In this episode of The Nearshore Cafe Podcast, host Brian Samson founder of Plugg Technologies, sits down with Amir Reiter CEO of Cloud Task, to discuss the journey of scaling a successful business in Colombia. Amir shares how he transitioned from working in the U.S. to building a thriving B2B marketplace for GTM services in Medellín, known for its vibrant entrepreneurial scene.
U.S. entrepreneurs are relocating to Medellín, Colombia because the city combines affordability, quality of life, and access to nearshore talent. Known as the “City of Eternal Spring,” Medellín offers year-round mild temperatures between 65–82°F, healthcare costs that are 75% lower than in the U.S., and a strong base of English-speaking professionals. Its proximity to the United States, just three hours from Miami, makes it an attractive hub for business operations. With a thriving expat entrepreneurial network and a growing tech ecosystem, Medellín has become a top choice for founders seeking work-life balance while building companies powered by skilled LATAM developers.
CloudTask, led by Amir Reiter, scaled to 265 contractors and more than $6M in revenue by merging Silicon Valley startup culture with nearshore hiring in Colombia. The company focused on recruiting top GTM talent such as SDRs, AEs, and CX agents from across Latin America while creating an entrepreneurial culture that treated team members as partners rather than just employees. By offering leadership pathways, building trust through in-person collaboration, and maintaining U.S.-style organizational structures with full English fluency, CloudTask developed a loyal and high-performing nearshore team. This model delivered startup-level agility at a fraction of U.S. costs, demonstrating the strategic advantage of building LATAM-based teams.
AI is redefining the future of nearshoring and global hiring by enabling smaller, more specialized teams to achieve greater results with fewer resources. Tools such as ChatGPT, Gemini, Manis.im, and Perplexity are already helping professionals in Latin America and beyond work faster and smarter. Rather than replacing jobs, AI is empowering employees to become transformation agents who deliver higher-value outcomes for U.S. companies. According to Amir Reiter, this shift means startups can now achieve billion-dollar scale with lean headcounts of fewer than a dozen people. CloudTask embraces this reality by training its workforce on AI adoption, making automation a core enabler of talent arbitrage and positioning LATAM developers at the center of the future of nearshore work.
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**Brian:** Welcome, everyone, to another episode of the Nearshore Cafe podcast. I’m your host, Brian Samson. If you’re interested in doing business in Colombia, running a software company out of Colombia, wow, this is going to be an episode for you! I’ve got Amir Ryder, CEO of Cloud Task. Before we officially welcome Amir, let me thank our sponsor, Plug Technologies. Plug.gg – a great way to connect talent, especially technical talent, from Latin America to growing US companies. Amir, so great to have you on the show.
**Amir:** Likewise, dude. Appreciate the invitation.
**Brian:** Amir, where in Colombia are you calling from?
**Amir:** Yeah, I’m in Medellín right now, but I spend a lot of my time in San Francisco, where we have an office and headquarters. And then I sneak back nearshore for the good food, the good weather, the safety and security, and just loving it here. I’ve actually, I’ve been to a lot of places in Latin America, but I have yet to make it to Medellín.
**Brian:** Oh, you’d love Medellín. I’ve heard it’s like perpetual spring. But for those like me who’ve never been there, it’s called the Eternal Spring.
**Amir:** Yeah, yeah.
**Brian:** Tell me, tell me more about Medellín. Like, quality of life, what it’s like living there.
**Amir:** Yeah, I wrote an article called “The New American Dream.” It’s on Substack. And I just, you know, for me, it’s 65 to 82 degrees every day. There’s no daylight savings, so you’re not up at 9:00 with the light. I sleep at 8:30, and I’m just on an amazing schedule, which is, you know, really underrated. The food itself is 75% cheaper and healthier. And then, you know, everything, the cost of living is just much lower. And healthcare, like my healthcare in America is like $900 a month for me and my family, and here it’s $190. And I just, you know, for me, it’s an amazing place that I just truly love. And there’s just an awesome entrepreneurial network there. There’s like the CEO of Beehive, shout out to Tyler Den, who just moved here, and just a lot of tech people and a huge community. I’m in like a paddle group of like a hundred CEOs of tech companies that live down here, which is great. And then, you know, I go to San Francisco all the time for just my clients and just, you know, meeting the people that aren’t as fortunate to be able to just move back and forth. I guess I’m very lucky to be able to just have that liberty to be in two cities and split my time. But yeah, for me, it’s just a magical place.
