Education influencer marketing in Bangladesh sits in a different economic universe than the entertainment creator economy.
The entertainment creator with 10 million followers generates impressions; the education influencer with 200,000 followers generates considered decisions. Students choosing where to spend coaching money, parents choosing where to send children for tutoring, working professionals choosing which skill-development course to invest in, families choosing which study-abroad consultant to trust with their child’s future — these are high-consideration decisions where audience trust transfers directly into conversion. A single recommendation from a credible education voice produces enrollment volume that the equivalent reach from an entertainment creator can’t generate, because the audience is in a fundamentally different state of intent.
The result: education influencer rates per impression are often higher than entertainment rates, but cost per actual enrollment is consistently lower. Brands that understand this allocate budget differently than brands that treat all influencer categories as equivalent. The edtech category, language learning platforms, study-abroad consultancies, scholarship programs, banks targeting students, professional certification bodies, and publishers all benefit from this dynamic — provided they select creators whose audience composition matches their offering.
This post is the working roster of education influencers in Bangladesh that brands in education-adjacent categories should know. The 15 names below span founders running their own educational businesses, university lecturers who’ve built credibility on YouTube, corporate trainers with substantial followings, content creators specializing in academic instruction, and entrepreneurs whose educational influence operates as a byproduct of their broader work. The category boundaries are deliberately wide because the brand-fit conversations brands have with us span similarly wide territory.
A note on selection logic. Some of these names are bigger by raw follower count; others have smaller audiences but disproportionate influence in specific sub-categories. The list isn’t ranked by reach — it’s organized to give brands the full landscape of who matters in Bangladesh’s education content economy. The brand-fit notes throughout are where the strategic work lives. The follower counts are easy to read; the brand-fit reasoning is harder and matters more.
For broader context on Bangladeshi influencer marketing, this post sits alongside our Top 30 Influencers in Bangladesh (2026) and Top 10 Social Media Influencers in Bangladesh. This post focuses specifically on the education category and the brand campaigns that depend on credibility transfer rather than reach maximization.
If you’re building an influencer strategy for an education-category brand in Bangladesh, what follows is the landscape.
1. Ayman Sadiq
The defining figure of Bangladesh’s education creator economy. Founder of 10 Minute School, Bangladesh’s largest online learning platform, Ayman has built a creator presence that operates on a fundamentally different model than peers — his personal channels are extensions of an educational business that reaches over 250,000 students daily, rather than a creator brand built on social media and monetized through brand partnerships. His content on his personal channels covers career development, productivity, soft skills, and the broader thinking that connects formal education to real-world outcomes. Queen’s Young Leader and Forbes 30 Under 30 recognitions underwrite the credibility; the daily operational scale of 10 Minute School confirms it.
Brand fit: Edtech platforms (where Ayman’s positioning aligns naturally rather than competing), banks targeting students and young professionals, productivity tools, professional certification bodies, career platforms, scholarship programs. The audience is high-consideration and high-purchase-intent for any credential or skill-building investment. Premium positioning works because the audience itself is premium-positioned in their own self-image.
Ayman Sadiq Social Media Profiles
https://www.youtube.com/@AymanSadiq
https://www.tiktok.com/@aymansadiq10/
https://www.facebook.com/aymansadiq10/
https://www.instagram.com/aymansadiq10/
2. Munzereen Shahid
The leading English-language instruction voice in the country. Munzereen’s content covers practical spoken English, IELTS exam preparation, and the kind of communication skill-building that sits at the intersection of academic and professional development. As a 10 Minute School instructor and content creator in her own right, she’s built audience trust specifically around language outcomes — which translates directly to enrollment intent for any product that promises improved English capability.
Brand fit: IELTS coaching and test-preparation services, English-language learning apps (Duolingo, Cake, others active in Bangladesh), study-abroad consultancies (where English proficiency is the gating credential), books and publishing in the language-learning category, communication-skills training programs, professional development services targeting language barriers. The narrowest audience profile on this list — and exactly the right narrowness for brands selling against the English-language outcome.
Munzereen Shahid Social Media Profiles:
https://www.youtube.com/@MunzereenShahid
https://www.tiktok.com/@munzereen.shahid
https://www.facebook.com/munzereenshahid19/
https://www.instagram.com/munzereen.shahid/
3. Sadman Sadik
The bestselling author and educator whose work bridges 10 Minute School’s platform reach and a personal creator brand built around psychology, book summaries, and personal growth. The dual operation matters: brand partnerships with Sadman can leverage either the personal channels (his own audience, his own voice) or the 10 Minute School platform (broader reach, institutional credibility), or both. The content category — psychology and personal development — sits at the high-consideration end of the education spectrum, where audience trust transfers strongly into purchase decisions for self-improvement products.
