Home E-Commerce From Law Student to Global Amazon Agency: How a Bangladeshi Founder Built eSaviour

From Law Student to Global Amazon Agency: How a Bangladeshi Founder Built eSaviour

by Bangladesh in Focus

Mainul Islam, once a law student, has turned hands-on Amazon work into a growing international agency that now helps brands look and sell better online. He started in 2014 while studying law and learned by doing small client tasks instead of following textbooks or videos. That early work taught him how Amazon listings really work: good images and clear descriptions make a big difference for buyers. Mainul mixed practical lessons with training programs such as Jungle Scout Bootcamp and Helium 10, and he kept improving his skills step by step. Today his company, eSaviour Limited, runs from both the UK and Bangladesh and serves more than one hundred and seventy brands around the world. The team has made more than thirteen hundred creative items, including hero images, A+ content, packaging pictures, 3D models, product renders, and storefront designs that help products stand out. Famous and smaller brands alike have used their services, and the portfolio shows how clear visuals can lift clicks, conversion, and ad results. Starting a creative agency from Bangladesh had clear challenges: time zone gaps, strict quality needs, and early doubts about local work. Mainul says steady delivery, strict quality checks, and proof of results helped change minds and bring repeat clients. Clients returned when they saw better listing performance, and that repeat business let the team grow and hire more designers and editors. The agency focuses on visuals that do more than look good; every image and layout is made to improve how shoppers respond and how ads perform. This practical focus means the studio tests ideas, measures results, and changes designs to boost real sales, not just to win praise. Beyond client work, Mainul plans two big steps to help the wider market: a Global Amazon Visual Benchmark Report for 2026, which will study what top listings share, and a Creative Academy to train new designers and sellers. Both moves aim to share knowledge so more people can build good listings and reach buyers around the world. Local talent has been a key part of the story, and the agency now trains staff to meet global standards and work smoothly with overseas teams. Mainul believes Bangladeshi creatives can match global quality if they get practice and feedback. The agency’s rise shows how practical learning, careful testing, and simple visual choices can lift small sellers into global markets. It also offers a clear message to other young founders: start where you are, learn from real work, focus on what customers see, and keep improving with small, steady steps. As the company grows it plans to keep building tools, reports, and training that help brands sell more and help local designers find work on the world stage.

Related Posts

Leave a Comment