The Nearshore Cafe

Costa Rica's Silicon Valley: Building a Data & AI Company for US Life Sciences

Brian Samson Season 2 Episode 32

In this episode of The Nearshore Cafe Podcast, host Brian Samson sits down with Arturo Garcia, CEO & Co-Founder of DNAMIC | Databricks Data Solutions, to discuss how Costa Rica has emerged as Latin America’s Silicon Valley for AI & Data Solutions.

Arturo shares his journey from medical school to building DNAMIC, a company that grew from a small startup to a million-dollar enterprise in just one year. Learn how the company’s “Work from Happiness” culture promotes productivity and employee satisfaction while providing high-quality solutions to clients worldwide.

Key topics include:
 ✅ The rapid growth of DNAMIC in the AI, Data Engineering, and Healthcare sectors.
✅ Why Costa Rica’s political stability and strong education system make it ideal for nearshoring.
✅ Navigating regulatory compliance and data security when working across borders.
✅ The unique Work from Happiness model that fosters creativity and efficiency.
✅ Costa Rica’s evolving reputation as the Central American Silicon Valley.
✅ The future of AI and Data Science for companies like DNAMIC.
✅ Insights into Costa Rican culture, tourism, and talent development.

This episode is packed with valuable insights for anyone interested in Nearshore Outsourcing, AI solutions, or building successful remote work cultures.

🔗 Connect with Arturo Garcia on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/arturogarciaf/

💡 Follow The Nearshore Cafe Podcast for more discussions on Nearshoring, Latin American Tech Talent, and Cross-Border Collaboration!

Host: Brian Samson | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/briansamson/
Sponsor: Plugg Technologies | PLUGG.tech

📢 Don’t forget to LIKE, SUBSCRIBE, and TURN ON NOTIFICATIONS for more insights on Latin America’s growing tech scene! 🎧🔥
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Speaker 1:

Welcome. Welcome everyone to another episode of the Nearshore Cafe podcast. I'm Brian Sampson, your host. This podcast is sponsored by Plug Technologies pluggtech great way to connect talent from all over Latin America to growing US companies. If you are interested in life sciences, regulatory healthcare and how it connects to Costa Rica, wow, this is going to be an awesome show for you. Let me introduce Arturo Garcia, out of Costa Rica, the CEO of Dynamic. Welcome, arturo.

Speaker 2:

Thank you, brian, thank you for having me here.

Speaker 1:

So, as we talked about, you're building a company from Costa Rica that impacts healthcare in the States. That's a lot in itself. How did this get started, and maybe even pre-company? You've had a really interesting journey in your life, in your career. I think our audience would be fascinated by that. Could you share more how this all came to be?

Speaker 2:

Well, yeah, thank you, and I would call it kind of like unusual. So here's the thing when I first went to college, I was trying to become a doctor. So I did medical school for three and a half years and I loved it Like I absolutely loved it the science, the hospitals, the technology for diagnosing patients, all of that Right. But after like three and a half years, my younger brother and co-founder of Dynamic, our CTO, andres Garcia, came to me saying hey, arturo, how about if we start a technology company? It sounded super exciting, man, and he eventually convinced me. So I was like all right, let's do this. So I was super excited about switching to software engineering. Now my dad, on the other hand, who had been paying for medical school for three and a half years, wasn't so thrilled about it. So he said you know what, arturo, if you're doing this, you're paying for it. So I got myself a job and I paid for software engineering school, which I ended up dropping at some point, but that's a topic for another time.

Speaker 1:

Cool. What was the vision? You're with your brother, andres. Help us understand the day one vision. We all know in entrepreneurship sometimes things pivot, they change over time. But day one what were you guys trying?

Speaker 2:

to build? Yeah, no. So, as I was saying, you know, I got myself into software engineering and started working on tech projects as a quality assurance person, and then, after that, project management, and then leadership in general and then sales, and that's when things got interesting. Right, we started paying attention to the US market and the boom in the mobile applications world, and so the vision was let's serve the New York market, which we had most of our connections back in the day 2014, when we started Dynamic let's focus on serving the New York market with the best mobile applications on earth, and that was the vision back then. I mean, this is 2014,. Like, mobile applications have been booming since 2008,. Right, and we had a lot of experience building mobile apps. So that was the initial vision. But then, at some point, we started doing web development, project management, digital production, all of that and eventually, at some point for the past three years, we switched to data and AI, so we can focus on a different niche.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Did you find a client and then kind of work from there, or were you and your brother? Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Because we had been working on IT services from Costa Rica. You know, since the early 2000s, we built a good from Costa Rica. You know, since the early 2000s, we we built a good network of connections, you know, especially in New York, and so we got ourselves our first project. We started Dynamic in 2014. Back then it was me, my brother our co-founder in California, by the way, sufjan and, of course, a few old laptops and a lot of Red Bull man.

