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A redesign is the most dangerous thing you can do to a website that already works. Done carelessly, it deletes years of search rankings in an afternoon — and you find out weeks later, when it is expensive to undo. We rebuild sites without throwing away the traffic they already earn.
The new site has tidier addresses, so every page moves. Nobody sets up redirects. Google now sees every page it knew about as gone, and every new page as unknown. Rankings built over years disappear in days, and recovery takes months.
It is the most common redesign failure in this market, and the cruel part is the timing: the site looks beautiful on launch day, so nobody suspects anything until the enquiries dry up a month later.
Preventing it takes an afternoon — a map of every existing URL and a 301 redirect for each one that moves. We do that mapping before a single screen is designed. Ask any redesign quote whether it includes a redirect map; the answer tells you what you are buying.
A single-page site rebuilt for speed and conversion, with existing content migrated and every old URL redirected to its new home.
From 18,000 Tk
A multi-page rebuild with a full URL audit, redirect map, and preserved rankings — plus a CMS so your team can edit without calling a developer.
From 30,000 Tk
A store rebuild where product URLs, categories, and order history all have to survive the move — the highest-risk redesign there is, and the one most worth doing carefully.
From 60,000 Tk
Redesign pricing follows our website packages — the same figures on our pricing page — because a redesign is a rebuild. The difference is the migration work: auditing your existing URLs, mapping redirects, and moving content so the rankings come with you.
Before you spend anything
A redesign is the expensive answer. Sometimes it is the right one. Often the real problem is speed, or content, or the fact that nobody has touched the site in three years — and those cost far less to fix. Here is how we tell the difference.
Protecting your rankings
A redesign is the most dangerous thing you can do to a website that already works. Done carelessly it deletes years of search rankings overnight — and the damage usually shows up weeks later, once it is expensive to undo. This is what actually protects you.
This is the single most common way a redesign destroys a business. The new site has tidier addresses, so every page moves. Nobody sets up 301 redirects. Google now sees every old page as gone and every new page as unknown, and your traffic falls off a cliff. Recovery takes months. The fix takes an afternoon — if someone does it before launch.
The first deliverable of an honest redesign is not a mockup. It is a list of every existing URL, its traffic, and where it will live on the new site. Anything that moves gets a 301. Anything that dies gets redirected to the closest real match — never all of them dumped on the homepage, which Google treats as a soft 404.
Record your current rankings, traffic, and conversions before launch. Without a baseline, nobody can tell whether the redesign helped, and any post-launch dip becomes an argument instead of a diagnosis. We take the snapshot first, precisely so the numbers can hold us accountable.
Businesses often diagnose a design problem when they have a performance problem. If your site takes eight seconds on a mid-range Android over mobile data, visitors leave before they can form an opinion about the design. Fixing that can cost far less than a redesign — and we would rather tell you that than sell you a new homepage that is just as slow.
Old content carries whatever rankings you have. The instinct at redesign time is to start fresh and write everything new — which quietly throws away the pages that were actually bringing people in. Migrate what works, rewrite only what is genuinely weak, and keep the URLs.
After go-live, someone has to watch for crawl errors, broken redirects, and missing pages for the next few weeks — that is when problems surface. A redesign handed over with no monitoring is how a quiet 15% traffic loss goes unnoticed for a quarter.
How we work
Typical timeline: 2–3 weeks for a small site, 4–8 weeks for larger corporate or e-commerce rebuilds, plus a short URL and content mapping step upfront. The date we commit to depends as much on how fast feedback and content come back as on how fast we build — we will be straight with you about that in scoping.
We ask what your business actually does and where the work is going wrong — before talking about software. If what you need is smaller than what you asked for, this is where we say so. No charge, no obligation.
You get the scope in writing, with a fixed price where the requirements are clear, before any work starts. If something is genuinely unknowable up front, we say that too rather than burying it in an estimate that moves later.
Work ships in agreed stages, and at each one you get something working to click through — not a status update. That means you catch a misunderstanding in week two, when it is cheap, instead of at handover.
Code, hosting, domain, and accounts go in your name. We train your team on the real system with your real data. You are never locked in — if you leave, everything is already yours.
Launch is when the real bugs appear. An agreed post-launch fix period is included in every project. After that, maintenance is a separate retainer with published pricing — not a surprise invoice.
Common questions
A redesign is priced like a new build plus migration work: from 18,000 tk for a landing page, around 30,000 tk for a multi-page corporate site, and 60,000 tk and up for e-commerce. The extra work versus a fresh build is preserving your existing URLs, content, and search rankings — which is exactly the part most redesigns skip.
It will if it is done carelessly, and this is the most common redesign disaster we see. If URLs change without 301 redirects, Google treats every page as new and gone at the same time — traffic can drop sharply and take months to recover. Done properly, with a URL map, redirects for every changed address, and content preserved, rankings hold and usually improve because the new site is faster.
Be honest about the actual problem. If the site looks dated but converts fine, a redesign is expensive vanity. If it is slow on a mid-range Android phone on mobile data, that is often a performance fix, not a redesign. If it is unusable on mobile, cannot be updated without a developer, or actively loses you customers, redesign. We will tell you which one you are.
Yes, and usually we should. Your existing content already carries whatever rankings you have. We migrate it, rewrite what is genuinely weak, and keep the rest. Throwing away years of content because it is on an old design is how businesses accidentally delete their own search traffic.
Not necessarily. We build primarily on Next.js because it is faster and more secure, but if your team is comfortable editing WordPress and the site is not the bottleneck, migrating adds cost and retraining for limited gain. We will recommend the move only when the performance or security case is real.
Similar to a new build — 2–3 weeks for a small site, 4–8 weeks for larger corporate or e-commerce — plus time upfront to map your existing URLs and content. That mapping step is short and it is what protects your rankings, so we do not skip it.
Message us on WhatsApp (+8801337320360) or use the contact form. We review your requirements, send a clear scope and quote, agree on terms, and start work — no long sales cycle.
A redesign is rarely the only decision on the table.
A fresh build when there is nothing worth migrating — and what really drives the price.
View serviceSo the new site does not rot the way the old one did. Retainers from 4,000 tk/month.
View serviceStore rebuilds, where product URLs and stock both have to survive the move.
View serviceSend us your website address. We will tell you what is actually wrong with it — and if the honest answer is that you need a performance fix rather than a redesign, we will say so.
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