**Amir:** You know, I know that you were in BA, right, Buenos Aires? So, I kind of look at it like a BA that’s like a smaller city that’s just closer to the Americas, right? Like Buenos Aires is maybe like, I don’t know, an eight-hour, ten-hour flight to the States, and you know, Colombia is like three hours from Miami. But it’s just, I went to Argentina, and I fell in love as well, right? So, I like it. It’s a beautiful place.
**Brian:** Awesome. Yeah, would love to, would love to check it out. Tell us the story, like, how did you end up there?
**Amir:** Yeah, so I had an advisory board member, Eric Amon, who was the CEO of Answers On Demand. It was a PC ERP medical software, and he sold it for a great deal. And he was like, “Amir, let’s go to Colombia.” And he was my mentor, and I was like, “Sure, you know, like, I’m learning, you know, like my mentor, I’ll come with you.” I was like the 32-year-old at the time that was gifted with the gift of gab and socializing. And he was the, you know, 60-year-old, recently divorced, getting back into the game type of person. Sorry, Eric, if I air you to do laundry on this call, he’ll be fine.
**Amir:** So I went there, and then I also had a team in the Philippines at the time, which was great. They’re awesome. But I came down here, and my, the guy at the hotel, who’s now our VP of Global Talent, his name is Daniel Agudelo. And I just had, you know, I was chatting with him, and this guy spoke fluent English. I was like, “Yo, what, you know, what do you make a month?” And he’s like, “$700 bucks.” And I was like, “Wow, you’re the same quality of an SDR in San Francisco making…” And I decided that it would make sense to, at the time, I wasn’t running a B2B marketplace. I was an agency, and we got to about 265 employees. I really, I kind of brought down B2B SaaS outsourcing from a sales and customer success perspective. I had amazing customers like RingCentral, Expensify, Apollo, all SaaS companies that would hire CS, CX, and SDRs and AEs through us. And so that brought me down was the talent I met, and just the, you know, the adventure of something new. Where, like, I already knew what Home Depot, and I kind of knew the whole America story like the back of my hand. And like, you could close your eyes and basically predict the next 15 years of your life. Where in Colombia, just cool stuff, just random weird things, and you’re just like, “This is strange, but cool.” So it’s also very mentally engaging, and just different cultures are great, right? And so that brought me down here, just a random trip with an advisory board member. And then at the time, I had an agency, like a call center type of thing. And I built a team here at that time.
**Brian:** And you remember what year this was? Was this?
**Amir:** 2016.
**Brian:** 2016. Okay, okay. Oh, how time is…
**Amir:** Yeah, I’ll be 42 in June. Don’t ask me how. But fortunately, I got married and have a daughter. So, you know, I’m not Peter Pan anymore.
**Brian:** Yeah, yeah, funny enough, 2016 was the year that I, I first went to Argentina. So we were doing it the same year, just in different countries. That’s awesome.
**Amir:** Yeah, yeah, our energies connected eight years later for the podcast.
**Brian:** Yeah, yeah. I like it. I like it. Small world. Did you meet your spouse in Colombia?
**Amir:** Yeah, I was buying computers for my team. She was working at the electronic store outside. And I said, “Guess what I said?” I said, “Hi, how are you? What’s your name? I’d love to take you on a date.” Right? For anybody listening, that’s pretty much all you need to say to get a date. Anything else is too much.
**Brian:** Yeah, yeah.
**Amir:** And, and we were like friends for eight years. She was going through law school, and then, you know, we had a very mature conversation about building a family. And she’s actually our Chief Operating Officer. Her name is Jessica. And she’s just great. Very fortunate to have a very traditional, non-traditional relationship where my wife gets to really focus on the family, but also gets to be a part of every meeting in the company. And she’s got equity in the company, and she’s smart. She deserves it. She earned it, right? So, really lucky in that. I’d bring the baby in, but, you know, too much time.
