At the end of September, the international IT company Endava opened a new office in Sofia, thus making the first step towards stable expansion of its team in Bulgaria. Strengthening its delivery capability in Central Europe, Endava entered the Bulgarian market at the end of 2016, through its merger with the software development company ISDC. The company announced its intention to increase the number of employees over the next three years. Currently Envada operates with 70 local developers, aiming to grow to 180 by mid of 2018, and up to 400 by the end of 2020.
The new office space spreads over 2 floors with the total area of 2,200 square meters in the newly-built Millennium Business Center in the very heart of the city. The workplace has 14 conference rooms, coffee and lounge areas, game room, library and parking places.
Aiming to grow to up to 400 Endavans locally by 2020, last week, we celebrated our new office space in Sofia. https://t.co/hAKsk4sHPm pic.twitter.com/eJHGLAmi5x
— Endava (@endava) September 22, 2017
About Endava
Envada’s headquarter is in London and operates with 14 offices worldwide with nearly 4,000 employees working with some of the biggest names in industries such as Technology, Telecom, Insurance and Banking. Currently, the international IT company boasts a revenue of over 115 million pounds.
Endava considers Bulgaria as a strategic hub for the IT services it renders. “With over 50,000 IT professionals and 2,000 IT graduates per year, Bulgaria is a strong IT hub, and Endava considered this location due to its engineering talent, excellent English language skills, good connections to European capitals, and good fit for the delivery of IT projects in North America, Europe and the Nordic countries. ”, the official press-release sais.
Envada’s local team consists of developers, architects, test engineers, Java, .Net, Scrum specialists, mobile application specialists, automation testing specialists, business analysts, and more. The Sofia office will further strengthen the network of Endava delivery centres in the region, together with the teams in Belgrade, Bucharest, Chisinau, Cluj-Napoca, Iasi, and Skopje.