Digital Consulting Institute
Encyclopedia
Digital Consulting Institute (DCI) was a seminar company launched in 1982 by George Schussel
and his wife Sandi from their home in Massachusetts. It evolved out of a series of database seminars taught by George Schussel
in the 1970s.
In 1990 the company moved into the historic Ballardvale Mill (1835) in Andover, Massachusetts. The mill helped DCI with good fortune as the company’s revenues grew from $12 million to $45 million during the decade of the 90’s. DCI produced an average of 120 seminar, conference, and exposition events a year. The majority were held in the United States, but the company also had a significant presence in Canada, Germany, and Australia. It held smaller numbers of events all over the world in mostly European and Asian venues.
DCI was a leader in creating and producing high technology conferences and tradeshows. Most of the company’s events were about the management of computer based systems for improved business efficiency. The company’s events were market leaders in the fields of database management systems (DBMS), eBusiness, application development, sales force automation (“SFA”), data warehouse, and customer relationship management (CRM) areas. DCI produced approximately 120 conferences, seminars, and expositions annually.
As the 1990s wore on, the Internet became of ever- increasing importance in communicating with IT professionals. DCI evolved a product line of on-line communities and web sessions for business professionals to serve this need.
DCI’s products served on the order of 200,000 business professionals annually from a customer database of over one million. The events were highly regarded for their content, educational focus, and ability to draw important industry exhibitors and qualified speakers. DCI events consistently drew real users and companies that needed to purchase software solutions, and, for that reason, the events were popular with the software vendor community.
Examples of conferences and expositions run by DCI included:
•Business Intelligence World Conference & Expo
•CASE World
•Client/Server World
•Corporate Portals Conference
•Customer Relationship Management Conference & Exposition
•Database World
•Downsizing Expo
•eB2B World
•eCRM University
•eCustomer Conference & Exposition
•Information Architecture Conference & Expo
•Internet Expo
•Managing Enterprise Networks and Systems
•Microsoft TechNet Symposium
•National Software Re-engineering Conference
•OSF/DCE Developer’s Conference
•Summit on Wireless Computing
•Sybase User Group Annual Conference
•The Enterprise Architecture Conference
•The IT Outsourcing Conference
George Schussel
George Schussel was born in 1941 in occupied France during World War II. In 1942, Schussel’s father brought the family out of German-occupied territory into Spain, and subsequently into the United States. Educated at UCLA on the west coast and at Harvard on the east coast, Schussel became best...
and his wife Sandi from their home in Massachusetts. It evolved out of a series of database seminars taught by George Schussel
George Schussel
George Schussel was born in 1941 in occupied France during World War II. In 1942, Schussel’s father brought the family out of German-occupied territory into Spain, and subsequently into the United States. Educated at UCLA on the west coast and at Harvard on the east coast, Schussel became best...
in the 1970s.
EarlyDevelopment
In the early 80’s the United States was coming out of a steep recession, and the DCI company grew quickly as demand for improved knowledge about the use of information technology (IT) soared. Experts in other IT fields were drawn to DCI as a way to spread knowledge about the IT discipline.Success
DCI’s business model underwent two significant paradigm shifts in the two decades following its inception. In the late 1980s, the company began to launch larger multi-speaker conferences. Then, around 1990, DCI began to serve a larger constituency by sponsoring trade show expositions as well as educational events. This expansion of DCI’s model was responsible for dramatic growth experienced in the 1990s.In 1990 the company moved into the historic Ballardvale Mill (1835) in Andover, Massachusetts. The mill helped DCI with good fortune as the company’s revenues grew from $12 million to $45 million during the decade of the 90’s. DCI produced an average of 120 seminar, conference, and exposition events a year. The majority were held in the United States, but the company also had a significant presence in Canada, Germany, and Australia. It held smaller numbers of events all over the world in mostly European and Asian venues.
DCI was a leader in creating and producing high technology conferences and tradeshows. Most of the company’s events were about the management of computer based systems for improved business efficiency. The company’s events were market leaders in the fields of database management systems (DBMS), eBusiness, application development, sales force automation (“SFA”), data warehouse, and customer relationship management (CRM) areas. DCI produced approximately 120 conferences, seminars, and expositions annually.
As the 1990s wore on, the Internet became of ever- increasing importance in communicating with IT professionals. DCI evolved a product line of on-line communities and web sessions for business professionals to serve this need.
DCI’s products served on the order of 200,000 business professionals annually from a customer database of over one million. The events were highly regarded for their content, educational focus, and ability to draw important industry exhibitors and qualified speakers. DCI events consistently drew real users and companies that needed to purchase software solutions, and, for that reason, the events were popular with the software vendor community.
Examples of conferences and expositions run by DCI included:
•Business Intelligence World Conference & Expo
•CASE World
•Client/Server World
•Corporate Portals Conference
•Customer Relationship Management Conference & Exposition
•Database World
•Downsizing Expo
•eB2B World
•eCRM University
•eCustomer Conference & Exposition
•Information Architecture Conference & Expo
•Internet Expo
•Managing Enterprise Networks and Systems
•Microsoft TechNet Symposium
•National Software Re-engineering Conference
•OSF/DCE Developer’s Conference
•Summit on Wireless Computing
•Sybase User Group Annual Conference
•The Enterprise Architecture Conference
•The IT Outsourcing Conference