@BhaveshMakwana-f4z Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Analyzed
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@BhaveshMakwana-f4z (7,830 subs, 35 videos) sits in a loosely defined education-adjacent cluster on YouTube, with closest competitor signals coming from @projectleadershipinstitute (7,300 subs) and @Thegauravrai1 (9,630 subs). The clearest differentiator: Bhavesh has built a top-tier 224 subs-per-video ratio that none of the five rivals match.
Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026
- Handle
- @BhaveshMakwana-f4z
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
The niche around @BhaveshMakwana-f4z is harder to pin down than most. With only 35 uploads on the channel, there isn't enough video corpus for YouTube's recommender to confidently lock onto a single topic vector. So the competitor set it surfaces — five channels spanning stock trading, tech reviews, corporate leadership training, government exam prep, and cloud development — is probably matching on audience signals like geography and general professional-learning intent rather than strict topical overlap. Four of the five are India-based, which is the strongest shared signal in the whole set. Worth keeping in mind as you read the rest.
@Thegauravrai1 (9,630 subs, 319 videos) is the closest sub-count neighbor that's actively shipping at scale. His beat is Indian retail investing — stock market, trading, mutual funds, IPOs, fundamental and technical analysis. Where this differs from Bhavesh's positioning: Gaurav has uploaded roughly 9x more videos to land within ~1,800 subs of where Bhavesh already is. That's a meaningful efficiency gap. If you're a viewer trying to learn personal finance specifically, follow Gaurav. If Bhavesh's channel is broader commentary or general business stuff (his description literally just says "More about this channel," so it's hard to tell from outside), the overlap is more audience than topic.
@BeyondTheScreenn (11,600 subs, 124 videos) is the closest analogue in cadence philosophy — Ashwin runs a "let me chat about tech and try to make sense of it" channel, which feels closer to commentary than tutorial. 124 videos to hit 11.6K is decent but still a 3-4x video count over Bhavesh. The thing to notice is the tone — his description reads casual, first-person, "nothing too serious." That's a closer voice match to a low-upload-volume creator than a daily-cadence finance educator. Worth pairing with Bhavesh if the audience overlap is people who like observation-led, conversational formats.
@projectleadershipinstitute (7,300 subs, 1,600 videos) is the outlier and arguably the most instructive data point on this list. 1,600 videos for 7,300 subs works out to ~4.5 subs per upload. That's almost certainly a corporate training operation dumping every webinar, snippet, and training module onto YouTube without much channel-strategy filtering. Bhavesh's 224 subs-per-video ratio is roughly 50x more efficient. This isn't really a fair comparison — it's a different content model entirely (institutional vs creator). The only reason to follow PLI alongside Bhavesh is if you specifically want PM-track corporate content; otherwise it's mostly noise in the similarity feed.
@FAUJDARACADEMY (15,300 subs, 491 videos) is the largest channel in the set and the most clearly defined — RPSC, KVS, NVS, EMRS exam prep for Indian government teaching jobs. This is a tightly scoped vertical with a hungry, repeat-viewing audience. If Bhavesh's content sits anywhere in the broader Indian professional-education space, Faujdar Academy is what a fully committed vertical play looks like at scale. Follow them if you're prepping for those specific exams. The lesson for Bhavesh-style creators here is the niche-discipline gap — Faujdar's entire channel is one audience served deeply, not a wide-net approach.
@TheCloudXBerry (12,000 subs, 369 videos) is a dev-focused channel — software, cloud infrastructure, databases for working developers. India-based, English-language, professionally pitched. 369 videos to land at 12K is ~32 subs per video, which is roughly in line with the rest of the set and well below Bhavesh's ratio. The interesting thing is the audience overlap with Bhavesh probably comes from people in tech-adjacent jobs in India watching both channels for different reasons. Follow Cloud X Berry if you actually write code; it's the most technically specialized channel of the five.
If you actively watch @BhaveshMakwana-f4z, the two adjacent channels I'd queue up are @BeyondTheScreenn (similar conversational, low-cadence-per-sub style) and @Thegauravrai1 (similar India-based audience but in a tighter vertical). The other three are more useful as contrast cases: @FAUJDARACADEMY shows what hyper-vertical exam prep looks like, @TheCloudXBerry shows the developer-education lane, and @projectleadershipinstitute is honestly mostly a recommender-system false positive. The real story in this competitor set is that Bhavesh's 224 subs-per-video ratio is unusually high — none of the five rivals are even half as efficient on that metric, which suggests either strong thumbnail and title craft or just a small-sample-size effect from only 35 uploads. Both are possible; can't tell from outside.
Common questions
Who are @BhaveshMakwana-f4z's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Based on YouTube's similar-channels signal, the five most adjacent channels are @FAUJDARACADEMY (15,300 subs, exam prep), @TheCloudXBerry (12,000 subs, cloud and dev education), @BeyondTheScreenn (11,600 subs, tech commentary), @Thegauravrai1 (9,630 subs, stock market), and @projectleadershipinstitute (7,300 subs, PM training). Four are India-based, which seems to be the strongest matching signal — not topic. The closest by sub count is PLI, but the closest by content cadence and voice is probably BeyondTheScreenn. With only 35 uploads on Bhavesh's channel, the competitor set is still loosely defined and may shift as more videos publish.
How does @BhaveshMakwana-f4z compare to @Thegauravrai1?
Sub counts are within ~1,800 of each other (7,830 vs 9,630), but the path each took is very different. Gaurav has uploaded 319 videos to get to 9,630 subs — about 30 subs per upload. Bhavesh has 35 uploads for 7,830 subs — roughly 224 per upload. That's a 7x efficiency gap on the subs-per-video metric. Topically, Gaurav is locked into Indian stock market, trading, and personal finance, while Bhavesh's positioning is unclear from his one-line description. If you specifically want investing content, follow Gaurav.
What channels should I watch alongside @BhaveshMakwana-f4z?
@BeyondTheScreenn is probably the closest stylistic match — Ashwin's "let me chat about tech" framing pairs well with creators who upload at a slower cadence. @Thegauravrai1 is worth following if you have any interest in Indian retail investing, since the audience overlap is likely high even if the content angle isn't. @TheCloudXBerry is the one to add if you're in the tech or dev workforce. The other two — @FAUJDARACADEMY (exam prep) and @projectleadershipinstitute (corporate PM training) — are mostly useful as contrast viewing rather than companion viewing in your sub feed.
Is @BhaveshMakwana-f4z the biggest channel in their niche?
No. At 7,830 subs, Bhavesh sits roughly mid-pack — tied with @projectleadershipinstitute (7,300 subs) and well behind @FAUJDARACADEMY (15,300 subs), which is the biggest channel in the set. The interesting metric flip is that Bhavesh has by far the smallest video count (35 uploads) of any channel here. By subs-per-upload, Bhavesh leads at ~224, while Faujdar sits at ~31 and CloudXBerry at ~32. Pure subscriber count tells one story; channel efficiency tells a very different one.
What's the difference between @BhaveshMakwana-f4z and similar creators?
The single biggest difference is upload volume and channel maturity. Bhavesh has 35 videos. The other channels have between 124 and 1,600 uploads, with most in the 300-500 range. That means Bhavesh is either much earlier in their content journey or running a deliberately low-volume strategy. The five "similar" channels are also more clearly positioned topically — investing, exam prep, tech reviews, cloud dev, PM training — while Bhavesh's channel description ("More about this channel") gives almost nothing away. Hard to compare angles when one side hasn't really shown its hand yet.
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