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Channel audit · @DailyEnglishWithTejas

@DailyEnglishWithTejas Channel Audit: 33.2K Subs, 22.9M Views Breakdown

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@DailyEnglishWithTejas sits at 33,200 subscribers with 22.9M lifetime views across 196 uploads — a views-per-sub ratio of about 690, which is well above what most Indian education channels post. The last 20 uploads are 100% Shorts, signaling a full format pivot away from longer spoken-English lessons.

Channel data · captured Jun 25, 2026

Handle
@DailyEnglishWithTejas
Subscribers
33,200
Videos
196
Country
India

🚀 Welcome to Daily English With Tejas English is NOT hard 😎 — you just need the right method! Here, you’ll learn English in the easiest way using Hindi to English translation. 📚 What you’ll get: ✔️ Daily Use English Sentences ✔️ Spoken English Practice ✔️ Vocabulary Boost ✔️ Tenses Made Simple 📸 Just watch, screenshot & practice daily — and see your confidence grow 💯 🎯 This channel is for you if you want to: 👉 Speak English confidently 👉 Improve daily step by step 👉 Learn fast without confusion 🔥 Don’t just watch… PRACTICE! 📸 Daily English Notes on Instagram 👇 https://instagram.com/dailyenglishwithtejas_ 🚀 Follow & Subscribe now — start your English journey today! #englishlearning #spokenenglish #learnenglish #hinditoenglish #englishpractice #dailyenglish #englishshorts #learnfast

The first thing that jumps out from the data is the views-to-subscriber ratio. 22.9 million lifetime views on 33,200 subscribers works out to roughly 690 views per sub — most education channels in India sit between 100 and 300. That gap usually means one of two things: either the content travels well on the Shorts feed to non-subscribers, or there's a long tail of evergreen videos still pulling search and suggested traffic. With 196 uploads and the heavy Shorts mix visible in recent activity, it looks like Tejas is mostly riding the Shorts feed rather than a search-driven library.

The format pivot is hard to miss. The last 20 uploads are all Shorts — zero long-form in the recent window. For an English-learning channel that historically benefits from sit-down lesson videos and structured tense breakdowns, going all-Shorts is a strategic bet. It maximizes top-of-funnel discovery, but it cuts the room for the deeper "vocabulary boost" and "tenses made simple" content the channel description still promises. Worth checking whether the older long-form videos are the ones quietly carrying that 22.9M view total — if so, abandoning the format entirely might be leaving compounding search traffic on the table.

The niche positioning is genuinely sharp: spoken English for Hindi speakers, taught through Hindi-to-English translation. That's one of the few segments on YouTube India where supply still hasn't caught up with demand — search volume for terms like "spoken english practice" and "daily use english sentences" stays in the hundreds of thousands monthly. The description leans hard into a "watch, screenshot, practice" loop, which is a smart frame for Shorts — viewers don't have to take notes, the screenshot IS the note. That's a small mechanic but it's exactly the kind of thing that lifts saves, and saves are one of the strongest ranking signals on the Shorts feed right now in 2026.

Here's where I have to be honest about what I can see: the live scrape pulled the last 10 uploads with 0 views recorded and missing titles, which is either a data-collection miss on my end or these are very fresh uploads YouTube's API hadn't backfilled at scrape time. I can't actually grade individual recent video performance without that. What I CAN say is that at 196 lifetime uploads against 22.9M views, the historical average works out to roughly 117K views per video. That's a healthy number, but averages always hide the spread — there's almost certainly a handful of videos doing 1M+ pulling that mean up, and a long tail of sub-10K uploads. Without the per-video data I can't tell which lesson themes are the breakout ones.

The growth gap I'd diagnose from outside data is subscriber conversion. If recent Shorts are doing what Shorts usually do — high reach, low sub conversion — then the 33.2K sub count is probably under-indexed against actual watch time. Most Shorts-first education channels in India see a 0.1-0.3% sub conversion rate per million views, so 22.9M lifetime views "should" produce somewhere between 22K and 70K subs. Tejas is sitting at the lower-middle of that band. The likely fix isn't more views — it's a clearer "what you get if you subscribe" hook at the end of high-performing Shorts, plus maybe a couple of pinned long-form playlists that act as a home base for new arrivals who want more than 60 seconds at a time.

