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Business Consultancy in Bangladesh

Business Consultancy in Bangladesh

Md. Joynal Abdin
Founder & Chief Executive Officer, Trade & Investment Bangladesh (T&IB)
Executive Director, Online Training Academy (OTA)
Secretary General, Brazil Bangladesh Chamber of Commerce & Industry (BBCCI)

 

Running a business in Bangladesh has never been fuller of opportunity and never more complex. Competitive pressure is rising across almost every sector, customers are increasingly digital-first, compliance expectations are expanding, and access to affordable finance remains a challenge for many firms. In recent private-sector diagnostics and firm-level surveys, constraints like electricity reliability, access to finance, and governance-related frictions repeatedly appear as major operational hurdles for companies especially smaller domestic firms that don’t have large buffers or specialized teams.

 

At the same time, Bangladesh’s economy is still moving forward, with multilateral institutions continuing to publish growth outlooks and policy notes that signal both risk and resilience in the macro environment. For business owners, this combination growth potential plus operational constraints creates a clear message: decisions must be faster, smarter, and more evidence-based than before.

 

This is where business consultancy becomes practical not as a “luxury,” but as a structured way to reduce expensive mistakes, professionalize decision-making, and build a business that can scale sustainably.

 

What is Business Consultancy?

Business consultancy is a professional service where an experienced individual or a consulting firm helps a business solve problems, improve performance, and achieve specific goals using structured analysis, planning, and execution support.

 

In plain terms, a consultant brings three things most businesses struggle to maintain consistently inside the company: outside perspective, specialized expertise, and proven frameworks. A good consultant does not just give advice; they help you clarify what is actually happening in the business, identify the highest-impact opportunities, design a workable plan, and set up a method to execute and measure results.

 

In Bangladesh, business consultancy often covers a wide range of needs because many companies are growth-driven but resource-constrained. That means a consultant may be asked to support strategy, operations, finance, HR, marketing, sales, compliance, export readiness, digital transformation, process improvement, or even crisis turnaround sometimes several at once.

 

Why Business Consultancy Matters in Bangladesh’s Business Reality

Many Bangladeshi businesses are built with exceptional entrepreneurial energy, but the operating environment can be demanding. Finance constraints are widely discussed in Bangladesh’s MSME context, and development-focused institutions regularly highlight gaps in access to finance and structural barriers that make scaling harder for smaller firms.

 

When a business runs into a bottleneck cash-flow gaps, margin erosion, sales slowdown, production inefficiency, high employee turnover, compliance issues, or weak systems the owner often becomes the “single point of solution.” That works early on, but it becomes risky as the business grows. Consultancy provides a way to convert owner-driven decisions into system-driven decisions, so the business becomes stronger than the owner’s personal capacity.

 

Benefits of Having a Business Consultant

Better decisions with less guessing

Many costly business problems come from decisions made with partial data: pricing without a real cost model, expansion without demand validation, hiring without role clarity, inventory without forecasting, or borrowing without repayment planning. A consultant typically introduces disciplined decision tools unit economics, break-even analysis, working capital mapping, funnel analysis, KPI dashboards, and process design so you can decide with logic, not only instinct.

 

Faster problem diagnosis

Owners often see symptoms, not root causes. For example, “sales are down” may actually be a pricing mismatch, weak lead quality, slow response time, inconsistent product quality, stockouts, poor channel incentives, or even a competitor changing terms. A consultant’s job is to isolate root causes quickly and propose a fix that fits your real constraints.

Structure and accountability

Plans fail when nobody owns execution. Consultants often bring execution discipline: timelines, responsibilities, SOPs, meeting cadence, KPIs, and follow-ups. This is especially valuable when internal teams are busy “running operations” and have little time to redesign how work should be done.

 

Access to specialized expertise without permanent payroll load

Hiring a full-time CFO, COO, HR head, process engineer, brand strategist, or compliance specialist can be expensive. Consultancy gives you access to senior skillsets for a defined period often the most cost-efficient way to build capability until the business can justify a full-time role.

 

Risk reduction in uncertain environments

When business environments have recurring constraints such as infrastructure stress, financing challenges, or changing compliance expectations risk management becomes a competitive advantage. A consultant can set up risk registers, scenario planning, supplier diversification, credit control systems, and compliance checklists to reduce “surprise losses.”

 

A Practical Guide for Business Owners

Services of Trade & Investment Bangladesh (T&IB)

Cost-Benefit Analysis of Having a Business Consultant

Business owners commonly ask: “Is a consultant worth the money?” The best way to answer is to evaluate cost versus measurable upside and avoidable losses.

 

Think of consultancy return in four categories:

1) Profit increase through margin improvement

A consultant may identify margin leaks you can’t easily see: unpriced overhead, inefficient procurement, high rejection rates, underperforming SKUs, or discounts that don’t convert to volume. Even a small margin improvement can be significant if your turnover is large.

If your business does BDT 5 crore annual sales and improves net margin by only 1%, that’s BDT 5 lakh additional profit per year often enough to justify many consulting engagements.

 

2) Cash-flow improvement through working capital control

Many Bangladeshi firms “look profitable” but struggle because cash is stuck in receivables or slow-moving inventory. A consultant can redesign credit policy, collection workflows, stock planning, and supplier terms. Working capital improvements can reduce borrowing needs meaning direct interest savings and lower stress.

 

3) Loss avoidance through preventing expensive mistakes

Common expensive mistakes include expanding too early, choosing the wrong location, buying unnecessary machinery, hiring the wrong leadership, entering a market without compliance readiness, or signing risky contracts. Preventing one major mistake can pay for consultancy multiple times over.

 

4) Capability building that continues to pay off

If the consultant leaves behind systems SOPs, dashboards, role structures, costing models, sales scripts, compliance checklists your team keeps benefiting after the engagement ends. That makes consultancy an investment, not only a cost.

 

A practical way to decide is to define the “break-even target” before hiring. For example: “If this engagement costs X, what improvement in monthly profit or reduction in monthly waste will cover X within 3–6 months?” If the target is realistic and measurable, you can proceed with confidence.

 

Why Every Business Should Have a Business Consultant (At Least at Key Stages)

Not every business needs a full-time consultant. But nearly every business benefits from consultancy at critical stages, because business stages create predictable challenges:

 

Stage 1: Early growth

You need product-market fit, pricing, sales process, basic accounts discipline, and a minimal operating system. Without structure, early growth becomes chaotic and fragile.