Brand fit: Books and publishers (the bestseller positioning is a direct brand asset), mental health and wellness platforms with educational orientation, personal-development apps, journaling and productivity products, online courses in psychology and self-improvement, audiobook platforms. Strong for brands where the message is “invest in becoming better” rather than “consume entertainment.”
Sadman Sadik Social Media Profiles:
https://www.youtube.com/c/sadmansadik
https://www.tiktok.com/@sadmansadik
https://facebook.com/sadmansadik95/
https://www.instagram.com/md_sadman_sadik/
4. Shahnawaz Hossain Jay
A category-spanning figure: university lecturer, public-speaking coach, educational consultant, and creative-side musician and linguist. The unusual breadth produces an audience that’s hard to find elsewhere — students seeking academic mentorship who also engage with cultural and creative content, parents who value both pedagogical credibility and well-rounded role-modeling, professionals interested in communication and language skills. Jay’s positioning isn’t built on follower-count dominance; it’s built on the cross-category credibility that brings him into mentorship-and-speaking engagements that pure social-media creators don’t get invited to.
Brand fit: Public-speaking and communication-skills training, university and higher-education marketing (the lecturer credibility is the asset), language-learning products, creative-adjacent education (music schools, arts programs), youth mentorship platforms, scholarship and admissions consultancies. The right pick when the brand needs an educator-figure rather than a pure-content creator.
Shahnawaz Hossain Jay Social Media Profiles:
https://www.youtube.com/c/SHJay
https://facebook.com/shahnawaz.jay
https://www.instagram.com/the.sh.jay
5. Ghulam Sumdany Don
The corporate trainer and educator whose audience reach extends meaningfully across students, parents, and professionals — three demographics that rarely overlap in any single creator’s audience. Don’s content focuses on career guidance, skill-building, and international opportunities, which gives him specific strategic relevance for brands operating in study-abroad, professional certification, and skill-development categories. The trust signal is the durable point: parents who watch Don for advice on their children’s education futures are exactly the audience that converts on study-abroad consultancy services, international university pitches, and credential-driven products.
Brand fit: Foreign university recruitment (Malaysian, UK, Australian, Canadian programs all targeting Bangladesh), study-abroad consultancies, professional certification programs (PMI, CFA, ACCA, others active in Bangladesh), corporate training partnerships, banks offering education loans, scholarship programs. The strongest single name in Bangladesh for foreign-university and professional-credential marketing.
Ghulam Sumdany Don Social Media Profiles:
https://youtube.com/@DonSumdany
https://tiktok.com/@don.sumdany
https://facebook.com/DonSumdany/
https://www.instagram.com/don_sumdany
6. Shuvasish Bhowmick
The credibility-and-relatability positioning that fills the gap between pure corporate-training voices and pure entertainment creators. Shuvasish’s audience spans students and young professionals seeking career advice plus parents who engage with his family-centric content — a combination that gives him reach into household decision-making rather than just individual purchase decisions. Education choices in Bangladesh are family decisions; brands that need to influence the family conversation rather than just the student consumer find Shuvasish’s positioning specifically useful.
Brand fit: Career-development platforms, professional-skill courses, family-oriented education products (school supplies, home-tutoring services, learning apps for children), banks marketing family education plans, life insurance products positioned around education funding, scholarship programs requiring family buy-in. The family-conversation positioning is the differentiator.
Shuvasish Bhowmick Social Media Profiles:
https://www.youtube.com/@baapkabeta
https://www.tiktok.com/@baap.ka.beta
https://www.facebook.com/baapkabeta2019/
https://instagram.com/baap_ka_beta_2019
7. Nafees Salim
Founder of Impact Academy and host of The 2 Cents Podcast — the largest business-focused podcast in Bangladesh by most measures. The combination is unusual: an institutional educational business (Impact Academy delivers skill-development programs) plus a content asset (the podcast) that reaches the exact audience the academy targets. Brand partnerships with Nafees can leverage either or both, and the podcast format produces deeper engagement than short-form social content for brands willing to participate in long-form conversations.
