Home Apparel From BUET Dorm to Global Mentor: Sumit Saha’s rise with Analyzen and Learn with Sumit

From BUET Dorm to Global Mentor: Sumit Saha’s rise with Analyzen and Learn with Sumit

by Bangladesh in Focus

Sumit Saha has turned a dorm-room project into a tech company and a nationwide learning platform, showing how clear teaching and steady building can change lives. He started at BUET and began coding early, building small projects for clients while still a student. From those early experiments he and a classmate grew Analyzen, a digital agency that mixes engineering and marketing to solve real problems for brands. The firm this way grew beyond Bangladesh into nearby countries and later to Canada without outside investors, relying on the team’s work and a culture of ownership. Besides running a company, Sumit focused on education. During the pandemic he began recording simple Bangla lessons that explain coding basics in a clear, friendly way. That channel then grew into Learn with Sumit, a free learning site and community that helps many students and job seekers learn practical skills. The platform uses a custom learning system so learners can follow courses, track progress, and get certificates without paying fees. Many people credit these lessons for jobs at tech firms and better careers. Sumit’s work also produced real software products. His team built tools for microfinance, social listening and chat commerce that won national awards and helped local firms work smarter. He keeps building while teaching, and this mix of product work and public lessons is part of his plan to raise the whole tech community. He now helps others by judging hackathons, speaking at events, and teaming with global groups so more people can learn. Sumit also links up with big projects and has written deep technical guides for a global audience, which widened his reach. What stands out is how he combines simple teaching, real tools, and steady work to make chances for learners from many places, not just city schools. He wants talented people to stay and build at home, showing that local teams can make things that win awards and reach global users. Teachers, students and startup leaders see the value in his clear style and hands-on help. If more founders balance building products and open teaching like Sumit, the tech scene can grow faster and offer more real jobs for young people. His video channel reached over 175,000 subscribers and a Facebook community of nearly 98,000, showing wide interest. Sumit’s company has won over 150 regional awards for practical engineering and services, which proves the work works. He also builds tools that help small banks and sellers, and he mentors many young teams who start with little money, and steady growth.

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