The one move I'd genuinely test if this were my channel: cluster the Shorts into themed series — "5-day tenses series," "10 phrases bankers actually use," "weekly office-English Shorts" — and tease the next one in the last 3 seconds of each video. Series structure is the cheapest way to convert Shorts watchers to subscribers because it gives them a reason to come back for the next drop. Combined with the existing Hindi-to-English framing, which clearly already has an audience pulling 117K views per video on average, that's the lowest-effort lever I can see from this side of the data. None of this requires more uploads. It just requires the existing uploads to point somewhere.

Common questions

How many subscribers does @DailyEnglishWithTejas have in 2026?

As of this audit, @DailyEnglishWithTejas sits at 33,200 subscribers with 196 total uploads and 22.9M lifetime views. That puts the channel in the mid-tier of the Indian English-learning niche — well past the early-stage 10K mark but not yet at the 100K+ tier where the top spoken-English creators play. The views-per-sub ratio of roughly 690 is notably higher than the niche average, which suggests strong discovery on the Shorts feed but underwhelming subscribe conversion from those views. That ratio is honestly the single most actionable number on the channel right now.

What kind of content does @DailyEnglishWithTejas post?

The channel teaches spoken English to Hindi-speaking learners, using Hindi-to-English translation as the core teaching method. The stated lesson categories in the channel description are daily-use English sentences, spoken English practice, vocabulary, and tenses made simple. The last 20 uploads are all Shorts — no long-form in the recent window. The Shorts are positioned around a "watch, screenshot, practice" loop, which is a smart save-driving mechanic. Historically the channel has 196 videos across its lifetime, so there's likely a meaningful archive of longer lesson content that isn't visible in the most recent uploads.

How often does @DailyEnglishWithTejas upload to YouTube?

I can't see exact upload timestamps in the live scrape, but the channel name "Daily English With Tejas" and the description's emphasis on "daily" practice point to a daily or near-daily cadence. With 196 lifetime uploads, that's consistent with someone posting steadily for roughly 6-9 months at a daily pace, or a year-plus at a 3-4 per week pace. The all-Shorts mix in recent uploads also signals a high-cadence workflow — long-form would be hard to ship daily, Shorts aren't, and the format pivot may have been partly a sustainability decision.

Is @DailyEnglishWithTejas's view-to-subscriber ratio healthy?

Yes — and unusually so. 22.9M lifetime views against 33,200 subscribers works out to roughly 690 views per subscriber, which is well above the 100-300 range typical for education channels. That kind of ratio almost always means the videos are reaching far beyond the subscribed audience, usually through Shorts feed surfacing or YouTube search. The flip side: a high views-per-sub ratio also signals weak subscribe conversion. The audience is showing up, watching, and leaving without subscribing. That's the actual growth lever worth pulling next — not more reach, better hooks.

What can other English-learning creators learn from @DailyEnglishWithTejas?

Two things stand out. First, the niche-language-pair framing — teaching English specifically through Hindi translation — is sharper than generic "learn English" channels and probably explains the strong discovery numbers. Second, the "screenshot and practice" framing in the description is a small but smart Shorts mechanic: it tells viewers exactly what to do with the content, which lifts saves and likely watch-time. The lesson isn't to copy the format, it's to copy the specificity: pick a clear language pair, give the viewer one obvious action to take, and repeat that loop until viewers expect it.

Why are @DailyEnglishWithTejas's recent video views showing as zero?

The live scrape pulled the last 10 uploads with zero views and missing titles. That's almost always one of two things — either YouTube's API hadn't backfilled view counts at the moment of the scrape (which happens for very recent uploads), or the data-collection layer hit a rate limit on the metadata fields. It's not a signal that the videos actually got zero views. The historical numbers — 196 uploads, 22.9M lifetime views, roughly 117K average per video — paint a much healthier picture of actual recent performance than the live snapshot row suggests.

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