Grow Creator
Competitor comparison · @DailyperfectClasses

@DailyperfectClasses Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared

Free creator diagnostic

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.

@DailyperfectClasses (26,100 subs, 1,500 videos) competes most directly with @AnjusScience (42,100 subs) and @FAUJDARACADEMY (15,300 subs) — both India-based education channels in the same school/competitive-exam zone. The key differentiator is volume: Dailyperfect sits at roughly 1.86 videos per 100 subs, way above peers.

Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026

Handle
@DailyperfectClasses
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

The cluster around @DailyperfectClasses is pretty clearly the India-focused academic teaching pocket of YouTube — channels run by individual teachers (or small institutes) where the upload looks more like a classroom recording than a polished produced video. That's the lane. Within that, you've got @AnjusScience and @FAUJDARACADEMY as the closest siblings on intent, while the rest of the scraped set (@tradethepool, @alex.heiden, @B.MCartoon-k6q) drifts further out into adjacent niches the algorithm has decided are somehow related. Worth saying upfront: a competitor set pulled from YouTube's "related" graph almost always includes a few odd matches, and this one's no exception.

@AnjusScience (42,100 subs, 808 videos, India) is the most direct competitor in the set. Roughly 1.6x Dailyperfect's sub count on about half the video volume, which tells you something interesting — Anju's getting more subscribers per upload, possibly because the channel description explicitly narrows the target ("Science for Classes 6th to 10th") and mentions animations and visuals. That's a different production posture. If Dailyperfect is the chalk-and-talk model running on volume, @AnjusScience is the polished-explainer model running on tighter targeting. A creator should follow @AnjusScience if they're trying to figure out how visual aids and clear class-level positioning convert browsers into subscribers in the same niche.

@FAUJDARACADEMY (15,300 subs, 491 videos, India) is the closest match on positioning but smaller. The description lists RPSC, KVS, NVS, TGT, PGT — these are Indian teacher recruitment and state board exams, so this is exam-prep-coaching territory, not school syllabus. Different audience: working-age aspirants, not 8th graders. The ratio of subs to videos (about 31 subs per video) is in the same neighborhood as Dailyperfect (about 17 subs per video), so both channels are running the "upload constantly and let the right videos find their people" playbook. Follow @FAUJDARACADEMY if the goal is to study competitive-exam coaching as a YouTube format.

@tradethepool (14,500 subs, 1,600 videos, US) is in the set, but honestly the only thing it shares with Dailyperfect is the high video count and the word "trading" being adjacent to "classes" in some embedding somewhere. It's a US-based prop firm for stock day traders. Different country, different audience, different monetization model entirely (they fund traders, they don't sell courses). Useful as a competitor only in the loosest sense — if you're scouting how high-volume educational channels structure their content libraries, the sheer 1,600-video catalog is worth a look. Otherwise this is an algorithmic drift match.

@alex.heiden (47,500 subs, only 324 videos) is the outlier on production model. Roughly 18x more subs per video than Dailyperfect, which is a completely different game — fewer, higher-effort uploads pointed at a software-business coaching audience (the description pitches a 60-day vibe-coding accelerator). Almost nothing transferable on tactics, but interesting as a contrast: this is what the opposite end of the spectrum looks like. Mention it to a creator who's wondering whether to slow down and produce fewer, bigger videos. Probably not the answer for Dailyperfect's niche, but worth seeing the data point.

@B.MCartoon-k6q (16,700 subs, 239 videos) is the one I'd be most skeptical about. The description is just "Welcome to my channel please 20k subscribe" — basically no signal about what they teach or who they target. With 70 subs per video they're outperforming Dailyperfect's ratio, but without seeing the content I'd hesitate to draw any conclusion. Could be a cartoon-format kids channel that's accidentally clustering with education channels, could be something else entirely. I'd treat this one as noise in the competitor set rather than a peer to study.

If you watch @DailyperfectClasses, the two channels actually worth opening in another tab are @AnjusScience (for the polished-explainer version of the same school-science audience) and @FAUJDARACADEMY (for the exam-prep-coaching adjacent lane). The other three are in the scraped set, but the overlap is thinner than the numbers suggest — and pretending otherwise would be writing a comparison page that doesn't survive five seconds of scrutiny.

Common questions

Who are @DailyperfectClasses's biggest competitors on YouTube?

The closest competitors based on niche overlap are @AnjusScience (42,100 subs, India-based school-science channel for classes 6-10) and @FAUJDARACADEMY (15,300 subs, India-based competitive-exam coaching for RPSC, KVS, TGT/PGT). Both are India-focused academic teaching channels running similar high-volume upload models. The scraped "similar channels" set also includes @tradethepool, @alex.heiden, and @B.MCartoon-k6q, but those are looser algorithmic matches — different countries, different audiences, or unclear positioning — rather than true peer channels in the same teaching niche.

How does @DailyperfectClasses compare to @tradethepool?

They barely compete, honestly. @DailyperfectClasses is a 26,100-sub Indian education channel running on 1,500 videos. @tradethepool is a 14,500-sub US-based proprietary trading firm that funds day traders with up to $200K buying power. The only real overlap is video volume — @tradethepool has posted 1,600 videos, slightly more than Dailyperfect — and that the word "trading" sits in the same embedding space as "classes." Different country, different audience, different monetization. If YouTube's algorithm surfaced @tradethepool as similar, that's the algorithm reaching.

What channels should I watch alongside @DailyperfectClasses?

Watch @AnjusScience (42,100 subs) for the visual-explainer version of the school-science niche — the description specifically calls out animations and a clear class-level target. Watch @FAUJDARACADEMY (15,300 subs) for the adjacent competitive-exam coaching format, which uses a similar high-volume upload approach but targets working-age aspirants instead of school students. Those two cover the main directions Dailyperfect could grow. The other channels in the scraped set are either in different countries or different niches entirely, so the takeaways don't transfer cleanly.

Is @DailyperfectClasses the biggest channel in their niche?

No. At 26,100 subscribers, @DailyperfectClasses is mid-sized within this competitor set. @alex.heiden leads on subscribers at 47,500, though that's a different niche entirely (software-business coaching). Within the direct India-education niche, @AnjusScience is larger at 42,100 subs. Dailyperfect sits ahead of @FAUJDARACADEMY (15,300), @B.MCartoon-k6q (16,700), and @tradethepool (14,500). So roughly middle-of-the-pack overall, but doing it on the highest video count in the set — 1,500 uploads, which is more than every channel here except @tradethepool.

What's the difference between @DailyperfectClasses and similar creators?

The clearest difference is the volume-per-subscriber model. @DailyperfectClasses has 1,500 videos and 26,100 subs — about 17 subs per video. @AnjusScience runs 808 videos for 42,100 subs (52 subs per video) and @alex.heiden gets roughly 147 subs per video on just 324 uploads. Dailyperfect is running the "upload constantly, let videos find their niche" approach, which makes sense for classroom-style recordings where production cost per video is low. The competitors lean more toward fewer, more produced videos with tighter audience targeting in their channel descriptions.

Free creator diagnostic

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.