What You'll Actually Learn, Module by Module
Module 1 — Web Foundations How the internet actually works, domains, hosting, browsers, and how a request travels from your browser to a server and back.
Module 2 — Front-End Development HTML5 for structure, CSS3 for styling, Bootstrap for responsive layouts, and JavaScript for interactivity — building static pages that look professional on any screen size.
Module 3 — PHP Fundamentals Variables, loops, functions, arrays, and object-oriented programming (OOP) basics — the actual grammar of the language.
Module 4 — MySQL and Databases Creating databases, writing queries, connecting PHP to MySQL, and understanding how data gets stored, fetched, and updated safely.
Module 5 — Dynamic Website Development Forms, file uploads, sessions, cookies, login systems, and admin panels — the features every real website needs.
Module 6 — Security Basics SQL injection prevention, input validation, and password hashing. Most beginner courses skip this. We don't — a developer who doesn't know basic security isn't job-ready.
Module 7 — Frameworks Introduction A working introduction to Laravel or CodeIgniter, so you understand MVC architecture and aren't lost the day a company asks you to work in a framework instead of core PHP.
Module 8 — Live Project You build one complete, deployed website from scratch — not a toy exercise, something that goes live on a real server.
How We Helped: A Real Example
A BCA final-year student came to us last year having failed to understand PHP from YouTube tutorials for months. She could copy code but couldn't explain why it worked. We started her over from the database layer — had her design a MySQL schema by hand for a simple bookstore before writing a single line of PHP. Once she understood what the data needed to look like, the PHP code stopped feeling like magic and started feeling like instructions. She finished her live project (a mini e-commerce admin panel) in week 10 and used it directly in her college final-year submission, then picked up freelance PHP fixes for local businesses within two months of finishing the course.
Self-Learning vs Joining a Training Institute
Both work. Neither is automatically better — it depends on you.
| |
Self-Learning (YouTube/free courses) |
Joining an Institute |
| Cost |
Free to low |
Paid, but structured |
| Speed |
Slow — lots of trial and error |
Faster, guided path |
| Doubt-solving |
You're on your own |
Trainer available directly |
| Project feedback |
None |
Reviewed and corrected |
| Job readiness |
Depends heavily on discipline |
Live projects built in |
| Placement support |
None |
Usually included |
| Best for |
Highly self-motivated learners with time |
Beginners wanting structure and speed |
If you've tried self-learning before and stalled out around the "PHP connects to MySQL but I don't know why my code isn't working" stage — that's exactly the point where structured guidance saves months.
Why Learn Web Design and Development With Hyper Software
We're not a pure training academy — we're an active IT solutions company, founded in 2020 and based in Jaipur, that builds real client websites, software, and apps every single day. That matters for training, because:
- You're learning from people who write PHP for paying clients, not just for a syllabus.
- Live projects are based on patterns we actually use in client work.
- Strong learners sometimes move into paid project work with us directly.
- We teach practical, current techniques — not a syllabus frozen from five years ago
Course Fees, Duration and Batches
Course fees and duration for PHP and web development training vary across Jaipur institutes — short PHP-only modules often run 45 days, while a full front-end plus back-end program typically takes 3 to 6 months depending on batch pace and how deep the framework module goes. We don't publish a fixed number here because it depends on whether you're joining the short PHP module or the full web design and development program, and whether you choose weekday, weekend, or online-live batches.

What to do: call or WhatsApp +91 9079282750, tell us your current skill level, and we'll tell you exactly which track fits and what it costs — no pressure, no forced upsell.
Batch options:
- Weekday classroom (morning/evening)
- Weekend batches
- Online-live batches (for outside-Jaipur and international learners)
- Fast-track intensive batches
Career Paths and How Placement Support Actually Works
Completing this course can lead toward roles like:
- PHP Developer
- Web Developer (Front-End, Back-End, or Full-Stack)
- WordPress Developer
- Junior Software Developer
- Freelance Web Developer
Placement support, honestly explained: it means resume review, interview preparation, and introductions to our own client and partner network when openings come up — not a guaranteed job offer. No legitimate institute can promise a guaranteed job, and you should be cautious of any that does.
Common Mistakes Beginners Make While Learning PHP
Memorizing syntax instead of understanding logic. You can look up syntax. You can't look up how to think through a problem.
Skipping MySQL basics and jumping straight into PHP-database connections — this is why so many learners get stuck at "why isn't my query working."
Ignoring security from day one. Learning to validate input and prevent SQL injection later is much harder than building the habit from the start.
Copy-pasting from tutorials without breaking code on purpose. Deliberately introducing an error and fixing it teaches you more than a hundred working examples.
Avoiding frameworks entirely. Core PHP is essential to learn first, but most real jobs today expect at least basic Laravel or CodeIgniter familiarity.
Do It Yourself vs Hiring an Agency (For Your Own Business Website)
If you're taking this course to eventually build your own business website rather than pursue development as a career, weigh this honestly:
DIY (after this course): Lower cost, full control, but takes real time — expect weeks, not days, for a first professional site, and ongoing maintenance is on you.
Hiring an agency: Faster, professionally finished, but higher upfront cost, and you're dependent on someone else for every change.
Many small business owners land in the middle: they take this course to understand what they're paying for, then hire a developer for the heavy lifting while handling small content updates themselves. That combination avoids being overcharged and avoids the frustration of a half-finished DIY site.