Ready4S
visit site- $50,000+
- 50 - 249 employees
- Kraków, Poland
Ready4S is a full-service web and mobile app development company based in Cracow, Poland, with offices in the UK and Ukraine. Started in 2011, this team of 25+ creates digital solutions for organizations both large and small.
Client Insights
Industry Expertise
25%
20%
15%
10%
10%
10%
10%
Client Size Distribution
Small Business (<$10M) 15%
Midmarket ($10M - $1B) 55%
Enterprise (>$1B) 30%
Common Project Size
$10K-$49K 18 projects
$50K-$199K 9 projects
$200K-$999K 4 projects
Clients
- Uber
Highlights from Recent Projects
Ready4S undertook a project for Trace One, a product lifecycle management software company. The company's existing applications were 15 years old and required a complete redevelopment. Ready4S was engaged to provide additional developers to supplement their internal teams and offer specific skills for a new product in the portfolio. The project involved PHP application development, customization, testing, and QA resources. The SaaS solution developed is a web-based application hosted on the Google Cloud. The engagement started in January 2019 and has cost just shy of €1,000,000 (approximately $1,200,000 USD) so far.
Ready4S collaborated with Lexly, a legal tech platform, to rebuild their old platform that was difficult to scale. The project involved building AWS infrastructure and front- and backend applications. One of the products developed was a dropbox for legal documents with features like e-signature and reminders. Another effort was to enable a lawyer to configure a web form for generating agreements online. The third product, a CRM system mainly aimed at lawyers, is still in progress. The project kicked off in September 2019 and has cost around €500,000 (approximately $563,000 USD).
Ready4S partnered with Uber, the ridesharing company, to work on a project related to firmware. The company required professional engineers who could understand the project and build the system along with their internal team. The project involved working with hardware electronics, writing drivers, working with sensors, IoT devices, microcontrollers, NFC technology, GSM, GPS technology, and more. They also built an automated assistant, a hardware-in-the-loop (HIL) test system. The project, which started in September 2019, has cost over $1 million and is still ongoing.