**Brian:** Yeah, yeah, show me a picture. Here’s the picture. That’s the wife and the baby. Love it. Yeah, love, love the family. That’s awesome.
**Amir:** So, I’m a rebel, so I was like, “We’re gonna have five kids.” You know, it’s great.
**Brian:** There you go. So, was Medellín the first city that you set up in in Colombia?
**Amir:** Yeah, and then I got an office in Bogotá as well, but Bogotá is a little bit cold and a little rainy and a little dangerous. Medellín is a sweet spot for me. I’m just really big into nature and hiking. And on the weekends, I go to a waterfall hike, and I got a Viszla, which is an awesome, very hyper dog. I got my dog in Argentina. We flew to Buenos Aires to pick him up.
**Brian:** No kidding!
**Amir:** Yeah, yeah, the, you know, from a champion breed. And he’s a little model. He like, he poses for pictures and stuff. It’s in his blood. It’s funny.
**Brian:** That’s great. So, talk us through that very first hire, because there’s people listening here, they’re like, “Wow, this is a really interesting thing.” They’re kind of hanging on every word of the VP of Talent, you know, the amazing arbitrage. Like, first hire, you know, how, how did that all work out? Like, what, what did you do to make that happen?
**Amir:** I, you know, I set up my job opening with my clear description of the job, my clear expectations, and my salary range. And then I allowed people to apply to it, and I reviewed the resumes, and I interviewed people that matched that job opening. And then I made an offer to the people that I felt were best fit. Unfortunately, the average, the average everybody in my company now has been with me for eight years, which is awesome. And they’re all contractors. So, anybody who says they have to hire W2 for longevity is just not really thinking smart, because it really matters, you know, like your culture and and your payment structure versus the contract, right? Like the average two months. And, you know, I made friends with all the people I hired, 265 that were actively working, and probably hired like 700. A lot of them have gone on to bigger and better things, to opening up agencies. And I just kept a good network of them and stayed friendly with all of them.
**Brian:** Yeah. And did you make that first hire, you were still living in San Francisco, or you were already in Medellín by then?
**Amir:** I was in Miami at that time. Yeah, I was in South Beach. And yeah, I, I named Julian Moreno. He’s now one of the VPs at Globalization Partners, which is a big company. He was one of my first hires out of Bogotá. And he brought someone else that he knew in his network. And, you know, I flew to Colombia and got an Airbnb, and we were all sharing it together. And then I actually had like this penthouse that was huge that I actually had some of my founding employees lived with me. One, Eddie Betoh, who’s my co-founder, actually married Maria Sanchez, who was the lady who was my CFO and did all the government passports. And they ended up getting married and having a kid. And it was interesting, it was like a, like a work frat house, but good time. I like to live life a little bit, you know.
**Brian:** Yeah. Now, California, Miami, these are places where Spanish is already prevalent. Did you have to worry about like, did you have to become bilingual to do it? Is everything?
**Amir:** No, I barely speak Spanish. I had handlers the whole time. So, I’ve just been handled. Like, Maria was my initial handler, right? So, just taking me to all the banks. I’m signing things, I’m stamping things. So, everybody I hired spoke English, and I was friends with them kind of. So, I constantly just had handlers. And now my wife is my handler, so she does all my visas. She’s a lawyer. She takes me to the doctor’s office, tells me to shut up and not be rude, you know, things like that. She’s happy I don’t speak Spanish, because, you know, I got a little bit of a gift of gab, and I just, you know, I talk a lot. So, she thinks it’s good that I don’t speak Spanish. But in ‘pincito’, I’m going to continue learning. But I’m an anomaly. Like, for someone who doesn’t speak Spanish, I met the coolest people in Medellín: the business owners, the private families, the founders. So, all my friends are just top, top-performing people. So, I guess that’s who I want to hang out with anyways. But I’m also, you know, I’ll admit that it’s a little bit embarrassing that I don’t speak Spanish fluently, but nobody’s perfect. You know, I got areas of opportunity, and got to work on it.