Brand fit: Business and entrepreneurship education, professional-skill development, business books and publishers, startup-adjacent services (incubators, accelerators, business banking, business software), MBA and executive education programs, fintech and business productivity tools. The long-form podcast format is particularly strong for B2B products where the buying process tolerates longer attention spans.
Nafees Salim Social Media Profiles:
https://www.youtube.com/@NafeesSalim
https://www.tiktok.com/@nafeessalim
https://facebook.com/nafeessalimofficial
https://www.instagram.com/nafees.salim/
8. Rafsan Sabab
The category-shaper rather than the single-channel content creator. Rafsan’s educational influence operates through ecosystem-building rather than direct content production — connecting students with resources, organizing community-based learning initiatives, building the infrastructure that other creators and businesses operate within. The strategic implication for brands: Rafsan’s value isn’t primarily as a content-distribution partner but as a relationship-and-community access point. Sponsorships and partnerships through his network reach audiences that aren’t accessible through pure-content-creator activations.
Brand fit: Community-driven educational products, sponsorship of student events and competitions, brand-building partnerships with education-adjacent NGOs, scholarship programs requiring community recruitment, brands wanting structural positioning in Bangladesh’s education ecosystem rather than transactional advertising placement. Different category of partnership than the content-creator names — and exactly the right partner when the brand objective is ecosystem positioning rather than impression generation.
Rafsan Sabab Social Media Profiles
https://youtube.com/c/rafsansabab
https://www.tiktok.com/@rafsan_sabab
https://www.facebook.com/rafsansababshows/
https://www.instagram.com/rafsan_sabab
9. Enayet Chowdhury
A BUET lecturer whose YouTube channel breaks down complex topics in history, geography, and science into story-driven videos that have built one of the strongest academic-credibility audiences in Bangladesh. The combination of institutional credibility (BUET is the country’s most prestigious engineering institution) and content quality (genuinely well-produced explainer videos rather than quick-take social content) produces audience trust that’s hard to manufacture. The audience composition skews toward students and young professionals who engage with substantive content — exactly the demographic that education-category brands typically struggle to reach.
Brand fit: Higher-education marketing (universities targeting Bangladesh students, both domestic and foreign), STEM-focused edtech platforms, science and history publishers, documentary platforms, knowledge-economy products (Audible, Coursera-style platforms operating in Bangladesh), serious-content brands wanting to associate with institutional academic credibility. The right partner when the brand message needs intellectual seriousness to land.
Enayet Chowdhury Social Media Profiles:
https://www.youtube.com/EnayetChowdhuryOfficial
https://tiktok.com/@enayetchowdhury
https://facebook.com/enayetchowdhury108official/
https://instagram.com/enayet_chowdhury_official
10. Ahmed Fahad
A tech entrepreneur and content creator whose educational influence operates downstream of his actual operating credentials — a founding-team member at Pathao, transition from self-taught coder and designer to global tech industry figure. Fahad’s content is less about formal academic instruction and more about the practical knowledge transfer that turns interested students into employable tech professionals. For brands operating in the tech-education space (bootcamps, coding schools, online tech courses), his credibility is a direct asset.
Brand fit: Coding bootcamps and tech-skill training platforms (CodersTrust, Programming Hero, Shikho, others), product-management and design-skill courses, tech-career platforms, freelancing platforms targeting Bangladesh developers, tech recruitment products, anything where the brand needs association with actual tech industry credibility rather than academic credentialing. The Pathao founding-team background is the asset that pure-content creators can’t match.
Ahmed Fahad Social Media Profiles:
https://www.youtube.com/c/AhmedFahad
https://facebook.com/amdfadx
https://www.instagram.com/amdfad/
11. Labid Rahat
The animated-maps history and geopolitics creator. A RUET mechanical engineering graduate whose YouTube content uses animated maps to break down history, geography, and international politics — a format that’s distinctive in Bangladesh’s creator landscape and produces engagement patterns that text-and-talking-head educational content can’t match. The audience is intellectually-engaged, news-aware, and disproportionately interested in international affairs and study-abroad opportunities.
Brand fit: International university recruitment (the geopolitically-aware audience converts well on foreign-education products), language-learning apps positioning around international communication, news and current-affairs publications, history and geography publishers, documentary platforms, travel-and-tourism marketing targeting educated travelers. The animated-maps audience overlaps unusually well with the demographics that study-abroad and international-credential marketing needs to reach.
