Coverage and updates from Geisel Software, new programs, recognition, and notable milestones across the work we’re shipping.
Founder Brian Geisel announced that Jeff Mitchell has been appointed Chief Executive Officer, responsible for scaling operations, expanding market reach, and driving the company’s next phase of growth.
read announcement →Named to the prestigious Inc. 5000 2025 list of the fastest-growing private companies in America for the fourth consecutive year, placing Geisel among a select group of companies showing sustained growth and resilience.
read announcement →Symage is a groundbreaking synthetic image generation platform that provides custom 3D photorealistic synthetic image data with pixel-perfect smart labeling, enabling AI models to achieve greater accuracy.
read announcement →Geisel Software secured a place on Inc. magazine’s Inc. 5000 2024 list of America’s fastest-growing private companies for the third year in a row, achieving a national ranking of 2,556.
read announcement →A robust growth rate of over 237% earned the company a spot in the top half of the list, recognizing sustained expansion in custom software for robotics, AI/ML, and IoT.
read announcement →Geisel Software named to the Inc. 5000 list, the most prestigious ranking of the most successful companies within the American economy’s most dynamic segment, its independent small businesses.
read announcement →Massachusetts-based custom software development firm Geisel Software ranked in the top 100 on the 2022 Inc. 5000 Northeast regional list, where companies posted an average growth rate of 208%.
read announcement →NASA M-STAR funding supports collaborative research between Geisel Software and Fayetteville State University on Active and On-demand Multi-Robot Perception (AOMRP).
read announcement →NASA STTR contract awarded to Geisel Software and Arizona State University (ASU) to support new research into advanced swarm robotics technologies for space exploration.
read announcement →Geisel Software and the University of Nevada Las Vegas (UNLV) awarded a NASA JPL Phase I STTR contract to support development of a robot simulation platform.
read announcement →The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) named Brian Geisel, CEO of Geisel Software, the Massachusetts Small Business Person of the Year for 2020.
read announcement →CEO Brian Geisel presented at LiveWorx ’19 on “End-To-End IoT Security: A Safer Internet of Things,” covering common security pitfalls in IoT and how to avoid them.
read announcement →The head of Worcester technology firm Geisel Software is the Massachusetts small business person of the year, the U.S. Small Business Administration said. Brian Geisel is the CEO of Geisel Software, a firm whose clients include iRobot, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Carbon Black and PharmAdva.
read article →Geisel Software (GSI) CEO Brian Geisel sits down with Tim Murray, President and CEO of the Worcester Regional Chamber of Commerce, to discuss Geisel Software’s continued growth, success, and vision for the future.
watch interview →Passion is often discovered at an early age and that was the case for Brian Geisel. Software development clicked for Geisel as a successful career path and more than three decades later, he was named 2020 Massachusetts Small Business Person of the Year.
read article →Great quality assurance is what turns great software into great product. As consultants, Geisel Software works with a variety of organizations, gaining exposure to many different products, development processes, and testing approaches.
read article →According to Brian Geisel, who runs a Boston-based software company, encryption features prevent Amazon from reducing costs as smaller and cheaper processors will not be enough for such protection.
read article →“While Amazon is trying to shrink their costs, adding extra encryption makes it impossible to use a cheaper, smaller processor,” said Brian Geisel, who runs his own software company in Boston.
read article →“I think there’s a lot of things in the agricultural and fish markets they haven’t even thought of yet because there was no way to do it. But now the tools are showing up. The reduction in cost of sensors means you can put a lot more of them in places that historically didn’t make economic sense.”
read article →“If it’s something you would have done for free, then stock can be a great motivator and could certainly pay off long term,” says the developer and CEO of Geisel Software, a Massachusetts-based web and mobile-development company.
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