 

Stage 2: Scaling

This is where many businesses suffer because the founder’s personal control no longer works. You need delegation, process standardization, team KPIs, and cash-flow planning.

 

Stage 3: Expansion or diversification

New branch, new product line, new region, export entry, or digital transformation each requires feasibility analysis, risk control, and execution planning.

 

Stage 4: Turnaround or crisis

If profit is falling, debt is rising, or operations are unstable, consultancy helps with triage, restructuring, cash protection, cost rationalization, and negotiating with stakeholders.

In Bangladesh’s context where access to finance constraints and operational frictions can punish small mistakes structured advisory becomes even more valuable for owner-led firms that want stable growth.

 

How to Export from Bangladesh?

Export Support Services of T&IB

Types of Business Consultancy Services You Can Use

In Bangladesh, business owners typically seek consultancy in several high-impact areas:

 

Strategy and business planning

Market positioning, competitor mapping, growth strategy, diversification decisions, business model redesign, and long-term planning.

 

Finance, accounting, and controls

Costing, pricing models, budgeting, cash-flow forecasting, working capital control, internal controls, management reporting, and funding readiness.

 

Operations and process improvement

Workflow redesign, SOPs, productivity improvement, procurement optimization, quality control systems, inventory planning, and waste reduction.

 

Sales and marketing growth

Sales process building, lead generation strategy, conversion improvement, CRM setup, branding, digital marketing planning, and customer retention programs.

 

HR and organizational development

Role clarity, performance management, incentives, hiring systems, training plans, leadership development, and culture building.

 

Compliance and governance support

Company documentation discipline, policy setup, audit preparedness, contract hygiene, and basic governance frameworks that reduce operational risk.

 

Export readiness and international expansion

Export documentation readiness, buyer communication preparation, costing for export, market entry planning, and export operations setup. For many SMEs, this is a crucial area because global trade demands systems, not improvisation.

 

How a Good Consultant Actually Works

A professional consultancy engagement usually has a clear methodology: It begins with diagnosis. The consultant reviews financials, operations, customer data, processes, and leadership priorities to identify what matters most. Then comes problem framing turning your general concern (“profit is down”) into a specific, measurable challenge (“gross margin fell due to procurement cost increases and discounting; receivables increased by 20 days”). Next is solution design what changes to make, who will do it, and how long it will take. Finally comes implementation support helping your team execute, track KPIs, and maintain accountability until the improvement becomes stable.

 

If a consultant jumps straight into “advice” without diagnosis, measurement, and a realistic implementation plan, the engagement often becomes a set of ideas that never translate into results.

 

How to Choose the Right Business Consultant in Bangladesh

Choosing a consultant is like hiring a senior leader fit matter. A reliable consultant should be able to explain their approach clearly, define scope in writing, and show you how progress will be measured. They should ask strong questions about your numbers, processes, customers, and constraints, rather than only talking about themselves. They should be honest about what they can and cannot deliver, and they should never promise guaranteed results without understanding your business.

Also, ensure you are hiring for the real need. If your biggest pain is cash-flow, you need finance/process support not only branding. If your biggest pain is lead flow, you need sales/marketing systems not only a business plan. Many owners’ waste money because they buy a service that is not aligned with the actual bottleneck.

 

Common Mistakes Business Owners Make When Hiring Consultants

One common mistake is expecting a consultant to “run the business” while internal leadership stays unchanged. A consultant can guide and support execution, but the company must own implementation.

 

Another mistake is focusing only on cost, not value. A cheap consultant who gives generic advice can be more expensive than a higher-quality consultant who delivers measurable improvement.

A third mistake is unclear scope. If you don’t define what success looks like metrics, deliverables, timeline you can’t manage the engagement properly.

 

Closing Remarks

Business consultancy in Bangladesh is most valuable when it is treated as a performance investment: you pay for clarity, systems, discipline, and measurable improvement. In an environment where many firms face constraints like financing gaps and operational frictions, businesses that build stronger decision-making and execution systems gain a long-term edge.

 

If you are a business owner, the real question is not “Do I need a consultant forever?” The practical question is: “At this stage of my business, what is the biggest bottleneck and do I have the internal capability to solve it quickly without costly trial and error?” When the answer is “no,” consultancy becomes one of the smartest tools available to protect your business, improve profitability, and unlock sustainable growth.

 