Labid Rahat Social Media Profiles:
https://www.youtube.com/@LabidRahat
https://www.tiktok.com/@labidrahat
https://facebook.com/labiDRahatofficial
https://instagram.com/labidrahat
12. Chamak Hasan
The Bangladeshi author, engineer, musician, and online educator who’s built one of the strongest audiences in the country for engaging math and science instruction. The combination of formal credentials and accessible teaching style produces an audience that spans school students, exam-preparing teenagers, and parents looking for trustworthy supplementary education sources. Books, YouTube videos, and live engagement combine into a multi-format presence that brand partnerships can plug into at multiple points.
Brand fit: Edtech platforms specifically targeting math and science instruction (Shikho, 10 Minute School’s STEM offerings, others), academic publishers, school-supplementary products (tutoring apps, exam-preparation services), coaching centers, university-entrance-exam preparation services, scholarship programs requiring strong-student recruitment. The STEM-specific positioning is the strategic asset — generic education partnerships don’t deliver the same brand fit.
Chamak Hasan Social Media Profiles:
https://www.youtube.com/@chamokhasan
https://www.facebook.com/chamok.hasan
13. Antik Mahmud
The animator, comic book artist, writer, and content creator whose work spans entertainment and education through humor-driven storytelling. Founder of Antik Animated Studio, winner of the Rokomari Best Seller Award in both 2023 and 2024, with notable work including the Bhallagena, Chol, Tin, and Noman series plus animation for the Behula music video and Murir Tin. The education positioning here is specifically about the book-and-storytelling side of his work — Antik’s young-adult readership engages with his published work in a way that pure social-media creators rarely achieve.
Brand fit: Publishers and book platforms (Rokomari, others — the bestseller status is a direct asset), young-adult educational products, creative-writing and storytelling courses, comic and graphic-novel publishers, animation and design-skill courses, brands wanting custom-animated content with built-in audience traction. The book-publishing track record makes Antik unusual among Bangladeshi creators — partnerships can leverage both his social channels and his published-author credibility.
Antik Mahmud Social Media Profiles:
https://www.youtube.com/antikmahmud
https://www.tiktok.com/@antik_mahmud_official
https://facebook.com/originalantik
https://instagram.com/being_antik
14. Anas Ferdous
Co-founder of Hulkenstein, the university admission coaching platform launched in 2019 with Samiur Rahman. The educational influence operates through the platform’s reach combined with Anas’s personal content presence as an author, entrepreneur, and YouTube creator. The admissions-coaching specialization is narrow but high-value — students and families navigating university admissions in Bangladesh represent a substantial purchase-decision pipeline for education-adjacent brands.
Brand fit: University admissions coaching (Hulkenstein’s own category), test-preparation services, scholarship programs, banks offering education loans, study-abroad consultancies, university recruitment programs targeting high-achieving Bangladesh students, publishers of admissions and test-prep materials. The narrower audience focus is exactly right for brands selling against the admissions decision specifically.
Anas Ferdous Social Media Profiles:
https://www.youtube.com/@HulkenSteinHSC
https://facebook.com/HulkenSteinGroupOfficial
https://www.instagram.com/hulkenstein_official/
15. Khadizatul Kobra Sonya
The non-fiction book reviewer, mental-health voice, and higher-studies-abroad guide. Sonya occupies a category corner that’s underserved in Bangladesh’s education creator economy — substantive book content for the audience that reads seriously rather than reads for entertainment, plus practical study-abroad guidance with the mental-health context that many similar guides ignore. The audience composition skews toward serious students, working professionals, and women specifically considering international academic opportunities.
Brand fit: Non-fiction publishers and book platforms, mental-health and wellness products targeting students and professionals, study-abroad consultancies (particularly those positioning around mental-health support during the transition), women’s-empowerment-focused education initiatives, scholarship programs targeting women candidates, journaling and self-development products. The intersection of seriousness, study-abroad, and mental-health is unusual and specifically valuable for brands operating at that intersection.
Khadizatul Kobra Sonya Social Media Profiles:
https://www.facebook.com/KhadizatulKobraSonya/
https://www.youtube.com/@KhadizatulKobraSonya
How to actually use this list
Education influencer marketing in Bangladesh operates by different rules than entertainment-category influencer marketing. The framework that produces results in this category looks like this.
