories larger than that of Titan Machinery. From humble beginnings as Co-Founder David Meyer’s 2-store North Dakota operation in 1980 to the 147-store publicly-traded powerhouse it is today, the almost half-century history of Titan Machinery is full of progressive business practices and mentalities. Core to the company’s successes are Meyer himself and the man who was a partner in elevating the dealership to “titanic” heights: Peter Christianson.

Meyer, who will step down as CEO on Feb. 1, remains Titan’s executive chairman and the chairman of the board, while Christianson retired in 2017, having served as Titan Machinery’s president, CFO and COO at different points along the way. 

What Analysts Have to Say

"I have known Dave for about 15 years as a Wall Street analyst covering Titan Machinery. Dave leaves behind a great legacy as a true entrepreneur, a great partner to shareholders, analysts such as myself, farmers and equipment manufacturers. Under Dave’s leadership Titan has grown from a relatively small operation into a company generating more than $2.5 billion in revenue, from a regional player in the upper Midwest into a truly global company with exposure stretching as far as Ukraine and Australia. Titan was able to grow without compromising its core values and commitment for honest dealing with its customers, the OEMs it represents and shareholders invested in the company; this is without a doubt the result of Dave Meyer’s leadership and vision for what Titan could and needed to be..."
—  RW Baird Senior Analyst Mircea (Mig) Dobre

"Titan Machinery is one of the most effectively managed companies we've encountered in the ag sector. We're uniquely impressed by the status it has earned to be a consolidator of choice for other dealers; that other dealer groups look to Titan as the best home for the next generation of their businesses..."

— Lake Street Capital Markets Senior Research Analyst Ben Klieve

Their careers were built on breaking the mold. The company survived by leaning into selling rather than pulling back during the tough 1980s, followed by a series of rapid acquisitions in early 2000s. Understanding how important capital was for their own growth, the pair took the company public in December 2007. Titan Machinery was also among the first North American dealerships to go international by expanding into the Black Sea region in 2012.

Humble Beginnings

Meyer’s entry into the ag equipment industry began in 1975 as a Case 4WD tractor product specialist straight out of college. But his time with the OEM was short-lived, and he knew he’d much prefer to work on the dealer end of things.

Bob Hope David Meyer award ceremony

Bob Hope presenting David and Candance Meyer (left) along with partner Darrell Larson and his wife Colleen (right) the Top Case High Horsepower Tractor Sales award in Phoenix, Ariz., 1984. Source: Titan Machinery

Pushing Change Through Associations

David Meyer has been very involved in dealer associations over his career, particularly with the North Dakota Implement Dealers Assn., now merged into the Pioneer Equipment Dealers Assn. Former association president Bob Lamp (retired 2010) joined the association in 1978 and says Meyer brought his drive to tackle challenges to the organization. Lamp would later join Titan Machinery for 2 years and work with Meyer and Christianson on acquiring other dealers.

“He was very involved in the dealer associations,” Irwin said. “Matter of fact, he served a couple of terms as president because he wanted things to get done in the industry that really made a lot of sense. He was very people oriented. And he always thought that there was a way to solve a problem.

“He was not afraid to approach an issue, whether it was with the company or with customers or with other dealers. If there was a way, they're going to try to figure out what the way was to solve a problem. He's still not afraid to broach an issue and come to a solution.”

By November 1975, he was working for the Case dealership Meyer-Jones Farm Store in Wahpeton, N.D., and became a minority shareholder along with Case blockman Darrell Larson in 1976. In September 1977, Meyer and Larson started a second location in Lisbon, N.D. In 1980, recognizing their success was rapidly raising the value of a business they intended to one day buy, Meyer and Larson bought out the dealership’s majority shareholders and formally started the corporation that is Titan Machinery today.

Christianson, meanwhile, entered the ag equipment industry in 1972 at his family’s Steiger dealership, Christianson’s Inc., in Elbow Lake, Minn. The dealership was run by his father, Earl, who not only played a pivotal role in the initial development of the Steiger 4WD tractor but was the first and ultimately one of the largest Steiger dealers. 

Peter--Dad-in-Front-of-Old-Steiger.JPG

Peter (right) and his father Earl (left) in front of a 2200 Steiger tractor at the Steiger Anniversary Event in 2008.

In 1988, the Christianson family bought the Case IH company story in Fargo, N.D., which Christianson ran, while his business partner ran the original Elbow Lake, Minn., store. The business was renamed to C.I. Farm Power, and by 1997, it had 4 locations.

Tough ‘80s, Bountiful ‘90s

 During the 1980s, Meyer saw dealers going out of business as fear caused them to pull in their horns and became ultra conservative. As a result, these dealers sold less, and their used equipment soon also dropped in value. Titan Machinery, however, took a different approach.

“We said, ‘let's manage our expenses and sell our way through this,’” Meyer says. “Let's sell more, turn our inventory and keep pushing through this thing. And it got us through the '80s.”


“Peter has a unique ability to recognize a solution to a problem, share his vision for the solution and generate the excitement needed to develop that solution into an answer to challenges Ag and Construction customers face…” – Jim Lilleberg, former VP of Marketing at Titan


Heading into the 1990s, just a few short years after the merger of Case and IH and the amicable split between Meyer and Larson, the first wave of Titan Machinery acquisitions began. Now the sole dealer-principal, Meyer began with 2 nearby acquisitions in LaMoure and Lidgerwood, N.D.

A Banker’s Perspective: Meyer’s Trend-Setting Financial Mind

David Meyer’s habit of assessing new and better ways to do things touched all areas of his business, including unassuming parts like payroll. Bruce Iserman, the now retired president of North Dakota Bremer Bank, was Meyer’s banker for many years as the business grew and recalls how Meyer’s approach to organizing his finances was impressively ahead of its time. He recalls one day in 1984 when he found Meyer organizing his employee’s financial info into separate folders.

“One day, I went out to see David and asked him what he was doing,” Iserman says. “He had made a file on every single employee that worked in Lisbon, including a pay grade and a salary description. Whether you were a truck driver, a mechanic, a parts man or a salesman, he had a file on every one of those people. He did reviews, some of them twice a year. I'd never heard of that before as it related to implement dealers. And it made the people around him know what their goals were and how they could make money, and it created a really good business atmosphere.”

Iserman admits he was overwhelmed by Meyer’s ability and knowledge to organize his staff that way. He adds that the employees had never encountered an organized system like this before.

“Once they got into the tune of knowing what they were responsible for in their job description and how they could make more money and meet their goals, that seemed to filter more into not only appreciating David but also for them to know they should be doing. And it was really an eye-opener for me where I thought, ‘This guy's got it together.’” 

Iserman comments on Meyer’s relationships with farmers as well, pointing out that his personality drove people to want to work for him.

“He had that knack, that nobody that I ever worked with in my 40 years had, that kind of skill to not only be successful but make people really like to work,” Iserman says. “I didn't know anybody who didn't want to work for David. Initially, I think for a while, he had farmers coming in and doing some training, so they'd help in the winter with him, and they wanted to. He just had that personality.  

“If you ask him about a particular area, he'll tell you, ‘Oh, so-and-so told me they had a good corn crop,’ or ‘I reached out to this guy the other day.’ His ability to continue to keep in contact with those farmers, even though he's more into the corporate side of it — he still wants that taste of what the farmers are thinking and doing.”

Meyer demonstrated an innate understanding of how to properly execute an acquisition. Bruce Iserman, retired president of North Dakota Bremer Bank, was Meyer’s banker at the time and saw firsthand Meyer’s progressive approach to these 2 early acquisitions. Iserman would work with Titan Machinery for over 20 years.