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Channel audit · @BIO-G01

@BIO-G01 Channel Audit: 15,000 Subs, 1,000 Videos, NEET Biology Niche

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@BIO-G01 is Dr. Amit Keshwani's NEET and Class XI/XII biology channel out of India, sitting at 15,000 subscribers across roughly 1,000 uploaded videos. The unusual signal: total channel views read as 3,296 lifetime — which, if accurate, works out to about 3 views per video over the channel's history.

Channel data · captured Jun 1, 2026

Handle
@BIO-G01
Subscribers
15,000
Videos
1,000
Country
India

G is not for genius | G is for Genetics By - Dr. Amit Keshwani Sir Every child has potential. 'Jeet ki tayyiary karne ka koi sahi vaqt nahi hota, aap jab shuru kar lein, wahi waqt sahi hota hai'. Start your journey to learn biology ( class XI, XII, NEET, BOARDS etc.) with an accurate source here! Believe in yourself, you'll be able to make your dream come true. We put daily MCQs and post different tips/tricks and sometimes even fun facts and knowledge disguised as memes. You're gonna love it and you're gonna rock your world. Trust yourself.

Let me say upfront what I can and can't see here. From the outside I have subscriber count, total video count, lifetime view total, and the metadata on the most recent 30 uploads. I can't see retention, CTR, traffic source split, or what's happening in Studio. So everything below is pattern-reading, not gospel.

The headline number is the disconnect between subs and lifetime views. 15,000 subscribers is a real audience — not huge in Indian NEET prep, where channels like Physics Wallah and Unacademy Biology sit in the millions, but it's the kind of base where a single decent upload should comfortably clear a few thousand views. Instead, the public total reads 3,296 across the entire channel. That's either (a) a data scrape glitch where view counts on the public API are misreporting, (b) a very recent reset or channel-type change (some education channels migrate between handles or get reclassified), or (c) genuinely the case that the channel publishes a high volume of content where most uploads pull near-zero. My honest read is some mix of (a) and (c) — the recent uploads all surface as 0 views with blank title fields, which usually means private/unlisted videos or freshly published Shorts/MCQs that haven't been indexed by the scrape yet.

The description tells you the strategy clearly: "daily MCQs and post different tips/tricks and sometimes even fun facts and knowledge disguised as memes." That maps to a daily-volume-play, which explains the 1,000-video count over the channel's lifetime. A daily MCQ channel will rack up uploads fast, but the trade-off is that each individual video is small and disposable — a question card, a 30-second concept clip — and those don't tend to accumulate views the way a single 12-minute concept explainer does. So a low view-per-video ratio isn't automatically a death signal in this format, but 3 views per video lifetime is still steep even by daily-MCQ standards.

The niche itself is strong. NEET biology in Hindi-English code-switching (the description's "Jeet ki tayyiary karne ka koi sahi vaqt nahi hota" is exactly the register that works with Indian Class XI/XII students) is one of the most search-intent-dense corners of YouTube India. A student preparing for NEET is searching for specific chapter names — Genetics, Human Physiology, Plant Kingdom — which means SEO-driven topic targeting can pay off even with a small channel, as long as the titles match what students type. The channel name doing the "G is for Genetics, not Genius" pun is cute and on-brand for the niche.

Where I'd dig if I were Dr. Keshwani's team: the gap between 15K subs and the engagement numbers points to a notification-fatigue or feed-suppression problem. When you upload daily for years, YouTube quietly stops surfacing your videos to subscribers who never click. Subs become a vanity number. The fix isn't more uploads — it's the opposite. Cutting upload frequency to 2-3 per week, with each video being a chapter-anchored explainer ("Mendel's Laws Explained in 8 Minutes — NEET 2026") rather than an MCQ card, would probably do more for visible reach than another 100 daily quiz posts.

