If you’ve ever searched “SSC result 2026 Dinajpur board” at midnight before your parents wake up, you’ve probably landed on a site like bdcareerinfo.com. It’s one of those Bangladeshi websites that collects job circulars, exam results, and admission news in one place so you don’t have to dig through ten government portals.
What’s on the site
The main stuff is government job circulars — ministries, armed forces, public institutions. There are also NGO and private company jobs, but honestly most people come for the government ones. Alongside that, you get SSC/HSC routines, National University results, and admission updates.
It basically grabs announcements from official sources and puts them on one page with some explanation. First-time applicants, especially those who’ve never filled out a government job form before, find the step-by-step guides helpful.
Who actually uses it
Students waiting for board results. Fresh graduates hunting for their first job. People from rural areas who don’t have someone nearby to explain what a “teletalk application process” means. In Bangladesh, where lakhs of people compete for a few thousand government posts, knowing about a circular two days late can cost you the chance entirely. That’s where these sites matter.
The problems
The site doesn’t create any original data. It copies from official sources, which means if the official notice changes, the site might not update fast enough. Old job posts from 2018 still show up in Google searches, which is confusing if you’re not careful about the date.
The design is basic. No real search filters. Ads pop up everywhere. On mobile it can feel cluttered. Premium portals like bdjobs.com have better tools, but they’re more corporate-focused and not always free.
The writing is also clearly SEO-heavy — titles like “SSC Result 2026 All Board Check Now” are designed to rank on Google, not to actually read well.
How to use it without getting misled
Treat it as a heads-up, not an official source. If you see a circular that looks relevant, go check the actual government website or the original PDF before you do anything. Don’t trust deadlines you haven’t verified. The site is useful for discovery — finding out that a circular exists — but not for final decisions.
Bottom line
It fills a real gap. Government job announcements are scattered, official websites are slow, and not everyone knows where to look. Sites like bdcareerinfo.com pull that information together and explain it in plain language. It’s not perfect, and you shouldn’t rely on it alone. But for a student in Rangpur trying to figure out if Bangladesh Air Force is recruiting this month, it’s a reasonable starting point.