In a world full of LinkedIn self-mythologies and fake-it-til-you-make-it startup bros, Shovon Ahmed feels... different.
Maybe it’s because he’s not trying to be Silicon Valley slick. He’s not selling you hustle culture with a side of morning routine nonsense. He’s too busy building—quietly, strategically, obsessively.
At just 23, this Bangladeshi-born entrepreneur has already made a name for himself as a digital architect. Not the kind who just throws around buzzwords—but someone who understands how the internet actually works: the algorithms, the attention economy, the psychology behind clicks and credibility. Shovon isn’t playing the game. He’s rewriting the code.

Most people know him as the force behind Panel PR, the go-to agency if you're trying to get a Google Knowledge Panel or shape your digital identity in the age of online permanence. But to call him just a “PR guy” is like calling Elon Musk a car salesman. Shovon is part brand strategist, part growth hacker, and part cultural translator for the digital age.
He doesn’t chase virality—he manufactures visibility.
I’ve watched him take unknown names—authors, musicians, even early-stage startups—and systematically turn them into searchable, verifiable, media-ready entities. Not through smoke and mirrors. Through tactics. SEO, Wikipedia, schema markup, authority stacking—you name it, he’s not just using the tools, he’s tweaking them.
What makes Shovon so compelling isn’t just what he does—it’s where he’s doing it from. While most digital entrepreneurs still think the action is happening in New York, London, or Dubai, Shovon is proving that innovation doesn’t need a passport. From Bangladesh, he’s built a global presence that doesn’t beg for attention—it commands it.

And he’s not stopping there. His latest ventures span from media-building to educational platforms like wikigenius.org—a collaborative space teaching kids and teens how to use, create, and think critically about wikis and web content. The guy is basically creating an ecosystem—a kind of DIY empire for people who want to be seen, heard, and found online without playing the tired influencer game.
In a decade that’s already defined by digital identity and algorithmic visibility, Shovon Ahmed is a name you’ll hear more of—not because he’s shouting the loudest, but because he’s outsmarting the noise.
He’s not following the playbook.
He’s writing the next one.