The other thing worth checking, and I genuinely can't tell from outside: are the recent uploads Shorts that haven't been classified as Shorts in the scrape? The recent-30 list reads as "30 long-form, 0 Shorts," but daily MCQ content is almost always Shorts-shaped. If the channel is publishing as long-form when the content is 60-second card-style videos, that's a format-mismatch problem — long-form needs longer dwell time to be promoted, and a 60-second video uploaded as long-form will tank watch-time metrics. Worth checking in Studio.

One aside, because I think it's interesting: the Hindi-English mix in the description ("Jeet ki tayyiary" alongside "Class XI, XII, NEET, BOARDS") is well-tuned for the audience, but the channel handle BIO-G01 reads like an internal SKU, not a brand. Students searching for "Dr Amit biology NEET" probably aren't finding the channel because the handle gives them nothing to latch onto. A rename to something like @DrAmitBiology or @BiologyByAmit would do real discovery work.

Common questions

How many subscribers does @BIO-G01 have on YouTube?

@BIO-G01 has 15,000 subscribers as of June 2026. The channel is run by Dr. Amit Keshwani and focuses on biology for Class XI, XII, NEET, and Board exam preparation in India. For context, 15K subs in the Indian NEET-prep niche is a small-to-mid tier creator — well below the household names like Physics Wallah, but a meaningful base for a specialist subject channel. The interesting wrinkle is that subscriber count alone doesn't tell the whole story here, given the channel's roughly 1,000 lifetime uploads.

What niche is @BIO-G01's channel in?

It's a NEET and Indian secondary-school biology prep channel, taught by Dr. Amit Keshwani. The description spells out the audience clearly: Class XI, XII, NEET aspirants, and Board exam students. Content format is described as daily MCQs, tips and tricks, and concepts "disguised as memes," which suggests a quiz-card and short-form heavy approach. The Hindi-English code-switching in the channel description ("Jeet ki tayyiary karne ka koi sahi vaqt nahi hota") signals the channel is targeting Hindi-medium and bilingual students, which is the largest segment of the NEET-prep market in India.

Why does @BIO-G01 have so few total views for 1,000 videos?

Honest answer: I'm not 100% sure from outside data. The public scrape shows 3,296 lifetime channel views across roughly 1,000 uploads, which is unusually low even for a daily-MCQ channel. The most likely explanations are either a data-scrape inconsistency where Shorts views aren't being counted in the channel total, a recent channel reclassification, or a genuine notification-fatigue pattern where daily uploads have trained subscribers to ignore the bell. The recent uploads all reading as 0 views with blank titles also points to a likely scrape-timing issue.

How often does @BIO-G01 upload new videos?

The description explicitly says "we put daily MCQs," and the math backs it up — roughly 1,000 videos over the channel's lifetime is consistent with multi-times-weekly or daily posting. The last 30 uploads in the recent data are all classified as long-form with zero Shorts, but that's worth questioning. Daily MCQ content in the NEET niche is almost always 60-second card-style videos, which should be Shorts. If they're being uploaded as long-form, that's a format mismatch that would suppress YouTube's algorithmic distribution.

What's the biggest growth gap visible in @BIO-G01's data?

From outside, the clearest gap is the mismatch between upload volume and per-video reach. Pushing daily quiz cards to a 15K audience that's been trained to ignore notifications is a hard loop to escape. The single highest-leverage change would probably be cutting upload frequency in half and replacing some MCQ cards with chapter-specific explainers titled for NEET search intent — things like "Genetics Class 12 Full Chapter" or "Human Reproduction NEET One-Shot." Search traffic in this niche is dense and predictable, and explainer videos accumulate views over years.

What can other NEET biology creators learn from @BIO-G01?

Two things worth noting. First, the channel's positioning line — "G is not for genius, G is for Genetics" — is the kind of memorable brand hook most education channels skip. It's specific, it's playful, and it tells you the subject in seven words. Second, the cautionary lesson is in the handle itself. @BIO-G01 reads like an internal product code, not a brand a student would search for. If Dr. Amit Keshwani's name is the actual draw, the handle should reflect that. Memorable handles compound over years; SKU-style handles do not.

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