**Brian:** I think that gives a lot of people from the States confidence, you know, that you can not only…
**Amir:** You go around to Miami, and they don’t speak English. I go to Miami, they’re like, “How about it’s different because you’re like, you should speak English, right?” Here, you’re not like, “You should speak English.” You’re like, “Shit, I should speak Spanish.”
**Brian:** Yeah.
**Amir:** But like, wait a second, Google translates language in real time. I don’t know if everybody saw that update. Sorry, no excuses now, you know.
**Brian:** Yeah, for sure, for sure. Espanol. You know what, what, you know what’s funny is when I was in Argentina, absolutely. But I live in Hawaii, really don’t get a chance to practice it. And just like you, Amir, everybody that I work with speaks advanced English. So, you know, their English gets better, my Spanish gets worse.
**Amir:** Yep, yeah. And I think having respect for the culture and the people and the land is equally as important as language, right? Like, I don’t come here and try to push my, I try to push my ambition and my speed and things that will help people get to the next level. But I embrace the culture, embrace the people, and I have a lot of respect for it. And it’s a journey, right? Like, now that I have a daughter, I’m sure that she’s going to be learning how to speak, and I’m gonna be learning how to speak Spanish with her, right? Life’s a marathon, right? So, maybe in like 10 years, me and you will be in Medellín speaking Spanish together.
**Brian:** Love it. Love it. Yeah, you never know, right? So, Cloud Task, tell the audience a little more about what it is, what does it do?
**Amir:** Yeah, we’re a B2B marketplace that’s focused on GTM services, full-time candidates, and software. So, we’re kind of bringing together the account executives, the SDRs. There’s almost 120 positions that are just customer-facing roles. Obviously, you know, we partner with you guys on the development side, right? And then lots of software, like Apollo, Clay, Warmly, all the technologies that people use for go-to-market functions. And in GTM, you got sales, marketing, operations, customer success, customer support, right? And then with agencies, think about all the call centers, telemarketing centers, inbound centers, lead generation agencies, SEO, there’s almost 50 types. So, we basically help buyers know what they’re buying and not have buyer’s remorse, because it’s such, there’s like 40,000 call centers, and 40,000 agencies, a thousand GTM softwares, right? So, we really make sure that people know what they’re buying, what the business challenge really is, so that they don’t have buyer’s remorse. And, you know, think of it like an Upwork, or an Airbnb, or an Uber, but just for GTM functions, right? For sales, support, operations, CX, which is big, right? So, we’re focused, but focused on a very big part of the market, and that’s what we do. That’s what we do. We help people, we help people find the right sellers and the right partners. We might even get you listed, because we have a business challenge called building teams, and then website development. And that’s where you’re going to be in, because that’s the business challenge you solve for, right?
**Brian:** That’s right, that’s right. We’ll definitely talk more about that.
**Amir:** Oh, it’s done. Sorry, you’re in, you opted in.
**Brian:** Yeah, I appreciate that. Yeah. What I’m, what I’m really interested in, Amir, is the scale that you got your team to. I mean, phenomenal. And, and, and how did that maybe intersect with like the original vision of Cloud Task and where Cloud Task evolved to and scaling around that and yeah, of doing that?
