About website development in Khulna
In Khulna the hardest part of website development isn't building the site — it's the owner who quietly believes a Facebook page already does the job
Most website development conversations in Khulna start with a question the owner is too polite to say out loud: amar to Facebook page ache, website lagbe keno? It is a fair question, and in a referral-driven city it has held up for years. Khulna business runs on knowing people. The shrimp buyer came through a relative, the showroom regulars walk in from the para, the contractor gets the next job because the last client passed his number along. A Facebook page felt like enough because, for that crowd, it was — they already trusted you before they clicked. The trouble is that the moment you want someone who does not already know you — a foreign seafood buyer vetting a new supplier, an out-of-town client comparing three firms, a bank or a tender committee checking you exist — a Facebook page stops being an asset and starts being the reason you look small. This page is about the gap between those two worlds, and what real website development actually buys you on the far side of it.
Here is what a Facebook page cannot do, and why it matters more in Khulna than people admit. It does not show up when someone Googles your trade plus 'Khulna' — your competitor's actual website does. It does not let a buyer in Europe or Dhaka read your full capabilities, your certifications, your real work, at their own pace at 11pm; it buries all of that under a wall of boosted posts and a Messenger button. It is not yours — Meta owns it, can restrict it, and can take the whole audience you built with one policy change you never see coming. And it makes the unspoken judgement for you: a serious operation has a website, a hobby has a page. None of that means you abandon Facebook. It means the website is the thing that does the heavy lifting Facebook was never built for, and the page becomes what it should always have been — a feed that points people to the real thing.
So when I take on website development in Khulna, I run it as one managed project with a clear shape, not a vague favour that drags for three months. We start with a short discovery call about what your business actually needs the site to do — sell, reassure a foreign buyer, take enquiries, list services, take a bKash deposit. I structure the pages, design the homepage and bring it to you to approve before I write any code. Then I build it on a clean WordPress or Next.js base depending on what fits — kept deliberately lean, because every extra plugin is a future auto-update waiting to break your layout after I hand over. You get a clear timeline, one WhatsApp thread to one person, and a launch day you can actually plan around. The single point of accountability is the entire offer: when something needs changing before a buyer meeting, you message me, not a ticketing system.
Pricing is fixed and the same in Khulna as it would be in Dhaka — you are simply not funding a Gulshan office or a sales team. 50,000 BDT for a focused 5-7 page business site, properly built and fast. 90,000 BDT for a larger build with a blog, custom sections and stronger on-page SEO. 1,50,000 BDT for a full bilingual site with deeper navigation, buyer-facing pages, or a basic shop. Genuinely custom development — real ecommerce, buyer portals, dashboards, order or shipment tracking, API integrations — starts from 3,00,000 BDT. Always 50% advance and 50% on launch, by bKash, Nagad or bank transfer, and you approve the full design before I write a single line of code. If your budget is honestly under 50,000 BDT, I will tell you that on the first call and point you to a real template option instead of shipping something I would be embarrassed to put my name on. Around five years building sites across Bangladesh tells me a cheap one always comes back as a rebuild.
See pricing in BDT