DEV Community

Manish Bhattarai
Manish Bhattarai

Posted on

How Percime Technologies Is Building Global-Ready Products from Nepal

Nepal’s tech ecosystem is quietly changing.

Over the last few years, more Nepali teams have moved beyond outsourcing and support work and started building product-grade software, scalable platforms, and globally usable tools. What’s interesting is not just that this is happening—but how these teams are approaching engineering, ownership, and delivery.

One of the companies contributing to this shift is Percime Technologies, a Kathmandu-based technology firm focused on cloud engineering, product development, and delivery-ready teams.

This post looks at Percime’s approach, the products they’ve already shipped, and what their work says about where Nepali tech is headed.

From Service Mindset to Product Thinking

A common challenge in emerging tech markets is remaining stuck in a “task execution” mindset—delivering features without owning outcomes.

Percime started with a different assumption:
engineering teams should own results, not just tickets.

That philosophy shows up in how they work with clients and in the internal products they’ve already launched.

Instead of positioning themselves as a general IT vendor, Percime operates as:

  • A cloud and software delivery partner
  • With engineers retained on Percime’s payroll
  • Accountable for continuity, performance, and delivery quality

This structure reduces coordination overhead on the client side and keeps architectural decisions closer to the engineers who implement them.

What Percime Has Already Built

Before scaling services aggressively, Percime focused on shipping real products—something many service companies delay or avoid.

🔧 PercimeTools

A growing collection of practical utilities aimed at developers, operators, and everyday workflows.

The emphasis is on:

  • Speed
  • Simplicity
  • Tools that solve one problem well

👉 https://tools.percime.com

📅 Evento

An event and scheduling platform designed with lightweight workflows and clean UX in mind.

Evento reflects Percime’s preference for:

  • Minimal abstractions
  • Predictable behavior
  • Clear ownership of state and data

👉 https://evento.percime.com

🎮 Battleboard (In Development)

Percime is also building a multiplayer game platform—Battleboard—which is shaping how the team thinks about:

  • Real-time systems
  • State synchronization
  • Performance at scale
  • Product-driven iteration

👉 https://battleboard.fun

Building a game alongside enterprise work has helped the team sharpen product instincts that translate back into client projects.

Engineering Principles They Apply Consistently

Across services and products, Percime’s work reflects a few consistent engineering choices:

  1. Cloud-Native by Default

Infrastructure decisions favor scalability, observability, and clean separation of concerns from day one.

  1. Delivery Over Headcount

They avoid the “more people = more output” trap by keeping teams small, accountable, and ownership-driven.

  1. Product Discipline

Even service engagements are treated like products:

  • Clear scope boundaries
  • Defined success metrics
  • Iterative releases instead of endless revisions
  1. Long-Term Maintainability

Architectural decisions are evaluated not just for speed today, but for clarity six months later.

Why This Matters Beyond One Company

Percime Technologies isn’t important because it exists—it’s important because it represents a pattern.

More Nepali tech companies are:

  • Shipping products alongside services
  • Owning architecture and outcomes
  • Competing globally without hiding behind low-cost positioning

This shift improves:

  • Developer skill depth
  • Product maturity
  • Global trust in teams operating out of Nepal

Looking Ahead

Percime is still early in its journey, but the direction is clear:

  • Build first
  • Learn fast
  • Scale responsibly

As more companies from Nepal take this approach, the global perception of where high-quality software can come from will continue to expand.

And that’s a change worth paying attention to.

Top comments (0)