Ecommerce website design company Sylhet
In Sylhet, "company" is a word people hide behind. Before you pay, ask who, by name, builds the store — and who picks up when an order breaks at 9pm.
When a Sylhet seller types ecommerce website design company in Sylhet into Google, the word "company" is doing something specific: you want someone you can hold responsible. You have probably already met the version that disappoints — a "company" that is really one marketer with a Facebook page, who takes your advance, buys a ready-made template, sub-contracts the actual work to someone you never speak to, and goes quiet the moment the bKash flow needs fixing. Sylhet has more of this than most cities, because so much of the money here comes from abroad and the budgets look tempting to anyone willing to call themselves a firm. The instinct to want a real company is correct. The mistake is thinking a registered name or a desk in Bandar Bazar is the proof. The proof is whether one accountable person designed your checkout and answers their phone in month three.
I run it the opposite way, deliberately. I am RH Fardin, a website designer and developer based in Bangladesh with around five years of full-time work behind me, and on your project I am the entire company — discovery, store structure, design, checkout code, bKash and Nagad integration, the admin training, and the WhatsApp line you message when a price needs changing before a customer arrives. For an ecommerce store this single thread matters more than it does for a simple brochure site, because a store has moving parts that have to keep moving every day. There is no salesman out front promising you a senior and no junior quietly rebuilding the store in week two. One name on the contract, one number to call, and that name and number are the same person who wrote your code.
Sylhet commerce is its own animal, and a store built here has to respect that. Some of my Sylhet clients are Zindabazar and Bandar Bazar retailers and restaurants going online properly for the first time; some sell the valley's own goods — tea from the surrounding gardens, citrus, traditional items — to buyers who are not all standing in the same city; and a large share have a son or daughter abroad who is the one actually paying and the one doing the due diligence on whoever they hire. That last detail changes the brief. Your buyer in Uposhohor pays the way the whole country pays — bKash, Nagad, cash-on-delivery on a mid-range Android — and that has to be fast and obviously trustworthy. But the relative checking you out from London or the Gulf judges the store, and the company behind it, in seconds, and walks if either looks flimsy. I build for both, because in Sylhet they are often the same sale.
The pricing is fixed and public, and it reads the same whether your buyer is in Ambarkhana or Whitechapel. 50,000 BDT for a focused, fast, mobile-first store — a real catalog of roughly 20 to 150 products with a working bKash, Nagad and cash-on-delivery checkout, a phone-editable admin panel, and SEO basics at launch. 90,000 BDT for a deeper build with bulk product import, stock control and a richer category structure. 1,50,000 BDT for a content-heavy, bilingual store with larger inventory and stronger buyer-facing pages. Fully custom platforms — marketplaces, subscription boxes, complex logistics — start from 3,00,000 BDT. Always 50% advance and 50% on launch, by bKash, Nagad or bank transfer, and you formally approve the full design before that final payment is due. Your hosting, domain and admin access stay in your name from day one, because a company that holds your store hostage is not a company any Sylhet seller should hire.
See pricing in BDT