Airdokan isn’t just another web development agency. They’re a team of builders, problem-solvers, and perfectionists obsessed with crafting high-performance websites that don’t just look great but perform flawlessly.
For CEO K.M. Bashar, the tools they used mattered as much as the websites they built. When Airdokan switched to Webstudio, it wasn’t just about features—it was about working smarter, staying agile, and having control over their future.
Why Airdokan Made the Switch
Bashar and his team needed a platform that could keep up with their pace. They found themselves frustrated with their current tool's inefficiencies—slow loading times, a rigid class system, and unpredictable pricing. That’s when they turned to Webstudio.
Here’s why, in Bashar’s own words:
Faster development
"I felt like we wasted a lot of time waiting for the builder to load. It drained my energy and made me feel unproductive. It seems like a small thing, just a few seconds more, but the amount of strain it puts on your mental energy when things are not instant is hard to quantify.
Plus, when we were building, we’d spend unnecessary time dealing with classes, which meant more time building, harder maintenance, and ultimately more hours unnecessarily spent on the website.
Our team really appreciates how quickly Webstudio loads and the brilliant system that has replaced classes—Tokens."
Predictable pricing
"I’d hear horror stories about agencies having to go to their clients and tell them about an exponential bill increase due to the platform changing their pricing model. I didn’t want our hands to be tied in this scenario.
Between Webstudio having affordable pricing and the option to self-host, we no longer have that fear."
Improved CMS workflow
"Content drives our business, and being locked into a CMS is putting too many eggs in one basket. Plus, we love how quickly we can scale content in tabular tools like Baserow.
Being able to integrate Baserow with Webstudio means we can output content way faster than having to switch between CMS pages for every little change. It really adds up."