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  • āϏāĻŽāϝāĻŧ āĻ“ āĻ–āϰāϚ āĻŦāĻžāρāĻšā§‡: āĻāĻ•āĻ• āϏ⧇āĻŦāĻž āϕ⧇āĻ¨ā§āĻĻā§āϰ⧇ āϏāĻŦ āĻĒāϰāĻŋāώ⧇āĻŦāĻž āĻĒāĻžāĻ“āϝāĻŧāĻžāϝāĻŧ āĻ­āĻŋāĻ¨ā§āύ āĻ­āĻŋāĻ¨ā§āύ āĻ…āĻĢāĻŋāϏ⧇ āϝāĻžāϤāĻžāϝāĻŧāĻžāϤ⧇āϰ āĻĒā§āĻ°ā§Ÿā§‹āϜāύ āĻĒā§œā§‡ āύāĻž, āĻĢāϞ⧇ āϏāĻŽāϝāĻŧ āĻ“ āĻ…āĻ°ā§āĻĨ āϏāĻžāĻļā§āϰāϝāĻŧ āĻšāϝāĻŧ[3]āĨ¤
  • āĻ•ā§ŒāĻļāϞāĻ—āϤ āϏāĻ™ā§āĻ—āϤāĻŋ: āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ āĻĒāϰāĻŋāĻ•āĻ˛ā§āĻĒāύāĻž āĻĨ⧇āϕ⧇ āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāĻŋāĻ‚ āĻ“ āĻĄāĻŋāϞāĻžāϰ āύ⧇āϟāĻ“ā§ŸāĻžāĻ°ā§āϕ⧇āϰ āϏāĻŽāĻ¨ā§āĻŦāϝāĻŧ āĻŦ⧃āĻĻā§āϧāĻŋ āĻĒāĻžāϝāĻŧ, āĻĢāϞ⧇ āĻŦāĻžāϜāĻžāϰ⧇ āĻāĻ•āϟāĻŋ āϏāĻ™ā§āĻ—āϤāĻŋāĻĒā§‚āĻ°ā§āĻŖ āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄ āχāĻŽā§‡āϜ āĻŦāϜāĻžā§Ÿ āϰāĻžāĻ–āĻž āϝāĻžāϝāĻŧāĨ¤
  • āϏ⧇āĻŦāĻž āĻ“ āĻĻāĻ•ā§āώāϤāĻž: āĻŦāĻšā§āĻŽā§āĻ–ā§€ āĻ…āĻ­āĻŋāĻœā§āĻžāϤāĻž āϏāĻŽā§āĻĒāĻ¨ā§āύ āĻĻāϞ āĻāĻ•āϏāĻžāĻĨ⧇ āĻ•āĻžāϜ āĻ•āϰāϞ⧇ āĻŦā§āϝāĻŦāϏāĻžāϝāĻŧāĻŋāĻ• āĻā§āρāĻ•āĻŋ āύāĻŋāϰ⧂āĻĒāĻŖ āĻ“ āĻŽā§‹āĻ•āĻžāĻŦāĻŋāϞāĻž āĻ•āϰāĻž āϏāĻšāϜ āĻšāϝāĻŧāĨ¤
  • āĻ•ā§āϰ⧇āϤāĻž āφāĻ¸ā§āĻĨāĻž āĻ—āĻ āύ: āύāĻŋāϝāĻŧāĻŽāĻŋāϤ āĻ“ āĻĒāϰāĻŋāĻŽāĻžāĻ°ā§āϜāĻŋāϤ āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāĻŋāĻ‚āϝāĻŧ⧇āϰ āĻŽāĻžāĻ§ā§āϝāĻŽā§‡ āĻ—ā§āϰāĻžāĻšāĻ•āĻĻ⧇āϰ āφāĻ¸ā§āĻĨāĻž āĻŦ⧃āĻĻā§āϧāĻŋ āĻĒāĻžāϝāĻŧ, āϝāĻž āĻĻā§€āĻ°ā§āϘāĻŽā§‡āϝāĻŧāĻžāĻĻā§€ āϏāĻŽā§āĻĒāĻ°ā§āĻ• āĻ—āĻĄāĻŧāϤ⧇ āϏāĻžāĻšāĻžāĻ¯ā§āϝ āĻ•āϰ⧇āĨ¤

āĻĒāϰāĻŋāϏāĻ‚āĻ–ā§āϝāĻžāύ āĻ“ āĻŦāĻžāϜāĻžāϰ āĻĒā§āϰāĻŦāĻŖāϤāĻž

āĻŦāĻžāĻ‚āϞāĻžāĻĻ⧇āĻļ⧇āϰ āϏāĻžāĻŽā§āĻĒā§āϰāϤāĻŋāĻ• āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ āĻĒā§āϰāĻŦāĻŖāϤāĻž āĻŦāĻŋāĻŦ⧇āϚāύāĻž āĻ•āϰāϞ⧇ āĻĻ⧇āĻ–āĻž āϝāĻžā§Ÿ āĻĻ⧇āĻļ⧇āϰ āϏāĻžāĻŽāĻ—ā§āϰāĻŋāĻ• āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ ⧍ā§Ļ⧍⧍ āϏāĻžāϞ⧇ āĻĒā§āϰāĻžā§Ÿ ā§Ģ⧝.ā§¨ā§Ž āĻŦāĻŋāϞāĻŋ⧟āύ āĻŽāĻžāĻ°ā§āĻ•āĻŋāύ āĻĄāϞāĻžāϰ āĻ›āĻŋāϞ, āϝāĻž ⧍ā§Ļ⧍ā§Ē āϏāĻžāϞ⧇ ā§Ēā§­.ā§Ļ⧝ āĻŦāĻŋāϞāĻŋ⧟āύ āĻĄāϞāĻžāϰ⧇ āύ⧇āĻŽā§‡ āĻāϏ⧇āϛ⧇[4]āĨ¤ āĻ…āĻ°ā§āĻĨāĻžā§Ž āĻŦ⧈āϚāĻŋāĻ¤ā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻšā§€āύ āĻĒāĻŖā§āϝ āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ āĻāĻŦāĻ‚ āĻŦ⧈āĻļā§āĻŦāĻŋāĻ• āĻĒāϰāĻŋāĻ¸ā§āĻĨāĻŋāϤāĻŋāϰ āĻĒā§āϰāĻ­āĻžāĻŦ⧇āϰ āĻ•āĻžāϰāϪ⧇ āϏāĻžāĻŽā§āĻĒā§āϰāϤāĻŋāĻ• āĻŦāĻ›āϰāϗ⧁āĻ˛ā§‹ā§Ÿ āĻ•āĻŋāϛ⧁āϟāĻž āĻ¸ā§āĻĨāĻŦāĻŋāϰāϤāĻž āĻĻ⧇āĻ–āĻž āĻĻāĻŋā§Ÿā§‡āϛ⧇āĨ¤ āϤāĻŦ⧁āĻ“ āφāĻ¨ā§āϤāĻ°ā§āϜāĻžāϤāĻŋāĻ• āϚāĻžāĻšāĻŋāĻĻāĻž āĻŦāĻžā§œāϞ⧇ āφāĻŽāĻžāĻĻ⧇āϰ āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ āϏ⧁āϝ⧋āĻ— āĻŦāĻžā§œāĻŦ⧇, āϤāĻžāχ āĻĻā§āϰ⧁āϤ āĻŦāĻžāϜāĻžāϰāϜāĻžāϤāĻ•āϰāĻŖ āĻāĻŦāĻ‚ āĻ•āĻžāĻ°ā§āϝāĻ•āϰ āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāĻŋāĻ‚-āĻšā§‡āĻˇā§āϟāĻž āϜāϰ⧁āϰāĻŋāĨ¤

 

āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāĻŋāĻ‚-āĻāϰ āϗ⧁āϰ⧁āĻ¤ā§āĻŦ āφāĻ¨ā§āϤāĻ°ā§āϜāĻžāϤāĻŋāĻ•āĻ­āĻžāĻŦ⧇ āĻ•ā§āϰāĻŽāĻžāĻ—āϤ āĻŦāĻžāĻĄāĻŧāϛ⧇āĨ¤ āĻŦāĻŋāĻļā§āĻŦāĻŦā§āϝāĻžāĻĒā§€ āĻļā§€āĻ°ā§āώ ā§Ģ,ā§Ļā§Ļā§Ļ āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄā§‡āϰ āĻŽā§‹āϟ āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄ āĻŽā§‚āĻ˛ā§āϝ ⧍ā§Ļ⧍ā§Ģ āϏāĻžāϞ⧇ ā§§ā§Ē āĻŸā§āϰāĻŋāϞāĻŋ⧟āύ āĻŽāĻžāĻ°ā§āĻ•āĻŋāύ āĻĄāϞāĻžāϰ āĻ›āĻžā§œāĻŋā§Ÿā§‡āϛ⧇, āϝāĻž āĻ—āϤ āĻŦāĻ›āϰ⧇āϰ āϤ⧁āϞāύāĻžā§Ÿ āĻĒā§āϰāĻžāϝāĻŧ ā§Ŧ% āĻŦ⧃āĻĻā§āϧāĻŋ[5]āĨ¤ āφāĻļāĻžāĻĒā§āϰāĻĻ āϏāĻ‚āĻŦāĻžāĻĻ āĻšāϞ⧋, āĻŦāĻžāĻ‚āϞāĻžāĻĻ⧇āĻļ⧇āϰ āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāϗ⧁āϞ⧋āϰ āĻŽā§‚āĻ˛ā§āϝāĻ“ āĻĒā§āϰāĻžā§Ÿ ā§§ā§Ģ% āĻŦ⧃āĻĻā§āϧāĻŋ āĻĒā§‡ā§Ÿā§‡āϛ⧇[6] (āĻŦāĻŋāĻļ⧇āώ āĻ•āϰ⧇ āĻĻ⧇āĻļā§€ā§Ÿ āĻ­ā§‹āĻ•ā§āϤāĻž āĻĒāĻŖā§āϝ āĻ“ āϤāĻĨā§āϝ-āĻĒā§āϰāϝ⧁āĻ•ā§āϤāĻŋ āĻ–āĻžāϤ⧇)āĨ¤ āĻāχ āĻĒā§āϰāĻŦāĻŖāϤāĻž āύāĻŋāĻ°ā§āĻĻ⧇āĻļ āĻ•āϰ⧇ āϝ⧇ āφāĻŽāĻžāĻĻ⧇āϰ āϕ⧋āĻŽā§āĻĒāĻžāύāĻŋāϗ⧁āϞ⧋āϕ⧇ āφāĻ¨ā§āϤāĻ°ā§āϜāĻžāϤāĻŋāĻ• āĻŽāĻžāύ āĻŦāϜāĻžāϝāĻŧ āϰ⧇āϖ⧇ āĻļāĻ•ā§āϤāĻŋāĻļāĻžāϞ⧀ āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄ āĻ—āĻĄāĻŧ⧇ āϤ⧁āϞāϤ⧇ āĻšāĻŦ⧇āĨ¤

 

āϏāϰāĻŦāϰāĻžāĻš āĻ“ āĻŦāĻŋāϤāϰāĻŖ āĻĻāĻ•ā§āώāϤāĻžāϰ āĻĻāĻŋāĻ• āĻĨ⧇āϕ⧇āĻ“ āωāĻ¨ā§āύāϤāĻŋāϰ āĻĒā§āϰāϝāĻŧā§‹āϜāύāĨ¤ āĻŦāĻŋāĻļā§āĻŦāĻŦā§āϝāĻžāĻ‚āϕ⧇āϰ āϞāϜāĻŋāĻ¸ā§āϟāĻŋāĻ• āĻĒāĻžāϰāĻĢāϰāĻŽā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āϏ āχāύāĻĄā§‡āĻ•ā§āϏ (LPI) ⧍ā§Ļā§¨ā§Š āĻ…āύ⧁āϝāĻžā§Ÿā§€ āĻŦāĻžāĻ‚āϞāĻžāĻĻ⧇āĻļ⧇āϰ āĻŽā§‹āϟ āĻ¸ā§āϕ⧋āϰ ⧍.ā§Ŧ āĻāĻŦāĻ‚ āĻ…āĻŦāĻ¸ā§āĻĨāĻžāύ ā§Žā§Ž[7]āĨ¤ āĻ…āĻ°ā§āĻĨāĻžā§Ž āϏāϰāĻŦāϰāĻžāĻš āĻšā§‡āχāύ⧇ āĻāĻ–āύāĻ“ āĻ…āύ⧇āĻ• āϏ⧁āϝ⧋āĻ—-āϏ⧁āĻŦāĻŋāϧāĻž āĻŦāĻžāĻĄāĻŧāĻžāύ⧋ āĻĻāϰāĻ•āĻžāϰāĨ¤ āωāĻ¨ā§āύāϤ āĻ“ā§Ÿā§āϝāĻžāϰāĻšāĻžāωāϜ, āĻĒā§āϰāϝ⧁āĻ•ā§āϤāĻŋ āĻĒā§āĻ°ā§Ÿā§‹āĻ— āĻ“ āĻĻāĻ•ā§āώ āĻ•āĻ°ā§āĻŽā§€āĻŦāĻžāĻšāĻŋāύ⧀ āĻ—āĻĄāĻŧ⧇ āϤ⧁āϞāϞ⧇ āĻĒāĻŖā§āϝ āĻĻā§āϰ⧁āϤ āĻ“ āϏāĻžāĻļā§āϰāϝāĻŧā§€āĻ­āĻžāĻŦ⧇ āĻ—āĻ¨ā§āϤāĻŦā§āϝ⧇ āĻĒāĻžāĻ āĻžāύ⧋ āϏāĻŽā§āĻ­āĻŦ āĻšāĻŦ⧇āĨ¤ āϤāĻžāχ āφāĻ¨ā§āϤāĻ°ā§āϜāĻžāϤāĻŋāĻ• āĻŽāĻžāύ āĻŦāϜāĻžāϝāĻŧ āϰ⧇āϖ⧇ āĻļāĻ•ā§āϤāĻŋāĻļāĻžāϞ⧀ āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāĻŋāĻ‚ āĻ“ āĻŦāĻŋāĻļā§āĻŦāĻ¸ā§āϤ āĻĄāĻŋāϞāĻžāϰ āύ⧇āϟāĻ“āϝāĻŧāĻžāĻ°ā§āĻ• āĻ—āĻĄāĻŧ⧇ āϤ⧋āϞāĻž āĻāĻ–āύ āĻ…āĻ¤ā§āϝāĻžāĻŦāĻļā§āϝāĻ•āĨ¤

