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Channel audit · @UpskillAI-io

@UpskillAI-io Channel Audit: 10.8K Subs, 184 Videos, Hindi AI Niche

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@UpskillAI-io sits at 10,800 subscribers with 184 uploads and roughly 1.35M lifetime views — that works out to about 7,300 views per video across the catalog. The channel runs Hindi-language AI tutorials covering ChatGPT, Midjourney, and prompt engineering, and the recent feed is entirely long-form.

Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026

Handle
@UpskillAI-io
Subscribers
10,800
Videos
184
Country
India

Welcome to UpskillAI Hindi, the YouTube extension of UpskillAI.io! Our mission is to make AI tech easy and accessible for everyone. This is our Hindi channel and on this channel, you’ll find: 🟢 Step‑by‑Step Tutorials – From ChatGPT basics to Midjourney image generation, we break down complex concepts into simple, actionable steps. 🟢 Live Demos & Case Studies – Watch real‑world applications, Q&A sessions, and mini‑projects, so you can replicate success on your own. 🟢 Prompt Engineering – Get our curated prompt library and learn techniques to craft prompts that deliver perfect results every time. 🟢 Advanced Automations – Learn how to integrate AI into your workflows with tools like Zapier, Make (Integromat), and custom scripts. Whether you’re a student, a professional, or an entrepreneur, UpskillAI Hindi equips you with the skills and confidence to leverage AI in your work and creativity. Don’t forget to subscribe, and join our growing community of AI enthusiasts!

10,800 subscribers in the Hindi AI tutorial space puts UpskillAI-io somewhere in the middle of a crowded but genuinely growing niche. The big Hindi AI channels doing ChatGPT and prompt-engineering explainers in 2026 are clustered in the 50K to 300K range, with a long tail of 1K-10K channels still finding their footing. UpskillAI-io is past the survival zone but hasn't broken into the discovery flywheel that takes a channel from 10K to 50K — that gap is usually an algorithm-trust problem more than a content quality one.

The catalog math is worth sitting with for a second. 184 uploads against 1,346,636 lifetime views averages out to roughly 7,300 views per video. For a niche tutorial channel, that's a workable floor — it means the back catalog is doing its job, picking up search and suggested traffic over time even after the initial upload spike fades. The flip side: if your per-video average is 7K and your sub count is 10.8K, you're roughly converting one viewer in ten into a subscriber on the videos that hit, which is in line with the tutorial-channel norm but doesn't suggest the kind of breakout videos that pull in cold audiences fast.

Here's the part of the data I genuinely can't read — the recent uploads list came back with empty titles and zero view counts across the last ten videos. That's almost certainly a scraper artifact (the page rendered before metadata loaded, or the channel pushed uploads in the last 24 hours and the analytics endpoint hadn't caught up yet). I'm not going to pretend I can read those rows. Worth flagging because anything specific I'd say about the most recent performance would be guesswork at that point.

What I can read clearly is the format choice, and it's interesting. Zero Shorts in the last 25 uploads is unusual for an AI tutorial channel in 2026. Most channels in this exact niche — Hindi AI explainers — use Shorts as a top-of-funnel mechanic: a 45-second "ChatGPT trick" pulls 50K-500K views, sends a sliver to the long-form tutorial, and the long-form does the subscriber conversion. UpskillAI-io is going long-form only, which is a defensible call (Shorts-acquired subscribers historically convert worse to long-form watch time), but it does mean the channel is relying entirely on search intent and suggested-video pickups for new viewers.

The description signals a positioning play that's not always obvious from outside. UpskillAI.io is the main English-language brand; this YouTube channel is the Hindi-language extension of it. That bilingual structure is actually one of the harder things to execute well — most creators try to serve both languages from one channel and the recommendation engine gets confused about who the audience is. Splitting Hindi onto its own channel means YouTube has a clean signal, which probably explains how the catalog has built up a healthy 1.35M view base even at a modest 10.8K sub count.

If I were looking at growth gaps from the outside, the thing I'd want to see (and can't) is the watch-time distribution across those 184 videos. My bet is that 20 or so videos are doing the bulk of the heavy lifting — probably high-intent search titles like "ChatGPT in Hindi" or "Midjourney tutorial Hindi" — and the other 160 are picking up trickles. Knowing which videos pull weight tells you the next thing to film. If the ChatGPT basics videos are the workhorses, the move is more "first 30 minutes with [new model] in Hindi" content as new models drop through the rest of 2026. If it's the Midjourney content, lean into the image-gen tools that have shipped this year.

