Over the past few years at work, I’ve spent countless hours
scoping and visiting various enterprises, attending investment forums and
workshops, and exploring social media and other online sources—not for leisure,
but as a deliberate part of my role in social enterprise, entrepreneurship, and
impact investing. My goal was to understand the latest trends shaping the
enterprise ecosystem, entrepreneurship, and digital skills in South Asia,
particularly in Bangladesh. What I discovered was both exciting and concerning:
while there is a growing wave of accessible digital knowledge and
entrepreneurial ambition, significant gaps remain in practical application and
sustainable business development—challenges that many aspiring entrepreneurs
continue to face.
A striking trend in Bangladesh’s digital landscape is the
explosion of paid and free courses. Everywhere you look, people are offering
training, challenges, and bootcamps—often with very attractive offers. Many of
these programs provide not only theoretical knowledge but also hands-on
guidance: how to build a website, run Facebook ad campaigns, set up pixels, server-side tracking and
more.
This is undeniably positive—knowledge is becoming more
accessible, and young people are acquiring entry-level digital skills at an
unprecedented pace. But here’s the critical question: Is this enough for
someone in Bangladesh to become a successful digital entrepreneur and the owner
of a profitable business?
From my observation, the answer is not yet. While courses
teach tools, the broader digital and online market ecosystem in Bangladesh
still faces significant challenges, particularly around trust. Cash-on-delivery
remains far more common than pre-payment, signaling that customers are still
cautious about online transactions. A few big players, like Daraz and Pathao,
have successfully built strong trust and scaled impressively, but for new
entrepreneurs, navigating this environment remains challenging.
This points to a deeper issue: Are we equipping young
Bangladeshis only with skills—or also with the ecosystem they need to thrive?
Technical abilities like website building or ad management are valuable, but
without:
- Market trust: Customers confident in digital commerce,
- Investment ecosystems: Access to capital and financial tools to scale ideas, and
- Support networks: Mentors, supply chains, and enabling policies,
…it’s extremely difficult for young entrepreneurs to move
from being freelancers to true business owners.
Bangladesh is brimming with entrepreneurial energy, and the
rise of digital courses shows a strong hunger to learn. But the next step is
crucial: we must strengthen the investment ecosystem, build trust in digital
markets, and create structures that allow youth to transform skills into
sustainable businesses.
The road ahead is promising. If Bangladesh can connect
skills, trust, and investment, we could witness a new generation of
entrepreneurs not just running ads, but building profitable, credible, and
impactful ventures that reshape the economy. The potential is enormous—but only
if we move beyond skills alone and focus on creating the broader ecosystem that
enables real entrepreneurial success.