**Amir:** We scaled to 265 contractors. We were about 6 million in revenue. And in America, you wouldn’t be profitable with the math there. But because the cost of goods was 75% lower, we were very profitable and successful. And I really pivoted because I saw an opportunity to solve a big problem and to build a billion-dollar company. And depending on how I stick the landing, I might be like, “Oh, that was a great idea, pat on the back,” or be like, “You’re an idiot.” Right? Because I took a very profitable business and ripped it apart. But it was, you know, for me, I just, I saw myself kind of stuck with success, which is not a bad thing, right? It just, I really saw the fact that buyers didn’t know what they’re buying, and that the status quo, like someone had to take a chance to really help the industry, because people just wanted to hear… If you told, if you came to me and you’re like, “Hey, I want to hire some sales development reps. We need to generate meetings.” And I told you, “Hey, it would take 90 days, because there’s no market validation, and I can’t promise you 15-minute meetings,” the person would go to the competition who lied to them. And I felt like that, that wasn’t the way people should buy, right? So, by being a marketplace, I got 5,000 options. I could really pay attention to your real business challenge and give you options, and not sell you because I got it all. Also, it’s kind of like if your car is a BMW, but I got all the brands, I’ll give you the right brand, because I just didn’t like the fact that, you know, status quo was telling people what they want to hear, and that was the normal, right? And at the same time, like from a capitalistic, I wanted to fix a big problem, and I wanted to do a good thing, but I also wanted to be rewarded for doing that, right? I don’t want to state that, you know, I wanted to build a billion-dollar company by doing that, and also at the same time, helping people getting out of the call centers, like you’re doing, right, which is a noble thing because you’re helping young professionals that work very hard just access jobs and opportunities they didn’t have a chance to before, right? So that was why I did the pivot, and hopefully partnerships like ours are, you know, make it worthwhile in the long run.
**Brian:** Yeah, just different business model, right? One builds cash, one makes money. Love it. Yeah, tell, tell us more about the actual scaling of your company, because I’m, I’m just super impressed that. Yeah.
**Amir:** Yeah, yeah, so we scaled from zero to 6 million in like three years, and a lot of it had to do with getting in a plane and meeting everybody face-to-face and driving. Like some of our biggest clients, I’d land in New York City, and then I drove to Boston, seven hours. And they’re like, “Yeah, you won the business, because you’re the only CEO who got in the car and drove seven hours and looked me in the eye.” Yeah, so I built really strong relationships with people who, you know, it’s required when they’re trusting you to build and manage teams. And I treated the employees with more of a sense of entrepreneurship, where I was teaching them, “You know, the world is yours.” And they kind of saw me cold calling and doing whatever I asked them to do, I do myself, right? So, I think in this culture, there’s more of like, “I’m the boss, you’re the employee.” And if they called me the boss, I’d be like, “I’m not your boss, I’m the chief,” right? Like, I might be leading you, but I’m not your boss, right? Like, I’m willing to roll up my sleeves and work side-by-side with you versus putting my feet up and bossing you around. And I think that was a big part of the reason why I scaled fast. It was because the culture was more like a San Francisco startup versus, you know, like, yeah, like I was less like, “This is your job,” more like, “This is your career,” type of thing, right? And really just, I think that it was natural because I really felt that way, and I think people can tell that I was just ready to get down and dirty with them, you know.
**Brian:** Yeah, yeah, I like it. Can you walk us through maybe even how you set up, or like, did it mirror what, like, the type of titles and positions and departments, did it mirror what you might see in San Francisco, or?
**Amir:** Yeah, it was, you know, I had a COO, I had three Account Executives, maybe five Account Managers, a VP of Operations. Very similar, no different. Everybody spoke English. Everybody worked for American companies. Most of the people I hired already working for AT&T and Cricket, and these big organizations.
**Brian:** Yeah, yeah.
**Amir:** You know, my co-founder, Eddie Betoh, was working for Fitbit customer support. So, yeah, same title, same structure. The only difference was like, “Hey, there’s 22 holidays on a Monday in Colombia. They’re not for you, they’re against you. So you could be lazy, you’re going to work on this holiday.” And it’s a different mentality of, you know, instead of drinking on a Monday, because think about it, right? They have 22 Mondays off. Okay, well, China’s not taking off on Monday, right? And you’re competing against the global stage. So, I just kind of showed them that, like, “Hey, you’re kind of being duped by your government into thinking that these holidays are…” They didn’t even know the holidays. They didn’t even know the holidays! “What is the holiday?” They had no idea. Multiple saint days, right? But they don’t know. All they knew is they had a long weekend and they couldn’t go party, and it held their career back. And it was a way for the government to keep the poor poor, right? They think you’re giving them something, but what they’re giving you is a way to just climb the ladder and fall back down.