āĻŦā§āϝāĻŦāϏāĻžāϝāĻŧāĻŋāĻ• āĻŦ⧃āĻĻā§āϧāĻŋ āĻ“ āĻŦāĻŋāĻ¸ā§āϤāĻžāϰ⧇ āωāĻĒāĻ•āĻžāϰāĻŋāϤāĻž

āĻāĻ•āϟāĻŋ āĻĒā§āϰāϤāĻŋāĻˇā§āĻ āĻžāύ āϝāĻ–āύ āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ, āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāĻŋāĻ‚ āĻāĻŦāĻ‚ āĻĄāĻŋāϞāĻžāϰ āύāĻŋāϝāĻŧā§‹āϗ⧇āϰ āϏ⧇āĻŦāĻž āĻāĻ•āϏāĻžāĻĨ⧇ āĻĒāĻžāϝāĻŧ, āϤāĻ–āύ āĻŦā§āϝāĻŦāϏāĻžāϰ āĻŦāĻŋāĻ•āĻžāĻļ⧇ āĻŦā§āϝāĻžāĻĒāĻ• āϏ⧁āĻŦāĻŋāϧāĻž āĻšāϝāĻŧāĨ¤ āϏ⧁āϚāĻžāϰ⧁ āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāĻŋāĻ‚ āĻĒāĻŖā§āϝ⧇āϰ āĻŽāĻžāύ āĻŦāĻžāĻĄāĻŧāĻžāϝāĻŧ āĻāĻŦāĻ‚ āĻĒā§āϰāĻŋāĻŽāĻŋ⧟āĻžāĻŽ āĻŽā§‚āĻ˛ā§āϝ āĻ…āĻ°ā§āϜāύ⧇ āϏāĻšāĻžāϝāĻŧāϤāĻž āĻ•āϰ⧇āĨ¤ āĻļāĻ•ā§āϤāĻŋāĻļāĻžāϞ⧀ āĻĄāĻŋāϞāĻžāϰ āύ⧇āϟāĻ“ā§ŸāĻžāĻ°ā§āϕ⧇āϰ āĻŽāĻžāĻ§ā§āϝāĻŽā§‡ āĻĒāĻŖā§āϝ āϏāĻšāĻœā§‡āχ āĻĒā§āϰāĻ¤ā§āϝāĻ¨ā§āϤ āĻ“ āĻļāĻšā§āϰ⧇ āĻĻ⧁āχ āĻŦāĻžāϜāĻžāϰ⧇āχ āĻĒ⧌āρāϛ⧇ āϝāĻžāϝāĻŧāĨ¤ āĻāĻ•āχāĻ­āĻžāĻŦ⧇, āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ āϏāĻšāĻžā§ŸāϤāĻž āĻĒ⧇āϞ⧇ āύāϤ⧁āύ āφāĻ¨ā§āϤāĻ°ā§āϜāĻžāϤāĻŋāĻ• āĻŦāĻžāϜāĻžāϰ āĻ–ā§‹āρāϜāĻž āϏāĻšāϜ āĻšāϝāĻŧ āĻāĻŦāĻ‚ āĻŦāĻŋāĻĻ⧇āĻļāĻŋ āĻ•ā§āϰ⧇āϤāĻžāĻĻ⧇āϰ āϏāĻ™ā§āϗ⧇ āϏāϰāĻžāϏāϰāĻŋ āϏāĻ‚āϝ⧋āĻ— āĻ¸ā§āĻĨāĻžāĻĒāύ āĻ•āϰāĻž āϝāĻžāϝāĻŧāĨ¤

 

  • āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄ āĻŽāĻžāύ āĻŦ⧃āĻĻā§āϧāĻŋ: āϏ⧁āϚāĻžāϰ⧁ āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāĻŋāĻ‚ā§Ÿā§‡āϰ āĻŽāĻžāĻ§ā§āϝāĻŽā§‡ āĻĒāĻŖā§āϝ⧇ āĻāĻ•āϟāĻŋ āϏ⧁āĻĒāϰāĻŋāϚāĻŋāϤ āĻĒāϰāĻŋāĻšā§āĻ›āĻĻ āϤ⧈āϰāĻŋ āĻšā§Ÿ, āϝāĻž āĻ­ā§‹āĻ•ā§āϤāĻžāϰ āφāĻ¸ā§āĻĨāĻž āĻŦāĻžāĻĄāĻŧāĻžāϝāĻŧ āĻāĻŦāĻ‚ āωāĻšā§āϚ āĻŽā§‚āĻ˛ā§āϝ āĻ…āĻ°ā§āϜāύ⧇ āϏāĻšāĻžāϝāĻŧāϤāĻž āĻ•āϰ⧇āĨ¤
  • āĻŦāĻžāϜāĻžāϰ āĻŦāĻŋāĻ¸ā§āϤāĻžāϰ: āĻļāĻ•ā§āϤāĻŋāĻļāĻžāϞ⧀ āĻĄāĻŋāϞāĻžāϰ āύ⧇āϟāĻ“ā§ŸāĻžāĻ°ā§āĻ• āĻ—ā§œā§‡ āϤ⧁āϞ⧇ āĻĻ⧇āĻļ⧇āϰ āĻĒā§āϰāĻ¤ā§āϝāĻ¨ā§āϤ āĻ…āĻžā§āϚāϞ⧇ āĻĒāĻŖā§āϝ āĻĒ⧌āρāϛ⧇ āĻĻ⧇āĻ“āϝāĻŧāĻž āϏāĻšāϜ āĻšā§Ÿ, āĻĢāϞ⧇ āĻĻ⧇āĻļā§€ā§Ÿ āĻŦāĻžāϜāĻžāϰ⧇āϰ āĻĒāĻžāĻļāĻžāĻĒāĻžāĻļāĻŋ āĻŦāĻŋāĻĻ⧇āĻļāĻŋ āĻŦāĻžāϜāĻžāϰ⧇āĻ“ āĻĒā§āϰāĻŦ⧇āĻļ āϏāĻšāϜ āĻšā§ŸāĨ¤
  • āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ āϏāĻšāĻžāϝāĻŧāϤāĻž: āφāĻ¨ā§āϤāĻ°ā§āϜāĻžāϤāĻŋāĻ• āĻāĻ•ā§āϏāĻĒā§‹āĻ°ā§āϟ āĻĒā§āϰ⧋āĻŽā§‹āĻļāύ āĻ“ āĻŽāĻžāĻ°ā§āϕ⧇āϟāĻŋāĻ‚ āϏāĻšāĻžā§ŸāϤāĻžā§Ÿ āĻŦā§āϝāĻŦāϏāĻžā§Ÿā§€āϰāĻž āĻŦ⧈āĻļā§āĻŦāĻŋāĻ• āĻ•ā§āϰ⧇āϤāĻžāĻĻ⧇āϰ āϏāĻ™ā§āϗ⧇ āĻĻā§āϰ⧁āϤ āĻ“ āϏāĻšāĻœā§‡ āϝ⧋āĻ—āĻžāϝ⧋āĻ— āĻ•āϰāϤ⧇ āĻĒāĻžāϰ⧇, āĻĢāϞ⧇ āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ āĻŦ⧃āĻĻā§āϧāĻŋ āĻĒāĻžāϝāĻŧāĨ¤
  • āĻā§āρāĻ•āĻŋ āĻŦā§āϝāĻŦāĻ¸ā§āĻĨāĻžāĻĒāύāĻž: āĻ…āĻ­āĻŋāĻœā§āĻž āĻĒāϰāĻžāĻŽāĻ°ā§āĻļāĻ• āĻ“ āĻŦāĻŋāĻļ⧇āώāĻœā§āĻž āĻĻāϞ āĻĨ⧇āϕ⧇ āĻāϕ⧀āĻ­ā§‚āϤ āϏ⧇āĻŦāĻž āĻĒ⧇āϞ⧇ āĻŦāĻžāϜāĻžāϰ āĻ—āĻŦ⧇āώāĻŖāĻž, āĻŽāĻžāύ āύāĻŋāϝāĻŧāĻ¨ā§āĻ¤ā§āϰāĻŖ āĻ“ āφāχāύāĻŋ āĻĒāϰāĻžāĻŽāĻ°ā§āĻļ āĻāĻ•āϏāĻ™ā§āϗ⧇ āύ⧇āĻ“āϝāĻŧāĻž āϝāĻžāϝāĻŧ, āϝāĻž āĻŦā§āϝāĻŦāϏāĻžāϝāĻŧāĻŋāĻ• āĻā§āρāĻ•āĻŋ āĻ•āĻŽāĻŋāϝāĻŧ⧇ āĻĻ⧇āϝāĻŧāĨ¤
āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ, āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāĻŋāĻ‚ āĻ“ āĻĄāĻŋāϞāĻžāϰ āύāĻŋā§Ÿā§‹āĻ—

āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ, āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāĻŋāĻ‚ āĻ“ āĻĄāĻŋāϞāĻžāϰ āύāĻŋā§Ÿā§‹āĻ—

 

āĻŦ⧈āĻļā§āĻŦāĻŋāĻ• āϏ⧇āϰāĻž āĻ…āύ⧁āĻļā§€āϞāύ

āĻŦāĻŋāĻļā§āĻŦ⧇āϰ āĻŦāĻŋāĻ­āĻŋāĻ¨ā§āύ āωāĻ¨ā§āύāϤ āĻĻ⧇āĻļ⧇āϰ āωāĻĻāĻžāĻšāϰāĻŖ āĻĨ⧇āϕ⧇ āĻŦā§‹āĻāĻž āϝāĻžā§Ÿ āĻ•āĻŋāĻ­āĻžāĻŦ⧇ āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ, āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāĻŋāĻ‚ āĻ“ āĻĄāĻŋāϞāĻžāϰ āϏ⧇āĻŦāĻžāϗ⧁āϞ⧋ āĻāĻ•āϏāĻ™ā§āϗ⧇ āĻĻāĻŋāϞ⧇ āϏ⧁āĻŦāĻŋāϧāĻž āĻšā§Ÿ:
āϜāĻžāĻ°ā§āĻŽāĻžāύāĻŋ (AHK): āϜāĻžāĻ°ā§āĻŽāĻžāύāĻŋāϰ āĻŦāĻžāĻŖāĻŋāĻœā§āϝ āĻŽāĻŋāĻļāύ AHK āĻŦāĻŋāĻļā§āĻŦāĻŦā§āϝāĻžāĻĒā§€ āĻĒā§āϰāĻžā§Ÿ ā§§ā§Šā§ĻāϟāĻŋ āĻļāĻžāĻ–āĻžā§Ÿ āϕ⧇āĻ¨ā§āĻĻā§āĻ°ā§€ā§Ÿ āϏ⧇āĻŦāĻž āϕ⧇āĻ¨ā§āĻĻā§āϰ āĻšāĻŋāϏ⧇āĻŦ⧇ āĻ•āĻžāϜ āĻ•āϰ⧇, āϝ⧇āĻ–āĻžāύ⧇ āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋāĻ•āĻžāϰāĻ• āĻ“ āĻŦāĻŋāύāĻŋā§Ÿā§‹āĻ—āĻ•āĻžāϰ⧀ āĻāĻ•āχ āĻ¸ā§āĻĨāĻžāύ⧇ āϏāĻŽāĻ¨ā§āĻŦāĻŋāϤ āϏāĻšāĻžā§ŸāϤāĻž āĻĒāĻžā§Ÿ[2]āĨ¤
āĻĻāĻ•ā§āώāĻŋāĻŖ āϕ⧋āϰāĻŋ⧟āĻž: āϕ⧋āϰāĻŋ⧟āĻžāϰ āĻ•āĻžāĻ¸ā§āϟāĻŽāϏ “āĻ“āϝāĻŧāĻžāύ-āĻ¸ā§āϟāĻĒ āĻļāĻĒ” āϚāĻžāϞ⧁ āĻ•āϰ⧇ āĻāĻ•āĻŦāĻžāϰ⧇ āϝāĻžāĻŦāĻ¤ā§€ā§Ÿ āĻāĻ•ā§āϏāĻĒā§‹āĻ°ā§āϟ āĻ…āύ⧁āĻŽā§‹āĻĻāύ āĻŽāĻŋāϟāĻŋā§Ÿā§‡ āĻĻā§‡ā§Ÿ, āĻĢāϞ⧇ āĻĒāĻŖā§āϝ āĻ•āĻžāĻ¸ā§āϟāĻŽāϏ āĻ•ā§āϞāĻŋ⧟āĻžāϰ⧇āĻ¨ā§āϏ⧇ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āĻĒā§āϰāĻžā§Ÿ āĻāĻ• āĻĻāĻŋāύ āĻ•āĻŽā§‡ āϗ⧇āϛ⧇[3]āĨ¤
āĻ¸ā§āĻĒ⧇āύ (ICEX): āĻ¸ā§āĻĒ⧇āύ⧇āϰ ICEX āϏāĻ‚āĻ¸ā§āĻĨāĻž āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ, āĻŦāĻŋāύāĻŋā§Ÿā§‹āĻ— āĻ“ āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄ āĻĒā§āϰāϚāĻžāϰ āϏāĻŦāĻ•āĻŋāϛ⧁ āĻāĻ•āĻ• āϏāĻ‚āĻ—āĻ āύ āĻĨ⧇āϕ⧇ āĻĒāϰāĻŋāϚāĻžāϞāĻŋāϤ āĻ•āϰ⧇, āϝāĻž āĻŦā§āϝāĻŦāϏāĻžā§ŸāĻŋāĻ• āϏāĻŽāĻ¨ā§āĻŦ⧟ āĻŦ⧃āĻĻā§āϧāĻŋāϤ⧇ āϏāĻžāĻšāĻžāĻ¯ā§āϝ āĻ•āϰ⧇[8]āĨ¤

