CAREER & BIOGRAPHY

A Life of Innovation, Family and Meaning …

A man dressed in a navy blue suit and white shirt, smiling, standing outdoors on a red carpet with blurred background of plants and people.

Scott Rosenzweig is a parent, an entrepreneur, business leader, an active community member, a volunteer and a runner. He is a candidate for Montana Senate District 29 (Park and Gallatin Counties) in the upcoming 2026 election. Scott currently serves as a legislator in the Montana State House of Representatives in the current Montana State Legislature, representing Montana House District 57 (Park and Gallatin Counties).

Scott earned his MBA from Cornell University and his BA in Philosophy from Wesleyan University, and has made Montana his home since 2005.

For more than 30 years, Scott has been a leader in the global satellite communications industry. He moved to Montana after being recruited to help lead a small start-up called Orbit One Communications, a company that produced world-leading technology products in Bozeman and achieved major sales to the U.S. Government and commercial clients. With the sale of Orbit One to a public company, Scott helped launch another successful start-up technology company, Sypes Canyon Communications, also sold and still operating.

He is currently a partner in a small technology and communications company, Miranda Solutions Group, and co-owner in a couple small businesses located in the district.

A lifelong long distance runner for 50 years, Scott has worked and traveled in more than 60 countries and has lived in Hungary, Israel and South Africa. Scott speaks Hungarian, Arabic and Hebrew, and is a studied drummer.

Scott is active in his community and in Montana as a volunteer, including business mentoring (Early Stage Montana, Frontier Angels VC Fund, others), a BridgerCare Ambassador and various fundraising and running events.

Scott grew up in rural Maryland where his father was a mathematics professor. His mother is a retired school teacher and social worker for parents of handicapped children for the public school system. Scott’s three children all went through the Montana public schools and public universities and continue to live in Montana.