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Why Bangladeshi companies should use Comply.bd
Most growing companies in Bangladesh do not have a full-time “head of compliance.” Instead, founders, finance leads, and admins juggle RJSC filings, NBR deadlines, VAT cycles, BIN updates, trade licences, and fire or municipal NOCs — often with different firms and formats for each.
The pain is rarely the fee on its own. It is the overhead: chasing quotes on WhatsApp, reconciling what was promised versus what arrived, and hunting for the right PDF when a bank, investor, or regulator asks again six months later.
Fragmentation is the default — until you centralise the workflow
Bangladesh’s regulatory landscape is not one portal or one profession. Lawyers handle RJSC and many contracts; CAs and tax practitioners handle income tax and often VAT; trade bodies and city corporations sit on licence renewals. That fragmentation is normal — but your *process* for buying and managing that work can still be coherent.
Comply.bd is built as a marketplace plus order workspace: you discover specialists, compare scoped offers in taka, and run each engagement in one thread with files attached to the job — instead of scattering context across inboxes and drive folders.
One place to find vetted specialists
Listings are structured around tasks businesses actually buy: company registration packages, monthly VAT support, corporate tax returns, secretarial retainers, and similar gigs. Agents set tiers (what is included, turnaround, revisions) so you are not starting from a blank email every time.
Profiles and reviews give a baseline for who does this work day to day. You still choose the firm or individual you trust; the platform is there to reduce search friction and make comparison fairer.
Engagements that stay on the record
Each order ties together messaging, agreed scope, and a document vault for MOUs, certificates, filed forms, and agent deliverables. When someone new joins your team — or you switch advisers for the next renewal — the history is easier to reconstruct.
That matters for boards, investors, and audits: fewer “we think we filed that somewhere” moments, and clearer accountability on both sides.
Trust and payment without replacing your lawyer or CA
Comply.bd does not provide legal or tax advice; independent agents do. The platform’s role is discovery, contracting structure, and a workspace that keeps scope and files aligned. Milestones and escrow-style flows help align payment with delivery so neither side is left guessing.
If you already have a trusted firm, you can still use the same habits — clear packages, written deliverables, and a single place for order communication — even when the relationship started offline.
When volume grows: Comply Pro
Companies that file often — multiple entities, monthly VAT, frequent licence renewals — need more storage and faster support. Comply Pro is aimed at that pattern: heavier vault capacity and priority handling so operational teams are not the bottleneck.
Local reality: names, languages, and timing
Bangladeshi compliance is not only “forms.” It is RJSC name clearance quirks, NBR portal behaviour, VAT circle follow-ups, and municipal counters with their own rhythms. Marketplaces fail when they pretend every country is the same; Comply.bd is oriented around how work actually gets done here — in Bangla and English, in taka, with agents who file these tasks weekly.
That does not remove waiting times at government offices or policy changes. It does mean your commercial relationship with an agent — scope, files, messages — is easier to run while those external variables move.
What Comply.bd is not
We are not your lawyer, auditor, or tax adviser. We do not stamp forms or appear before regulators on your behalf. Independent professionals do that work; the platform helps you find them, contract clearly, and keep the paper trail straight.
If you need a formal legal opinion or a signed audit report, you still engage a qualified firm. Comply.bd is infrastructure for procurement and collaboration — not a substitute for professional judgment where the law requires it.
If you are evaluating how to run compliance in 2026, start from the marketplace: search by task, read a few profiles, and open an order when the scope fits. Questions about the platform itself go to support@comply.bd.