āĻŦāĻžāĻ‚āϞāĻžāĻĻ⧇āĻļ⧇āϰ āĻĒā§āĻ°ā§Ÿā§‹āϜāĻ¨ā§€ā§ŸāϤāĻž āĻ“ āϏ⧁āϝ⧋āĻ—

āĻŦāĻžāĻ‚āϞāĻžāĻĻ⧇āĻļ āĻĻā§āϰ⧁āϤ āωāĻ¨ā§āύ⧟āύāĻļā§€āϞ āĻāĻ•āϟāĻŋ āĻ…āĻ°ā§āĻĨāύ⧀āϤāĻŋ, āϝāĻžāϰ āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ āϏāĻžāĻŽāĻ°ā§āĻĨā§āϝ āĻ­āĻŦāĻŋāĻˇā§āϝāϤ⧇ āφāϰāĻ“ āĻŦ⧃āĻĻā§āϧāĻŋ āĻĒāĻžāĻŦ⧇ āĻŦāϞ⧇ āĻĒā§āϰāĻ¤ā§āϝāĻžāĻļāĻŋāϤāĨ¤ āĻŦāĻŋāĻļā§āĻŦāĻŦāĻžāϜāĻžāϰ⧇ āϟāĻŋāϕ⧇ āĻĨāĻžāĻ•āϤ⧇ āφāĻŽāĻžāĻĻ⧇āϰ āĻĒāĻŖā§āϝāϕ⧇ āĻŦ⧈āĻļā§āĻŦāĻŋāĻ• āĻŽāĻžāύ⧇āϰ āϏāĻ™ā§āϗ⧇ āĻ–āĻžāĻĒ āĻ–āĻžāχāϝāĻŧ⧇ āύāĻŋāϤ⧇ āĻšāĻŦ⧇āĨ¤ āĻāϜāĻ¨ā§āϝ āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ āĻĒā§āϰāĻ•ā§āϰāĻŋ⧟āĻž āϏāĻšāĻœā§€āĻ•āϰāĻŖ, āφāĻ¨ā§āϤāĻ°ā§āϜāĻžāϤāĻŋāĻ• āĻŽāĻžāύ āĻŦāϜāĻžā§Ÿ āϰāĻžāĻ–āĻž āĻ“ āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄ āϏāĻšā§‡āϤāύāϤāĻž āĻŦ⧃āĻĻā§āϧāĻŋāϰ āĻĒā§āĻ°ā§Ÿā§‹āϜāύ āĻ°ā§Ÿā§‡āϛ⧇āĨ¤ āĻĻ⧇āĻļ⧇āϰ āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāĻŋāĻ‚ āĻ•ā§āϝāĻžāĻŽā§āĻĒ⧇āχāύ āϝ⧇āĻŽāύ “Made in Bangladesh” āχāϤāĻŋāĻŽāĻ§ā§āϝ⧇ āĻļ⧁āϰ⧁ āĻšā§Ÿā§‡āϛ⧇, āϤāĻŦ⧇ āϤāĻž āφāϰāĻ“ āĻŦ⧇āĻļāĻŋ āĻ•āĻžāĻ°ā§āϝāĻ•āϰ āĻ•āϰāϤ⧇ āĻ•ā§ŒāĻļāϞāĻ—āϤ āϏāĻŽāĻ¨ā§āĻŦā§Ÿā§‡āϰ āĻĻāϰāĻ•āĻžāϰāĨ¤

 

āĻĄāĻŋāϞāĻžāϰ āύ⧇āϟāĻ“āϝāĻŧāĻžāĻ°ā§āĻ• āĻ—āĻĄāĻŧ⧇ āϤ⧇āϞ⧇ āĻĻ⧇āĻļ⧇āϰ āĻĒā§āϰāĻ¤ā§āϝāĻ¨ā§āϤ āĻāϞāĻžāĻ•āĻžāϏāĻš āĻļāĻšā§āϰ⧇ āĻ…āĻžā§āϚāϞ⧇ āĻĒāĻŖā§āϝ āĻĒ⧌āρāĻ›āĻžāύ⧋ āϏāĻšāϜ āĻšāĻŦ⧇āĨ¤ āĻĒāĻžāĻļāĻžāĻĒāĻžāĻļāĻŋ āĻĄāĻŋāϜāĻŋāϟāĻžāϞ āĻŽāĻžāĻ°ā§āϕ⧇āϟāĻŋāĻ‚ āĻ“ āχ-āĻ•āĻŽāĻžāĻ°ā§āϏ⧇āϰ āĻŽāĻžāĻ§ā§āϝāĻŽā§‡ āĻŦāĻŋāĻļā§āĻŦāĻŦā§āϝāĻžāĻĒā§€ āĻ—ā§āϰāĻžāĻšāĻ•āĻĻ⧇āϰ āϏāĻšāĻœā§‡āχ āϟāĻžāĻ°ā§āϗ⧇āϟ āĻ•āϰāĻž āϏāĻŽā§āĻ­āĻŦāĨ¤ āϏāĻŦ āĻŽāĻŋāϞāĻŋāϝāĻŧ⧇ āĻĻ⧇āĻ–āĻž āϝāĻžāĻšā§āϛ⧇, āĻāĻ• āĻ›āĻžāĻĻ⧇āϰ āύāĻŋāĻšā§‡ āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ, āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāĻŋāĻ‚ āĻ“ āĻĄāĻŋāϞāĻžāϰ āύāĻŋā§Ÿā§‹āĻ— āϏāĻ‚āĻ•ā§āϰāĻžāĻ¨ā§āϤ āϏāĻŽāĻ¨ā§āĻŦāĻŋāϤ āϏ⧇āĻŦāĻž āĻāĻ–āύ āĻŦāĻžāĻ‚āϞāĻžāĻĻ⧇āĻļ⧇āϰ āĻŦā§āϝāĻŦāϏāĻžāϝāĻŧā§€āĻĻ⧇āϰ āϜāĻ¨ā§āϝ āĻ…āĻĒāϰāĻŋāĻšāĻžāĻ°ā§āϝ, āϝ⧇āύ āϤāĻžāϰāĻž āĻŦ⧈āĻļā§āĻŦāĻŋāĻ• āĻĒāĻ°ā§āϝāĻžā§Ÿā§‡ āĻĒā§āϰāϤāĻŋāϝ⧋āĻ—ā§€ āĻšāϤ⧇ āĻĒāĻžāϰ⧇āĨ¤