The audience trust transfer is the entire value. Education influencers convert because the audience trusts their judgment on educational outcomes. The moment the brand integration breaks that trust signal — through ham-handed promotional content, through obviously-paid recommendations that contradict the creator’s existing positioning, through products that don’t actually deliver what the creator implied — the long-term value of the partnership collapses. The brands that operate well in education-category influencer marketing treat creator partnerships as long-term brand-building rather than short-term performance media. The brands that treat them as performance media generate one campaign of results and then can’t repeat because the creator has moved on or the audience has tuned out.
Credential alignment matters more than reach. A coding bootcamp partnering with Ahmed Fahad gets credibility transfer that the same bootcamp doesn’t get from partnering with a higher-reach entertainment creator, because Fahad’s audience associates him with actual tech-career credentials. An IELTS preparation service partnering with Munzereen Shahid gets enrollment-driving credibility that the same service doesn’t get from a higher-reach general-education voice, because Munzereen’s positioning is specifically language-outcome focused. The implication: brands need to think about which creator’s specific credentials align with their specific product proposition, rather than selecting on aggregate reach.
Long-form content outperforms short-form for high-consideration products. Education-category purchases tolerate longer attention spans because the purchase decision itself is high-consideration. A 20-minute podcast interview produces stronger conversion than a 30-second Reel for products like online courses, foreign-university programs, or professional certifications. The brands that operate in this category should be commissioning long-form content (podcast episodes, YouTube videos, dedicated educational sequences) rather than treating education-creator partnerships as variants of entertainment-creator campaigns.
Multi-touchpoint sequences produce better results than single-touchpoint placements. The student or parent making an education-category purchase typically encounters multiple touchpoints before converting — a recommendation from one creator, a longer-form explainer from another, a peer conversation, a website visit, often a consultation call. Brand campaigns built around single creator placements don’t address the full purchase journey. Campaigns built around 3-5 creator partnerships sequenced across the consideration timeline produce conversion rates the single-placement campaigns can’t generate.
Authentic creator integration outperforms scripted promotion. The education category is particularly unforgiving of obviously-scripted brand integrations. The audience can detect when a creator is reading from a brand-supplied script versus genuinely recommending something they use. The work that produces best results is the work where creators have meaningful product access, opportunity to form actual opinions, and editorial freedom to integrate the product into their existing content style. Brands that try to control every word of the creator’s output get the worst version of the partnership.
Disclosure is non-negotiable and shouldn’t be hidden. Bangladesh’s regulatory environment is evolving, and global platforms enforce sponsorship disclosure regardless of local law. Education-category audiences are particularly attentive to disclosure — they specifically want to know which recommendations are paid because they’re making purchase decisions on the recommendations. Brands that disclose clearly preserve trust; brands that try to disguise paid placements as organic recommendations destroy it. Counter-intuitively, transparent disclosure in education-category influencer marketing often improves rather than reduces conversion, because the audience interprets it as a signal of seriousness rather than dismissing the recommendation.
Measure on enrollment and conversion, not impressions. The metrics that matter in education-category influencer marketing are enrollment, sign-up, application submission, consultation booking, course purchase, and downstream completion. Impressions and reach are necessary inputs but they’re not business outcomes. Brands that measure their education-category campaigns on impressions get exactly the wrong feedback — they end up optimizing for reach (which the entertainment creators deliver better than the education creators) rather than for conversion (which is where the education creators deliver disproportionate value). Set up proper conversion tracking through UTM tags, dedicated landing pages, promo codes, and attribution before the campaign launches, not after.
Long-term creator relationships compound. The education-category creators who’ve worked with the same brands over multiple years produce stronger results in year three than they did in year one. The audience association builds, the creator’s natural integration of the brand becomes more authentic, the cumulative content library generates ongoing organic reach. Brands that operate education-category influencer marketing as one-off campaigns systematically underperform brands that build ongoing partnerships. The economics work — repeat collaborations at standard rates outperform new-creator outreach because the production efficiency improves and the audience response strengthens.
A note on the education creator landscape in Bangladesh
A few specific dynamics worth being explicit about for brands planning education-category campaigns over the next 12-18 months.
The category is consolidating around fewer credible voices. The proliferation of education content creators during 2021-2023 has narrowed substantially as audiences have learned to distinguish substantive educators from creators producing education-themed entertainment. The names on this list represent the consolidated credibility holders; the long tail of education creators with thin or unverified credentials has shrunk as audience trust has concentrated. The implication for brands: working with established names is increasingly safer than gambling on rising names, even though rising-name rates are lower.