One honest forward observation. The bottleneck for a channel like this getting to 50K subs is almost always thumbnail and title resonance on suggested video, not upload frequency or quality. 184 videos already proves the consistency is there. The question I'd be asking if this were my own channel: of the videos that did break out historically, what was different about the title and thumbnail? Probably more emotionally framed (क्यों, नहीं, specific outcomes) versus descriptive ("ChatGPT Tutorial Part 4"). That's a pattern you can only see by sorting your own analytics by CTR, but in my experience it's where the lift is usually hiding for channels stuck in the 10K plateau.

Common questions

How many subscribers does @UpskillAI-io have right now?

As of June 2026, @UpskillAI-io has 10,800 subscribers, 184 total uploads, and 1,346,636 lifetime channel views. The math on that works out to roughly 7,300 views per video across the full catalog, which is a reasonable floor for a niche tutorial channel. The channel sits in what I'd call the mid-tier of the Hindi AI explainer space — past the early survival zone where most channels die, but not yet in the breakout flywheel that takes channels from 10K to 50K subscribers in a single year.

What language and niche does @UpskillAI-io publish in?

@UpskillAI-io publishes entirely in Hindi and focuses on practical AI tool tutorials — ChatGPT basics, Midjourney image generation, prompt engineering, live demos, and case studies. The channel describes itself as the YouTube extension of UpskillAI.io, with the parent brand operating in English. Running Hindi on a dedicated channel rather than mixing both languages in one feed is actually a smart algorithmic choice — YouTube's recommendation engine gets a much cleaner signal about audience when one channel commits to one language, which probably helps explain the healthy view floor across 184 uploads.

Why doesn't @UpskillAI-io upload YouTube Shorts?

Looking at the last 25 uploads, all 25 are long-form — zero Shorts. That's a notable format choice in 2026, because most channels in the Hindi AI tutorial niche use Shorts as a top-of-funnel mechanic. A 45-second "ChatGPT trick" can pull 100K+ views and feed a trickle of those viewers to the long-form tutorials. The tradeoff: Shorts-acquired subscribers historically convert worse to long-form watch time, so committing to long-form-only is defensible if the goal is high-intent viewers. It does mean growth depends heavily on search and suggested pickups instead of viral discovery.

How does @UpskillAI-io's view count compare to its subscriber base?

The channel has roughly 1.35M lifetime views against 10,800 subscribers — about a 125-to-1 view-to-sub ratio. That's healthy for a tutorial channel and suggests the back catalog is doing the long-tail work it's supposed to do (search traffic, suggested pickups months after upload). The per-video average of about 7,300 views means a typical upload finds its audience but isn't breaking out. Getting to 50K subs from here usually requires a handful of videos doing 50K+ each, not just a steady drip of 7K performers.

What can other Hindi creators learn from @UpskillAI-io's setup?

The bilingual brand structure is worth studying. UpskillAI runs an English-language site (UpskillAI.io) and a separate Hindi YouTube channel — they didn't try to serve both audiences from one feed. That separation is hard to execute but pays off algorithmically. The other observable lesson: 184 uploads sitting tightly inside one niche (AI tools, prompt engineering, ChatGPT, Midjourney) builds the kind of topical authority that compounds over time. The channel's view floor across the catalog suggests YouTube has clearly categorized it, which is usually the precondition for breakout videos when they eventually happen.

What's the biggest growth gap visible in @UpskillAI-io's channel data?

From outside, the clearest gap is the absence of breakout videos in the recent feed. With a 7,300 per-video average and 10,800 subscribers, the math says growth from here probably won't come from upload consistency (already proven at 184 videos) but from CTR and title experimentation on the next 10-20 uploads. The pattern I'd be looking at internally is which historical videos broke past 30K views and what was different about their titles and thumbnails. That's usually where the next 10K subscribers are hiding for a channel stuck around the 10K plateau.

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Run a free YouTube channel audit on your own channel

Paste your channel handle and get a free read of the bottleneck holding back your Shorts, uploads, or channel positioning. No signup and no card for the first read.