T&IB āĻāϰ āĻāĻ•āĻ• āϏāĻŽāĻžāϧāĻžāύ

T&IB āφāĻĒāύāĻžāϰ āĻŦā§āϝāĻŦāϏāĻžāϰ āϜāĻ¨ā§āϝ āϏāĻŋāĻ™ā§āϗ⧇āϞ āωāχāĻ¨ā§āĻĄā§‹ āϏ⧇āĻŦāĻž āĻĒā§āϰāĻĻāĻžāύ āĻ•āϰ⧇āĨ¤ āφāĻŽāĻžāĻĻ⧇āϰ āĻĻāĻ•ā§āώ āĻĒāϰāĻžāĻŽāĻ°ā§āĻļāĻ• āĻĻāϞ āϰāĻĒā§āϤāĻžāύāĻŋ āĻĒāϰāĻŋāĻ•āĻ˛ā§āĻĒāύāĻž, āĻŦā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻ¨ā§āĻĄāĻŋāĻ‚ āĻ¸ā§āĻŸā§āĻ°ā§āϝāĻžāĻŸā§‡āϜāĻŋ āĻāĻŦāĻ‚ āĻĄāĻŋāϞāĻžāϰ āύāĻŋā§Ÿā§‹āĻ— āϏ⧇āĻŦāĻž āĻāĻ•āϏāĻžāĻĨ⧇ āωāĻĒāĻ¸ā§āĻĨāĻžāĻĒāύ āĻ•āϰ⧇, āĻĢāϞ⧇ āφāĻĒāύāĻžāϰ āĻ•āĻžāĻœā§‡āϰ āϜāϟāĻŋāϞāϤāĻž āĻ•āĻŽā§‡ āϝāĻžā§Ÿ āĻāĻŦāĻ‚ āĻĢāϞāĻžāĻĢāϞ āĻĻā§āϰ⧁āϤ āφāϏ⧇āĨ¤

āϝ⧋āĻ—āĻžāϝ⧋āĻ—:
– āĻŽā§‹āĻŦāĻžāχāϞ: +8801553676767
– āχāĻŽā§‡āχāϞ: info@tradeandinvestmentbangladesh.com

āφāĻĒāύāĻžāϰ āĻŦā§āϝāĻŦāϏāĻžāϰ āωāĻ¨ā§āύ⧟āύ⧇āϰ āϜāĻ¨ā§āϝ āĻāĻ• āĻ›āĻžāĻĻ⧇āϰ āύāĻŋāĻšā§‡ āĻĒā§‚āĻ°ā§āĻŖāĻžāĻ™ā§āĻ— āϏāĻŽāĻžāϧāĻžāύ āĻĻāĻŋāϤ⧇ T&IB āϏāĻ°ā§āĻŦāĻĻāĻž āĻĒā§āϰāĻ¸ā§āϤ⧁āϤāĨ¤ āφāϜāχ āϝ⧋āĻ—āĻžāϝ⧋āĻ— āĻ•āϰ⧁āύ āĻāĻŦāĻ‚ āφāĻŽāĻžāĻĻ⧇āϰ āĻŦāĻŋāĻļ⧇āώāĻœā§āĻž āϟāĻŋāĻŽā§‡āϰ āϏāĻšāĻžā§ŸāϤāĻž āύāĻŋāϝāĻŧ⧇ āĻŦā§āϝāĻŦāϏāĻžāϰ āύāϤ⧁āύ āϏāĻŽā§āĻ­āĻžāĻŦāύāĻž āωāĻ¨ā§āĻŽā§‹āϚāύ āĻ•āϰ⧁āύ!

 

āĻ‰ā§ŽāϏ: āϏāĻ°ā§āĻŦāĻļ⧇āώ āĻĒāϰāĻŋāϏāĻ‚āĻ–ā§āϝāĻžāύ āĻāĻŦāĻ‚ āφāĻ¨ā§āϤāĻ°ā§āϜāĻžāϤāĻŋāĻ• āĻĒā§āϰāϤāĻŋāĻŦ⧇āĻĻāύ āĻ…āύ⧁āϝāĻžā§Ÿā§€ āϤāĻĨā§āϝ āϏāĻ‚āĻ•āϞāύ āĻ•āϰāĻž āĻšā§Ÿā§‡āϛ⧇[4][5][6][2][8][3][7][1]āĨ¤

[1] US surpasses Denmark to become most intangible market globally | Press Release | Brand Finance

https://brandfinance.com/press-releases/us-surpasses-denmark-to-become-most-intangible-market-globally

[2] [8] eesc.europa.eu

https://www.eesc.europa.eu/sites/default/files/files/qe-03-18-141-en-n.pdf

[3] WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement

https://www.congress.gov/crs_external_products/R/PDF/R44777/R44777.4.pdf

[4] Bangladesh Exports, billion dollars – data, chart | TheGlobalEconomy.com

https://www.theglobaleconomy.com/Bangladesh/exports_dollars/

[5] [6] Global Brand Value Tops USD 14 Trillion in 2024; China, India, Brazil, Mexico and Viet Nam among the top; Egypt and Kazakhstan rising

https://www.wipo.int/en/web/global-innovation-index/w/blogs/2025/global-brand-value

[7] 2023 | Logistics Performance Index (LPI)

https://lpi.worldbank.org/international/global