Platform-owned creator economics are growing in importance. 10 Minute School, Shikho, Hulkenstein, and other platform companies operate creator ecosystems within their platforms. The brand partnerships that include both the platform and the platform’s creators (rather than only individual creators) produce reach and credibility that pure-individual partnerships can’t generate. Education-category brands should be evaluating platform-level partnerships alongside individual creator partnerships rather than treating them as separate categories.
Foreign-education marketing is the highest-growth subcategory. Bangladesh’s outbound student flow continues to grow, particularly to Australia, UK, Canada, US, Malaysia, and increasingly to specific European destinations. The brands marketing foreign-education services to Bangladesh consumers — universities, consultancies, banks offering education loans, scholarship programs, visa services — are increasing influencer marketing investment specifically because the high-consideration nature of the purchase rewards credibility-driven promotion. The creators on this list with foreign-education positioning (Don, Sonya, Enayet, Anas, Labid in varying degrees) are increasingly in demand.
Edtech competition is intensifying. The Bangladesh edtech space has multiple substantial players (10 Minute School, Shikho, Olympiad-prep platforms, English-learning apps, coding bootcamps) competing for the same student attention. The differentiation through creator partnerships is increasingly important — the platforms that have built strong creator relationships are competing more effectively than the platforms relying on paid media alone. Brands operating in edtech should expect creator partnership costs to rise as more platforms compete for the same creator inventory, and should be building exclusivity arrangements where possible.
Mental health and wellness content is becoming an education-category extension. The boundary between education content and mental-health-and-wellness content is blurring in Bangladesh as audiences engage with creators across both. Brands that operate in either category should be considering creators on the other side of the boundary — Sonya’s combination of book reviews and mental-health content is one example, but similar overlaps are emerging across the category. The strategic implication: brand partnerships that span education and wellness can reach audiences neither category alone reaches.
What this looks like done right
An education-category brand operating influencer marketing in Bangladesh seriously has done the following:
Defined the conversion outcome precisely — enrollment, application, consultation booking, course purchase, downstream completion — and built measurement infrastructure that captures it across creator partnerships.
Selected creators based on credential alignment with the specific product proposition rather than aggregate reach, with multiple creator partnerships covering different audience segments and consideration-stage touchpoints.
Structured partnerships as long-form content production (podcast episodes, YouTube videos, dedicated educational sequences) rather than treating education creators as variants of entertainment creators producing short-form social content.
Given creators meaningful product access and editorial freedom rather than scripting every word of the output, accepting that authentic integration produces better results than controlled promotion.
Implemented clear disclosure that signals the partnership transparently rather than disguising paid placements, recognizing that disclosure improves rather than reduces conversion in this category.
Built ongoing relationships with proven creators over multiple campaigns rather than treating each campaign as a one-off, allowing the audience association and content library to compound across years.
Measured against enrollment and conversion metrics rather than impressions and reach, and used the conversion data to inform creator selection and content strategy for subsequent campaigns.
Operated platform-level partnerships (10 Minute School, Shikho, others) alongside individual creator partnerships where the audience fit warranted both.
The brands building this capability are producing competitive positions in education-category marketing that brands operating informally cannot match through paid-media investment alone. The capability compounds over multiple campaign cycles as creator relationships deepen, content libraries grow, and audience associations strengthen. The brands that haven’t built this capability continue competing on paid-media efficiency in a category where credibility-driven marketing produces consistently better unit economics.
For brands evaluating their education-category influencer strategy: the realistic question is whether you’re investing in the credibility transfer that determines education-category conversion, or operating in this category with the same playbook you’d use for entertainment-category campaigns. The first approach requires deliberate creator-partnership strategy and substantive content investment but produces sustainable competitive position. The second approach generates impressions without conversion and increasingly underperforms competitors operating with serious capability.
The 15 names above are the working roster for Bangladesh’s education category. Which creators belong in your specific campaign, in what sequence, with what content brief, and against what conversion outcome — that’s the strategic work. The list is the starting point.
Ngital builds education-category influencer marketing programs for Bangladeshi and international brands operating in edtech, language learning, study-abroad services, professional certification, banking targeting students and young professionals, and the broader education ecosystem. The work spans influencer marketing strategy and execution, content marketing, creative production, paid media amplification, and the measurement infrastructure that converts education-category campaigns from impression-generation exercises into measurable enrollment-and-revenue programs. We’ve activated campaigns with creators across every category covered in this post and know which combinations produce results for specific brand objectives.