Pluriza
visit site- $5,000+
- 10 - 49 employees
- Barranquilla, Colombia
Pluriza is a development firm. Their team of around 15 employees is based in Barranquilla, Colombia. They focus on custom software development, web development, and IT staff augmentation.
Client Insights
Industry Expertise
15%
15%
10%
10%
10%
10%
10%
10%
10%
Client Size Distribution
Small Business (<$10M) 80%
Midmarket ($10M - $1B) 20%
Common Project Size
$10K-$49K 3 projects
$50K-$199K 1 project
Clients
- Autocab UK
Highlights from Recent Projects
Pluriza was hired by dexFreight to create a web application for tracking container export processes at the Port of Veracruz, Mexico. The goal was to store status changes with its owner, timestamp, and location on a federated blockchain and display this information in an easy-to-understand format. Pluriza designed, developed, and deployed both the front and back end on AWS, provided documentation and training. The team comprised of a project manager, a full-stack developer, two front-end developers, and one back-end developer.
A startup service company hired Pluriza to provide two full-time software developers to complete their We Lease web application. The objective was to develop a functional solution that would address the needs and expectations of their target customer. Pluriza's team, consisting of two software developers skilled in React, built front and back components on user onboarding screens, filters for buildings, user registration, and the creation and management of databases. The final result can be viewed at https://yoarriendo.co.
Post-Acute Analytics, a healthcare informatics company, engaged Pluriza to develop algorithms and APIs for several scorecards and dashboards. The project aimed to expedite the process of bringing several products to market. Pluriza's team, which started with two engineers and expanded to three, developed algorithms that calculated various types of quality measures. They also provided documentation on executing computational pipelines and setting up docker files. The project, which lasted from October 2019 to April 2020, cost between $75,000 and $80,000.