**Brian:** Yeah.
**Amir:** Right? So, I kind of came in and said, “You want to work for a plumbing company, go do that. You want to work for us? You’re going to get education, exposure to tools, exposure to AI,” which now, you know what I mean, now, “but you’re going to work on the American days, right?”
**Brian:** Yeah. So, it’s a give and get, right?
**Amir:** Yeah, I think, you know, you probably seen that in Latin America, they’re more trained on how to sue the employer than they are how to make it, because that’s what they’re given. They’re not given the opportunity to move up the ladder. They’re given opportunity to sue the employer, right? And I was like, “Yeah, you can’t sue me, I’m an American,” you know, like, “I’m not, you know, I’m not hiring an unemployment contractor, independent contractor, and you’re going to have to work hard and earn skills.” People are given things that distract them, right? So, I felt like the government was pulling the shades over the eyes of the general population while the top 1% is working and crushing weekends, the average person is partying and taking off. And right, like, okay, if you’re, you know, and there’s, it’s backwards in this culture. A lot of the, a lot of the kids are taking care of the parents. The parents don’t retire at 50, the parents get supported by the kids. And there’s one way to break that trend, by somebody saving money and investing, right? So, some of the guys I’m working with now have like stock portfolios, they have like Bitcoin, because I talked to them about that, right? And I would say stuff like, “Hey, it’s not fair that you’re, now that you make more money, you give your family more money, and they retired at 50.” Like, where does it stop, right? It’s this never-ending vicious cycle. And I just kind of told them the truth. It hurt their feelings, but they could see that I kind of meant it from a point of like empowering the next generation, right?
**Brian:** Yeah, I like that. I think that’s really good advice. Is there any other advice that you give maybe U.S. CEOs who are trying to build?
**Amir:** Fly down, meet your team, take them out to dinner. And I have a company called Expensify. They have 48 Account Executives for five years. Well, guess what? They flew out, they met the team, they took them, and they’re still there, right? Everybody who flew out to visit their team still has the team. Anybody who just hired an outsourced third party, fired them. Treat them like they might work with you for eight years. Get to know them and build real relationships in person.
**Brian:** Yeah, that’s great advice, great advice. I want to talk more, Amir, about AI. You’re very well-versed in it, your company. What do you see, what are some of your predictions, and then maybe even how it might impact nearshoring?
**Amir:** Yeah, faster, cheaper, more efficient. I see it making everything faster, cheaper, and more efficient. And I see the fact that companies are going to have, could probably be able to be leaner on the headcount and achieve more. But there also might be more startups, right? So, instead of having bigger companies, I would predict that there’s going to be many small specialized companies, right? So, if you need a million people employed, and that was in 500 companies, now it might be a million across 2,000. And I think that what I’m trying to do is just get the hands, get the tool. Like I have an example, I got this guy Daniel Agudelo. I joked around, because on LinkedIn, I put some posts about how he didn’t speak English when I met him, which is not true, he did. And now he programmed a candidate assessment of Lovable, right? And just letting people know that you got to break things if you want to learn something. Just start using these tools. Use Manis.im, use Lovable, use Chat GPT, use Gemini, use Perplexity, and ask it questions. It’s about the questions you ask it. If you ask it, “How do I improve my career and protect myself in the next five years?” it’ll give you an answer that can help you. If you ask it, you know, “Who should I bet on in the next NBA basketball game?” you might get some good information, but it’s not going to… So, it’s like, anything is as good as the questions you’re asking. We’re just getting information faster, right? So, just make, make pretend that you’re using the tools the right way. And then, you know, there’s going to be a big opportunity for you to be a transform agent, meaning like, “Hey, I’m going to come to your company and share everything I know with AI to make you do things faster, cheaper, more efficient,” versus being replaced by it. So, if you don’t want to be replaced by it, you should be using it. If you’re not going to use it, expect to be replaced by it.
**Brian:** Yeah, and I sent an email to my team basically saying, “Hey, guys, we’re going to grow a billion-dollar company with 12 employees or less. You have a choice. You can either use these tools, and I’ll pay for them, or you can resign.” Nobody resigned, and everybody’s using the tools.