Speaker 1:

A lot of Red.

Speaker 2:

Bull, and that way we took this company like working hard, not getting that much sleep. We took this company from zero to a million dollars in just one year.

Speaker 1:

Awesome, that's incredible. You don't hear that very often. How about the early software developers that you brought on? I'm assuming these are all guys from Costa Rica.

Speaker 2:

Yes, yes, so the beginning of the company was focused on Costa Rica and then we expanded to other regions. But at the beginning we started bringing the people that we knew and trust people that knew we would deliver the level of quality that we wanted to offer to our clients. And so we brought close friends and, of course, family. Dynamic is a family company, so we brought on board family and then, you know, at some point it was 10 guys, then 20 guys, then 30 guys up to the point in which, nowadays, we're more than 100 people.

Speaker 1:

So I've been lucky enough to visit Costa Rica, but as a tourist I wasn't thinking any business there. You know. We quickly were in San Jose, but otherwise Manuel Antonio ended up proposing to my now wife, you know way back.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, you did that right. You proposed to Manuel Antonio.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I proposed to Manuel Antonio, so it's got a special place in my heart. But I and I think we saw Cloud Forest and where they have the coffee. But, arturo, we want to give our listeners a great sense of Costa Rica as a business hub. Yes, but maybe even before we start there, just tell us about Costa Rica overall.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so Costa Rica is this beautiful green country in Central America, very peaceful, green country in Central America, very peaceful. The country abolished the army back in 1948, I think and ever since we invested all of that money into education and so Costa Ricans were not used to an army, not used to seeing guns and all of that right. So we're a very peaceful country, generally speaking. Three and a half hours flight from major cities in the US, so not that big of a long trip.

Speaker 2:

Right, and then you'll get to meet these just friendly people, highly educated, in this beautiful green country. The generally speaking Costa Ricans tend to be good at making conversation. We're good at becoming friends and building just genuine relationships right. As you can see, we have an accent. Like most people in Costa Rica, I had an education, basic education that includes English lessons, but that's not usually that great to make conversations, so we have to take courses. Additionally, there's lots of higher education institutions and, generally speaking, we have great universities Actually the best and this is a fun thing about Costa Rica, a fun fact about Costa Rica the best and highest quality higher education institutions in Costa Rica. Universities are free and mandatory. Did you know that? I can hear you.

Speaker 1:

That's right. And, arturo, what are some of those universities that are maybe some of the ones that you personally like to recruit out of?

Speaker 2:

Right. So we don't really pay that much attention to which college you went to and we don't really pay that much attention to degrees generally speaking. Essentially, at Dynamic, we want to hire people with the right knowledge. We vet them properly. They take technical tests with us. We focus on values and we focus on their ability to be creative. The degree or what college they graduated from, it's not that big of a deal for us.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, tell us more about what the staff looks like. So you've got about 100 or so people. Are they all software developers, ui, ux, devops, qa? What kind of roles are they doing?

Speaker 2:

Yes, but keep in mind that we expanded to Mexico as well, right, so nowadays we have resources across Latin America, but mostly Costa Rica and Mexico. In our company, most of our developers are nowadays full-stack developers data engineers, data scientists, devops people for sure, lots of them UX, ui people, project managers, technical leads like you name it right Everything you need to grow an IT consulting company. But see, that's the thing. For the past three years, we've been specializing more and more and specializing in specific niches, including healthcare and life sciences. We no longer do that much work when it comes to mobile applications, but we want to focus more on data engineering, data science, ai solutions those kinds of things for the healthcare and life sciences industries.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's something I'd love for you to dive in deeper. Southern California, san Diego area, huge place for life sciences, yes, and I'm sure there are people listening that have maybe never offshored or nearshored and they're thinking like, wow, I'm in a very regulated space. Is that even allowed? Like, how does that even happen? Can you break it down, like what this ecosystem looks like? And the regulations, the compliance how does this all come together when you're working across borders?

Speaker 2:

So there's information you're not allowed to take across borders, but there's ways to work around that. For sure, it's not an impossible gap to bridge and so, as long as you have the right controls in place good VPN connections, security training, great security practices, encrypted data and you have people accessing that information in a secure way, that should not be a problem. So companies that think you know what, can I do this or can I not? There's definitely information you don't want to get out of your country because of local regulations, and each country has different regulations, especially when it comes to healthcare and life sciences. But then again, there are certain projects you can dissect, outsource and collaborate with people, as long as they have good HIPAA compliance training and the right encryption methods.

Speaker 1:

So thanks, Arturo. That really helped me understand how you guys are doing some of this cross-border and you're working across different industries too. You know life sciences, pharma and so forth. Can you share a little bit more about, like, maybe, how that might differ from industry to industry and how nearshoring can make it happen?

