Why Khulna sellers short-list me as the best company to build their store
Khulna does not need a prettier shopfront. It needs a store engineered to hold up - because in this city the build breaking is what costs you the order.
Almost everyone who searches "best online store development company in Khulna" has already had the demo phase work fine. A page got designed, it looked clean, it loaded on the seller's phone on a good day. Then real traffic arrived and the cracks showed: stock counts that drifted, a checkout that timed out when three people ordered at once, a bKash confirmation that never came through, an order that lost its address somewhere between cart and courier panel. That is the gap the word development is pointing at. Design is what a buyer sees in the first two seconds; development is whether the thing actually works on the fortieth order on a Thursday night. In Khulna the seller who gets burned is almost never the one with an ugly page - it is the one whose store could not take the load it finally earned. The best company here is the one that builds the unglamorous engine right, not the one with the slickest sample theme.
What makes a Khulna store its own brief is the kind of goods that move through this city. Khulna is the gateway to the whole southwest - the fish and shrimp trade, golda and bagda heading out to Dhaka and abroad, jute, Sundarbans honey and dried fish, the agro produce coming up from Satkhira, Bagerhat and Jashore. Plenty of these are heavy, perishable, or sold by weight, and the buyer is rarely the person next door - she is in Dhaka or Chittagong, sometimes the Gulf, ordering something she cannot inspect first. So the store has to do two hard things a Dhaka boutique template never plans for: charge delivery honestly when a five-kilo parcel of dried fish costs nothing like a single saree to send, and hand that order to a courier whose pickup from Khulna is a scheduled run, not a rider ten minutes away. A store built on the assumption that every parcel is light and starts inside the capital will quietly bleed your margin on every order. Building from the fact that you ship weight, outward, from the southwest is exactly what separates a real Khulna store from a borrowed Dhaka one.
When you hire me you are not hiring a company where a salesman closes the deal and a junior you never meet writes the code. I am the discovery call where we map how your orders really flow today, the catalogue structure, the design, the front-end and the checkout code, the bKash and Nagad integration, the cash-on-delivery and courier logic, and the person who answers when a payment looks stuck the night before a big push. One senior developer, around five years deep into building stores for Bangladeshi sellers - the fish-and-dry-goods trader still taking orders in DMs, the home-food and clothing brands that grew off KUET and the city's student crowd, the agro seller who needs a store that does not buckle in a seasonal rush. One thread for the entire project. That single point of accountability is the whole reason a one-person studio out-builds a named agency on a store like this: nobody quietly hands your checkout - the one part that touches real money - to whoever happened to be free that week.
Pricing is honest and fixed, with no agency overhead baked in. 50,000 BDT for a clean, focused store - catalogue, cart, bKash or Nagad plus cash-on-delivery, weight-aware delivery charges, courier-ready nationwide addresses and an order dashboard - enough to get a Khulna Facebook seller off the inbox-and-screenshot routine for good. 90,000 BDT for the standard store with deeper categories, variants and units (by piece, by kg, by dozen), coupon and delivery-charge rules, and proper product-photo layout. 1,50,000 BDT for a larger catalogue with customer accounts, real stock control, abandoned-order follow-up and richer reporting. From 3,00,000 BDT for fully custom builds - multi-vendor, ERP or POS sync, direct courier API, export-order workflows. Always 50% advance and 50% on launch by bKash, Nagad or bank transfer, and you approve the full design before a single line of code is written. That is the design-approval guarantee, and it means you never pay the balance for a store you did not sign off.
See pricing in BDT