**Amir:** Awesome. I love it. I love it. And that even goes for me, yeah.
**Brian:** Yeah, yeah, I’m sure you saw the email from, I think, the Fiverr CEO, right? Like, even, even the CEO…
**Amir:** Yeah, that was something similar, I saw that. And it’s true, right? Because it’s like, you’re just, you’re telling them the truth. And it goes for me too, right? Like, as a CEO, there might come a day, like a year from now, where I can get replaced by AI, right? I might, I might own that AI at that point, right, which might still be beneficial. But I don’t think anybody is safe from innovation and change. And it’s not a you versus them type thing. It’s like, we’re just innovating fast, and you could be a leader or a laggard, right?
**Brian:** What’s your favorite AI tool?
**Amir:** Yeah, I’ve been having a lot of fun with Caption App, you know, where you can kind of, your own, your own avatars. Are you vibe coding?
**Brian:** You vibe code?
**Amir:** I’m not a vibe coder, but I’m seeing a lot of this vibe coder trend. Are you all right?
**Brian:** No, I don’t know, maybe, depends. I’m seeing, I’m seeing the trend, maybe, maybe I’ll become a vibe coder. It seems like…
**Amir:** Yeah, I think there’s a lot of FOMO right now around vibe coding, so we’ll see. Yeah, I’m like, you know, it’s, I started making prototypes. So, like, I wouldn’t say I vibe coded, but for me to communicate with my CTO and my dev team, I was starting to be able to use Manis to get this prototype on a website. Makes so it’s technically vibe coding. So, yeah, I guess I am vibe coding, you know.
**Brian:** There you go. There you go. Good, good stuff. Well, as we start to wind it down, I just want to ask a fun question. What are, what are some of your favorite must-go-to restaurants in Medellín?
**Amir:** Juan de la Diablo, best steak. Yeah. And then I go to Hakanami, which is the best sushi. El Cielo is like a five-star restaurant, which is awesome.
**Brian:** Yeah, awesome, awesome. Cool. We’ll definitely put those in the show notes for everybody. Yeah. Well, Amir, this has been super fun. I’m just really impressed with how you took the risk, built something really special, did it all in Colombia, and embraced the culture. So, kudos to you.
**Amir:** Likewise to you, man. You did the same thing, so I’m also impressed and I appreciate you having me on.
**Brian:** Absolutely. Well, you’re listening to the Nearshore Cafe podcast. This is Amir Ryder from Cloud Task. This podcast is sponsored by Plug Technologies. Plug.gg connects talent from all over Latin America to growing U.S. companies. We’ll see you next time on the Nearshore Cafe podcast. Thanks for listening.
Brian Samson
Founder at Plugg Technologies
Brian Samson is the founder of Plugg Technologies and a veteran tech entrepreneur, with 10 years building successful nearshoring companies. Brian has helped to grow Plugg into one of the leading nearshoring agencies, connecting technical talent in Latin America; including Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, Nicaragua and Colombia with top U.S. companies. Plugg consistently hires and places over 100 LATAM resources each year.
Plugg sponsors and Brian Samson hosts the leading podcast about doing business in Latin America with 70+ episodes, The Nearshore Cafe Podcast. In addition, Plugg brings insight and clarity to clients by supporting them with the details, big and small, to set their team up for success. Everything from currency, customs, hardware, and culture, Plugg provides advice and guidance based on first-hand expat experiences living and doing business across multiple Latin American countries. Plugg Technologies is a trusted partner for businesses seeking future-ready tech solutions including cloud infrastructure, cybersecurity, and digital operations positions
Brian holds an MBA from UCLA Anderson and prior, was an expat in Argentina and a VP of Talent for several San Francisco startups with multiple successful exits (IPO & acquisitions). In his free time he supports foster kids and is a dedicated family man.
Ready to Grow With a Team That’s Invested in Your Success?
At Plugg Technologies, we connect you to nearshore talent that brings real advantages: shared time zones for easier collaboration, strong English proficiency for clear communication, and significant cost savings without compromising quality.
Beyond top talent, we deliver thoughtful guidance and premium, white-glove service — all backed by deep expertise in Latin America and a genuine commitment to your success.
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