Prologic Technologies
visit site- Undisclosed
- 10 - 49 employees
- Sahibzada Ajit Singh Nagar, India
Client Insights
Industry Expertise
35%
25%
10%
10%
10%
10%
Client Size Distribution
Small Business (<$10M) 40%
Midmarket ($10M - $1B) 55%
Enterprise (>$1B) 5%
Common Project Size
$50K-$199K 3 projects
<$10K 1 project
$10K-$49K 1 project
Clients
- doocle
Highlights from Recent Projects
Prologic Technologies was hired by a media company, Talk to Santa, to develop a website and all the technology for the business. The company needed a platform where children could interactively live video chat with Santa Claus. Prologic Technologies designed the website and app for iOS and Android using PHP, JavaScript, and MySQL, and hosted everything on Amazon's server. They also integrated a database with MailChimp for email reminders, receipts, and privacy statements. The product accepts credit cards and allows the sale of gift cards. The project was completed within the budget of $40,000 from July to November 2015.
The Illustrated Media Group, an entertainment content provider, approached Prologic Technologies to build a new website. The previous site was cluttered and outdated, and the company wanted to highlight the achievements of their partner, the former editor-in-chief of Marvel. Prologic Technologies developed a new website from scratch on WordPress, showcasing the company's achievements and properties, and including a gallery section for their illustrated work. They also redesigned a blog according to specific requirements. The project, costing around $2,000, was completed from August to December 2020.
Gotcha Mobile Solutions, a digital agency and software company, hired Prologic Technologies to build a new platform with features and software products. The company had hundreds of clients on their platform and needed a quick solution after running into problems with their third-party platform partner. Prologic Technologies built the new platform from scratch in about three weeks using KPHP as a framework, Apache servers, and MySQL database. The platform included a QR code dashboard, digital prize wheel, scavenger hunt game, and scan-to-win game. The project, costing between $25,000 and $30,000 annually, was completed in 2 to 3 years, starting in early 2011.