Speaker 2:

Absolutely. So. Keep in mind that we serve all kinds of clients, right From the earliest age startup all the way to mid-size companies and then very large pharma corporations. They all have different regulatory controls and policies, right. So your early age startup want to take care of the data. They want to control the data. They want to control the data. They want to share it with you in an appropriate manner, so they want to be in control of it and you accessing it remotely. They want to encrypt that information and then want you to use a VPN. And then midsize companies who uses things like monitors to keep track of patients' health care. Those kinds of things you cannot share. You want to keep in the US. And then large corporations like pharmaceuticals they want to keep things very, very tight and so they set up very specific controls and checkpoints and security controls for you to access their information and you have to sign additional NDAs with them. Again, it's all doable.

Speaker 2:

It's just a matter of the size of the organization and how they structure their security controls.

Speaker 1:

Arturo, I'm imagining the culture of your company is excellent. You're a great leader. Can you talk about how, maybe like advice for other companies, like how to build a great culture where you're able to work across borders and make your clients happy and then also you know Costa Rica is a more laid back place than maybe you know some other places in the US and how you're able to keep a great culture, make your clients happy, but then also you know kind of match the right energy.

Speaker 2:

Right. Right, and I think you already mentioned some of that, brian it's all about keeping things simple, like the most simple. You can keep things. I mean you have lots of things you want to take care of, right, security, controls, training, those kinds of things right, but you have to establish a good company culture in which you keep things simple and people understand that and they know that. So take, for instance, at Dynamic we do have offices, places that we go to work to, but then again, most of our work is remote. Our guys just meet every now and then to share experiences, to focus on a specific project, but they get to work from home.

Speaker 2:

And actually at Dynamic we call it work from happiness, because our guys are allowed to work from wherever they have internet connection. And so we've had people working from Europe, from the US. We've had some of our guys going to South America and just work for a month or two because we allow that. And so as long as you keep things simple and you focus on the important things like quality, deadlines, good communication, your client will feel happy. Brian, it's all about keeping things simple. You know you want to.

Speaker 2:

There's many things you have to do in a company. You have to serve your clients, but you also have to give services to your people, and so, as long as you focus on the right things like quality, deadlines, budget your customers will appreciate that you're keeping things simple. And so, for instance, at Dynamic, we have a policy that we don't call work from home. We call it work from happiness, meaning that you get to work from wherever you're happy, as long as you have a good internet connection and when you have happy people. From wherever you you're happy as long as you have good internal connection and when you have happy people collaborating with you. They have the proper, the appropriate training and the right values.

Speaker 1:

They deliver on time, high quality work and your customers will be happy, amazing and um, in your company, um, could you give us a little more idea on, like, the structure of you see you've got leads and maybe architects and VPs and so forth.

Speaker 2:

How do you kind of put all that together as there's client facing roles, heads down roles, yeah, so keep in mind that I'm an extremely practical person, Brian, and we can come back to that in a moment. But then again, I try to keep dynamic as lean as possible in terms of company hierarchy. Try to keep dynamic as lean as possible in terms of company hierarchy.

Speaker 2:

We don't think a project manager is a more important person than a developer or a quality assurance engineer. We're all the same right. We're all contributing to successful projects and so, yes, we do have people doing the development, we have a leadership structure, we have project managers leadership structure, we have project managers. But then again, some of our projects tend to be more lean in the sense that at some point, a technical lead could be acting as a project manager and we don't really need a full-time project manager. Sometimes we're building a project for one of our customers and we only need the intervention of a project manager every now and then to set up the right project infrastructure or the right best practices, and then, after that point, we continue on our own.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I wanted to come back a little bit on Costa Rica as a business destination. You know, one of the unfair things is Latin America sometimes gets lumped in like it's one singular country right and problems that maybe another country experiences, you know, has nothing to do with another country in Latin America. You know from internet outages to you know, inflation and unstable currencies or governments. Can you talk about some of that and then you know if there are any challenges that you're trying to manage within Costa Rica?

Speaker 2:

Right, so that's a great question. I mean, let's split that into three parts, right? So the country has the Costa Rica has the longest democratic record in Latin America over 200 years of democracy, which is great record in Latin America over 200 years of democracy, which is great. Lots of political stability. The currency is super stable as well. So those are good things for companies to set up their own team or their own branch in Costa Rica. That is the reason why we have companies like HP, alienware, ibm, you name it.

