@easy2learning Channel Audit: 32.6K Subs, 4,000 Videos Analyzed
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@easy2learning runs one of the deepest video libraries in Indian competitive exam prep — 4,000 uploads against 32,600 subscribers and 3.01M lifetime views. That works out to roughly 753 views per video, which tells you more about their teaching cadence than their reach: they upload like a coaching institute, not a YouTuber.
Channel data · captured Jun 18, 2026
- Handle
- @easy2learning
- Subscribers
- 32,600
- Videos
- 4,000
- Country
- India
We at Easy2Learning believe that learning should be easy. Keeping this in mind, we teach our students to learn the concepts through easy methods so they can enhance their understanding of the subject. We also believe that cracking a competitive exam needs conceptual as well as mathematical understanding, to cover this we make the students go through lot of practice problems, weekly subject wise test, full subject test, mock exams. Easy2Learning is facilitating online classes for JELET, West Bengal Police, WBSETCL, SSC, JEXPO & other competitive examinations. Contact Person:- David Das Contact number:- 8584864783
Let me put 4,000 videos in context. Most education channels at the 30K sub tier have 200-600 uploads. Easy2Learning has 4,000. That's not a YouTube content strategy — that's a recorded coaching operation. With 3,013,190 lifetime views spread across that library, the math comes out to about 753 views per video on average, but the reality is almost certainly bimodal: a few hundred videos doing real numbers, and thousands of class recordings that maybe 20-50 students actually watch. That's not a criticism. It's just a different model from the algorithm-chasing creators most audits look at.
The niche is clear from the channel description: JELET prep (Joint Entrance Lateral Entry Test — the West Bengal engineering lateral entry exam) plus adjacent competitive exams. This is a thin-margin, hyper-specific audience. JELET aspirants are roughly 30,000-60,000 students per cycle, and they're searching for very particular topics — partial differentiation, vector calculus, transformer problems. Easy2Learning is positioned to own that long-tail search if they push it. 32.6K subs against a niche that small is actually impressive market penetration. For comparison, that's somewhere near 1 subscriber per current-cycle aspirant, which is a wild ratio if you sit with it.
Upload mix is the first thing I'd push back on. Of the last 30 uploads, all 30 are long-form. Zero Shorts. In 2026, for an Indian education channel, that's leaving a major discovery channel completely closed. The bigger exam prep channels in the broader category — PhysicsWallah, Khan Academy India, even mid-tier JEE creators — are pulling massive Shorts impressions on quick concept hits, single-problem walkthroughs, formula tricks. A JELET-focused channel could carve a clean 60-second niche around "this problem appeared in JELET 2024" or "this concept always shows up." The Shorts feed treats education well, and the cost of producing one Short from an existing 45-minute class recording is maybe 15 minutes of editing. Right now every Shorts impression in this niche is going to someone else.
Here's where I have to be honest about what I can't see. The recent upload scrape came back with empty titles and zero views on all ten videos, which usually means one of three things: the videos are unlisted (members-only or paywalled course content), they were just uploaded and haven't accumulated public views yet, or there's a scraping hiccup with this specific channel. Without the titles I can't comment on whether the recent content matches what's worked historically. If those videos are paywalled course recordings, the public channel is acting as a credibility shopfront for the actual product — which is a perfectly valid setup, just one that limits what an outside audit can grade.
What I can see, though, is the distribution shape. 3M views across 4,000 videos suggests a relatively flat curve rather than a few breakout hits carrying the channel. Channels that scale on YouTube tend to have a power-law shape — one video at 500K, ten at 50K, the rest under 5K. A flat distribution near a 750 average usually means the channel is working as a class archive rather than a discovery engine. That's fine if the goal is enrollments. If the goal is YouTube growth specifically, the playbook would be pulling the 20 strongest concept explanations out of the archive, recutting them as standalone 8-12 minute discovery videos with proper SEO titles like "JELET Mathematics: Eigenvalues in 10 Minutes," and letting those work as top-of-funnel.
