Why your marketing campaign needs more than specialists? Your Meta ads are burning $500 a day. Traffic is coming in. But conversions? Dropping like a stone. Your developer says the landing page is fine—”It loads fast, everything works.” Your designer insists the visuals are on-brand. Your marketer swears the ad copy is optimized. Everyone’s working hard. Everyone’s defending their territory. And your ROI is bleeding out while they point fingers at each other. Here’s the brutal truth: You don’t have a developer problem, a design problem, or a marketing problem. You have a systems problem. And that’s exactly why I approach landing pages—and entire campaigns—differently than anyone else you’ll work with. The problem with specialists who can’t see beyond their screen. I’m Md Minhazul Abedin. Professionally, I’m a Landing Page Specialist (primarily a Web Developer). Academically, I studied Physics. And philosophically? I practice it with the same dedication most people reserve for religion. Walking across those disciplines taught me something critical: If you can’t see a problem from different angles, you can’t understand it properly. And you definitely can’t solve it. Think about how a computer works for a second. Ask a programmer, and they’ll tell you about software—programs, packages, operating systems, dependencies. Ask an electronics engineer, and they’ll explain circuits, transistors, how tiny electrical charges store data at the hardware level. Both are correct. Both see completely different pictures. And surprisingly? Both are absolutely essential to build an efficient web server. Throw a networking engineer into the mix, and now you’ve got a team that can actually make things work at scale. But here’s where it gets interesting—and why this matters to your landing page. Every discipline has limits (And why that should change how you think about problems) Our current computer chips are approaching physical boundaries. Engineers are shrinking circuits smaller and smaller, but eventually, you hit walls where classical physics starts breaking down and quantum effects kick in. At that point, the old rules don’t work anymore. So what do we do? We don’t give up. We switch disciplines. Enter quantum computing—where instead of simple on/off bits, we work with quantum states that can exist in multiple possibilities simultaneously. In 2019, Google’s quantum processor solved a specific problem in 200 seconds that would take traditional supercomputers 10,000 years. Different problem. Different discipline. Different solution. This matters in today’s AI-driven world because we’re processing massive amounts of data. Training models like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude requires enormous computational power. But here’s where philosophy enters the room: Do we actually need all this computing power? Are these AI tools essential for a better civilization? That’s not a physics question. That’s not an engineering question. That’s a philosophical one. And neither physicists nor engineers alone can answer it properly. That’s exactly how I learned to identify, breakdown, and solve problems. And that’s what I bring to my professional career—making me more than just a web developer. I don’t just build landing pages. I design entire campaigns with systems thinking. What this actually means when you hire me? Let me be crystal clear about what you’re getting: If you just need to convert your Figma design to Elementor? Call me. My developer self will handle it perfectly. If you have an Elementor template but can’t figure out why your page looks broken on mobile after swapping the hero image? Call me. My developer and designer selves work together to fix both the technical issue and the visual problem. If you have a live landing page and an active campaign, but conversions are getting worse every day? Now we’re talking. My developer, designer, and marketer selves collaborate—and I’ll bring in specialists from other disciplines if your business goals demand it. Here’s how that actually looks in practice. How I troubleshoot a Meta Ads Campaign? (Because I only work on Meta) When you bring me a struggling campaign, I don’t start with Elementor Canvas. I start with philosophy! Step 1: Strategic analysis (The Philosopher’s lens) First question: Does this campaign actually deserve to run? Is this the right time for an engagement campaign? Are your target audiences based on real data or educated guesses? What’s the actual business goal here—brand awareness, lead generation, direct sales? If the foundation is rotten, no amount of pretty design or clean code will save you. We fix this first, or we don’t move forward at all. Step 2: Creative review (The Designer’s lens) Assuming strategy checks out, now I examine your ad creatives like a graphic designer would. Is the design aligned with your campaign goal? Does it represent your brand through colors, shapes, and typography? Does it stop the scroll? If I’m not satisfied—or if the campaign genuinely needs it—I won’t hesitate to collaborate with a dedicated graphic designer. Bad creative wastes every dollar you spend, no matter how good your targeting is. Step 3: Copy optimization (The Marketer’s lens) Next, I dig into your ad copy as a digital marketer would. Is this copy convincing enough to move someone from curiosity to action? Are keywords optimized per Meta’s terms and conditions? Is the story structure walking toward conversion, or is it just… talking? Even perfect design can’t save weak copy. They work together, or they fail together. Step 4: Landing page experience (The UI/UX Designer’s lens) Now I’m looking at your landing page through a UI/UX designer’s eyes. Are these layouts and colors aligned with your brand identity? Will the CTA button’s color psychologically trigger visitors to buy or book an appointment? Is the page structure guiding users toward conversion, or confusing them? If the current page doesn’t satisfy me, I’ll hunt for an Elementor template or Figma layout that fits your campaign goal perfectly. And if your business goal truly demands it? I’ll recommend hiring a UI/UX designer without thinking twice. Because here’s the thing: I’m not trying to be the hero who does everything. I’m trying to get you results. Step 5: Development (My home territory) Finally, I’m in my zone. I’ll