Speaker 2:

Lots of large, large corporations in the US have operations in Costa Rica. So that's one part. Then the other thing is I mean, yes, across Latin America we have 650 million people and roughly half of them are part of the workforce. Throughout Latin America we have thousands of great universities, very old universities with great practices and great teaching programs. Costa Rica has the same as well. And then about the culture so the culture in Costa Rica is very laid back. We're very friendly, but then again, just great values overall. If you talk to Costa Ricans and you have collaborated with Costa Ricans you know that we're friendly people and we want to learn continuously. Now, in that part, I would say that not only Costa Rica, but all of us, because of these AI changes and these new discoveries we're seeing on AI pretty much on a daily basis, we have to train ourselves to learn more and more and in a faster pace. Nowadays.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, tell us more about that, about AI. I mean, we're in the middle. It's changing so fast and every day. What does that mean for you, for your company, for the vision of your company? How is the? You know? What are you trying to do to make sure you're ready for these new changes?

Speaker 2:

Right. So I mean there's so much to learn in AI, in data and data science, these kinds of things. You're seeing discoveries on a daily basis, as I was saying. So essentially, the way you address all of that is by having the right company culture and a set of small good practices, by having the right company culture and a set of small good practices. So at Dynamic we have different Slack channels for different topics, because if you try to address everything in AI in just one Slack channel, it's going to become like one of those newspapers that talk about everything and no one's really paying attention to anything.

Speaker 2:

Right, that's one. And then the second thing is having that new learning mindset, and so that has to come from the upper management. So, for instance, I made it a personal challenge for me to learn as much as I can about AI for the past five years, and so that's part of the reason why I don't really write emails. I actually don't type. I try to keep my keyboard away from me as much as I can, because I talk to my computer Like, if you think about it, speech-to-text technology has been available since 2017 and most people they're not really aware of this, so you no longer need to write emails.

Speaker 2:

You can talk to your computer and speech-to-text technology will allow you to do way more than your fingertips could ever do. Right, that's one. And then continuously have built and deployed programs in your company to encourage people to learn more, and, of course, lots of gamification and just highlighting people who has either gained a certificate or a new ability, a new skill set.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Now for the fun stuff. Arturo, let's talk about tourism in Costa Rica. Absolutely, people that are visiting what do they have to put on their must-do list, their bucket list, when they visit Costa Rica? Where should they go?

Speaker 2:

When you come to Costa Rica, you definitely want to spend some time in San Jose, get to see the city, get to know the people, but then, if you have some good time, say you know, five days, six days, go to the mountains, go to the beaches, just enjoy the relaxing environment in Costa Rica and we have. As you mentioned before, manuel Antonio is a great area with lots of nature. To the south of Costa Rica, in one specific region of Costa Rica, we have 6% of the world's biodiversity, which is just amazing. I mean, it's just impressive. In natural reservations you'll see crabs, monkeys, like it's very usual for you to be in a restaurant and have a monkey stealing your food which is fun, but not that fun if you paid a lot of money.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's great. Tell us about the food. You know, what should someone expect food-wise when they visit Right?

Speaker 2:

So in Costa Rica we eat a lot of rice and beans and combinations of those things. Actually, the thing we usually have for breakfast in Costa Rica it is a combination of rice and beans which we call gallo pinto. I think it's the same, very similar. In Nicaragua they have their own version, and throughout different countries in Central America they have their own version of these dishes. You have to try the pinto with eggs, beans and then a little bit of meat to have some fun Sour cream. For sure, when you come to Costa Rica you have to try the chifrijo and then the local cheese in different towns in Costa Rica. Man, you will love it. And of course the coffee. Costa Rican coffee is top coffee on earth.

Speaker 1:

It really is. I live in Hawaii, as some of the listeners know. Hawaii coffee is quite good, but Costa Rican coffee is.

Speaker 2:

Oh, absolutely Absolutely, and I'm glad to hear that you proposed to your wife in Manila, antonio.

Speaker 1:

It's just a, it's a very romantic, uh, beach town, for sure yeah, absolutely uh, and then ziplining, of course, is is a very popular thing of course you have to do it and you have to.

Speaker 2:

You have to just sit in one of those little local bars, have you know? See the sunset, enjoy a beer or some drinks.

Speaker 1:

Man, it's just beautiful, amazing arturo, this has been a fascinating conversation. I've learned a lot more about costa rica. Costa rica as a really great business destination, a place to put your developers, other, other people, the laid back vibe, english speaking, anything else that I missed that you'd like to add?

Speaker 2:

Yes, yes, I would say Costa Rica is known as the Central American Silicon Valley, which is a good thing in terms of reputation, but also in terms of the challenge it represents for us in Latin America, in Costa Rica. So, definitely a place you want to check out, great place in terms of stability, setting up your own operation and then, just you know, grow and have a beautiful, fun place to go and visit your team every now and then.

Speaker 1:

Amazing. This podcast was sponsored by Plug Technologies PLUGGtech Great way to connect talent all over Latin America with growing US companies. Arturo, thanks again for being a guest on our show. Thank you so much, brian. All right, thanks everyone. We'll see you next time.