One forward-looking thing. Indian regional-language education on YouTube is having a real moment right now — Bengali-medium and Hindi-medium concept explainers are pulling numbers that English-only channels in the same subjects can't touch. If Easy2Learning is teaching in Bengali or bilingual (which the West Bengal focus strongly suggests), leaning further into that and tagging it explicitly in titles could be a cheap unlock. The audience exists, the competition is thinner, and the geographic targeting matches their existing student base. Worth a test, even just a five-video pilot to read the comments before committing the broader channel direction.
Common questions
How many subscribers does Easy2Learning have on YouTube?
As of June 2026, @easy2learning sits at 32,600 subscribers with 3,013,190 lifetime views across 4,000 uploaded videos. That's an unusually deep library relative to the subscriber count — most channels at this tier have 200-500 videos. The ratio works out to roughly 753 views per video on average, which suggests the channel functions partly as a class archive rather than a pure YouTube growth play. The 32.6K figure is actually solid for the JELET prep niche specifically, given the relatively small annual aspirant pool for that exam.
What niche is @easy2learning's channel focused on?
Easy2Learning teaches Indian competitive exam prep with a primary focus on JELET — the Joint Entrance Lateral Entry Test for West Bengal engineering pathway students. The channel description also mentions weekly subject-wise tests, full subject tests, and mock exams, which signals they're running a full online coaching operation with YouTube as one delivery channel. The audience is narrow and intent-heavy — students preparing for a specific dated exam — which is why their subscriber-to-niche ratio is actually quite strong even if the absolute number looks modest next to general-purpose education channels.
Why does @easy2learning have 4,000 videos but only 32.6K subscribers?
This is the most interesting structural pattern on the channel. 4,000 videos is institute-scale, not creator-scale. The most likely explanation is that the channel doubles as a class recording archive alongside live coaching, with public videos serving as credibility for paid enrollments. That model doesn't optimize for subscriber growth — it optimizes for trust signals with prospective students. The 32.6K subs is a byproduct, not the goal. If they wanted subscriber growth from this existing library, recutting the top 30 concept explanations as standalone tutorials would likely move the number meaningfully.
Should @easy2learning post YouTube Shorts?
From the outside data, yes, and it's their biggest visible gap. Of the last 30 uploads, all 30 are long-form classes — zero Shorts. In 2026, the Shorts feed is where Indian education discovery happens, particularly for exam prep. A JELET-focused channel could pull single-concept Shorts directly from existing class recordings — 60-second explainer hits like "this question appeared in JELET 2024" or quick formula walkthroughs. Production cost is minimal because the raw material already exists in the archive. Right now, every Shorts impression in this niche is being captured by competing channels.
What's the best growth strategy visible from @easy2learning's data?
Two things stand out from outside. First, mining the existing 4,000-video archive for the 20-30 best standalone concept explanations and recutting them as proper discovery videos with SEO-tuned titles. The teaching is done — it's a packaging problem. Second, testing Shorts seriously for the first time. Regional-language Indian education content is performing exceptionally well in 2026, and the West Bengal focus suggests Easy2Learning has a Bengali or bilingual angle they could push more explicitly in metadata. Neither requires new content production, which makes them cheap experiments to run.
How does @easy2learning compare to other Indian education YouTube channels?
Easy2Learning is a niche specialist rather than a mass-market education channel. PhysicsWallah, Khan Academy India, and the larger JEE/NEET channels operate at 10M+ subscribers because their target exam pools are millions of students. JELET-specific demand is a small fraction of that. So comparing absolute subscriber numbers isn't really useful. What matters is within-niche position, where 32.6K subs is competitive. The honest comparison is other regional engineering lateral-entry prep channels, and against that bench Easy2Learning's 4,000-video archive is a real differentiator for students who search YouTube directly for syllabus topics.
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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.