Website design company sylhet — what "company" should buy you
Why a one-person website design company in Sylhet is more accountable than most firms with an office
When you search "website design company in Sylhet" instead of just "website design," you are saying something specific: you want a proper outfit, not a part-timer who builds on the side and stops replying the week you need a change. You want a contract, an invoice, a process, and the comfort that the thing won't collapse if one person gets busy. That instinct is correct. The problem is that the word "company" on a Sylhet homepage guarantees none of it. A trade licence and a stock-photo "Our Team" page can sit in front of exactly the setup you are trying to avoid — one person selling, and a rotating cast of cheap freelancers building whatever lands cheapest that month. The label is doing the reassuring; the structure underneath may be thinner than a careful freelancer's.
Here is the part that surprises owners. The reliability you actually want from a company — someone accountable, continuity after launch, work that doesn't get dropped mid-build — often survives better in a focused solo practice than in a small firm that churns staff. In a thin agency, the developer who knew your site quits, the file gets handed to whoever is free, and your context evaporates with the person who left. With me there is nobody to leave. I am the discovery call, the structure, the design in Figma, the front-end code, the launch, and the WhatsApp line you message a year later when you need a price changed before a customer walks into your Bandar Bazar shop. One named senior operator, roughly five years deep into shipping sites for Bangladeshi businesses, holding the whole thread. That is what "company" should have meant all along: a single point of accountability that does not dissolve.
Sylhet sharpens why this matters, because of who signs off on the spend. A large share of business money here is remittance — the Londoni and Gulf families funding restaurants, wedding and event venues, hotels and guesthouses, real-estate projects, clinics and retail back home. Those families often insist on dealing with a "proper company," because abroad that is how they vet a vendor: who are you, where is the paper trail, who is liable. They are right to ask, and I answer it cleanly — a written scope, a contract, a 50/50 invoice, your assets in your own name. But I also tell them the truth they don't expect: in this market, a registered logo is not the assurance they think it is, and a senior person they can name and reach directly is worth more than an office address they will never visit. The probashi relative judging your site at 1am their time against the fast UK and Gulf sites they use daily cares whether it loads and looks credible — not whether a brochure says "company."
Pricing is fixed and plain, because the first message is almost always "koto taka?" Plans start at a 50,000 BDT floor for a focused, fast build — who you are, what you offer, and a contact line that reaches a real person. 90,000 BDT covers a fuller multi-page site with service or product sections, a gallery and proper lead capture. 1,50,000 BDT is a content-deep, bilingual Bangla-and-English site with deeper navigation and buyer-facing pages. Fully custom builds from a blank canvas start at 3,00,000 BDT. Payment is always 50% advance and 50% on launch — bKash, Nagad or bank transfer — and you approve the complete design before a single line of production code is written. Your domain, hosting and files are registered in your own name, never locked on my account. No platform you keep renting from me, no surprise monthly "maintenance" invoice landing the month after launch. That is the company structure you wanted, without the part where the work quietly leaves the building.
See pricing in BDT