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Competitor comparison · @KushalDuball

@KushalDuball Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared

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@KushalDuball (8,770 subs, 192 videos) competes most directly with @businessweapon74 (11,700 subs) in the India-based business content space. The key differentiator: Kushal narrows hard on AI and automation ROI for SMBs, drawing from 16 years running an IT services company, while most algorithmically-similar channels drift into broader entertainment or unrelated niches.

Channel data · captured Jun 21, 2026

Handle
@KushalDuball
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

First thing worth saying out loud: the "similar channel" set YouTube and third-party scrapers surface for @KushalDuball is mostly noise. That's typical for a sub-10K channel in a tight B2B niche — the algorithm reaches for anything with a vaguely matching watch-graph signal. Of the five channels below, honestly only one is a true competitor in the sense that a viewer would meaningfully choose between them. The rest are useful as a contrast, because they show you what @KushalDuball is NOT, which is half the point of a competitor scan.

Kushal's positioning is unusually specific: "technology that actually pays off for businesses," framed by a 16-year track record running an IT services company. That's a credibility lever very few AI-niche creators have. At 8,770 subs with 192 videos, the channel is also under-monetized relative to the catalog depth — 192 videos is a serious back-library for a creator that size, which usually points to a creator who's been heads-down shipping without much title/thumb optimization on the older stuff.

@businessweapon74 (11,700 subs, 223 videos, India) is the only one in this set that actually overlaps with Kushal's audience. The handle alone signals the same SMB-owner viewer, and the sub/video ratio is almost identical to Kushal's. The thin channel description ("WELCOME TO MY CHANNEL" plus a business inquiry email) suggests less brand discipline than Kushal — no clear thesis statement, no specific niche promise. Follow them if you want a second voice on Indian SMB content; follow Kushal if you specifically want the AI/automation angle backed by IT-services experience.

@rxyy-1-w6m (6,210 subs, 251 videos, Taiwan) is not a competitor in any honest reading of the word. The channel is age-gated artistic short-form video content with EDSA disclosures attached — a completely different category, language, and audience. It's showing up here almost certainly because of a shared upload-cadence signature or some incidental viewer cluster. Worth ignoring entirely if you're a creator scouting the niche. The only reason to even mention them is that their 251 videos to 6,210 subs ratio is a useful benchmark for what "high output, low conversion" looks like when audience-fit is off.

@heyitsmepiu (7,270 subs, 45 videos, country unlisted) is a "study life" aesthetic channel — the description is mostly decorative Unicode hearts and a contact email. Zero overlap with B2B AI content. What's interesting from a competitive lens is the ratio: 45 videos to 7,270 subs is wildly more efficient than Kushal's 192-to-8,770. That gap (roughly 4x subs-per-video) is the gulf between a high-aesthetic lifestyle niche and a long-form technical one. Worth noting if you're Kushal: aesthetic-first niches scale subs per upload much faster, but they don't sell IT consulting services on the back end.

@helloasia7857 (15,900 subs, 1,500 videos, Japan) is a Yoshimoto-produced Asia travel/entertainment channel. Massive video catalog, mid-size sub count — classic media-company output where each individual video is a small slice of a programming schedule rather than a discoverable asset. Not a competitor, but a useful contrast: 1,500 videos to 15,900 subs is 10.6 subs per video, vs Kushal's 45.7 subs per video. Kushal's individual videos are roughly 4x more efficient at sub conversion, which tracks for a tighter niche with stronger creator-as-authority framing.

@nixo-i8l (5,780 subs, 63 videos, India) is a gaming channel — "Amazing Gameplay Videos, Funny Gaming" etc. The India tag is the only signal connecting them to Kushal in the algorithm. Real overlap: zero. Mentioning them mainly to underline how thin the competitor set actually is. If you're a creator in Kushal's lane and you're auditing your own "similar channels" sidebar, this is a reminder that the algorithm's "similar" surface is mostly geographic and behavioral, not topical.

If you watch @KushalDuball, the only listed channel worth also subscribing to is @businessweapon74, and even then they're more parallel than overlapping. The bigger takeaway: Kushal's real competitive set isn't on this list — it's broader English-language AI/automation creators like David Ondrej, Liam Ottley, and Indian B2B voices like Ankur Warikoo's business content. The scraper missed them because Kushal's catalog hasn't yet built strong enough watch-graph signal with those larger creators. That's actually a roadmap: cross-pollinating with that tier through comments, references, or collab attempts is probably the single highest-leverage move from 8,770 subs.

Common questions

Who are @KushalDuball's biggest competitors on YouTube?

Based on the algorithmic similar-channel set, the only meaningful competitor is @businessweapon74 (11,700 subs, India), which targets a comparable Indian SMB-owner audience. The other surfaced channels — @rxyy-1-w6m (Taiwan artistic shorts), @heyitsmepiu (study lifestyle), @helloasia7857 (Japanese travel) and @nixo-i8l (gaming) — share geographic or behavioral signals but no topical overlap. Kushal's real competition is the broader English AI-automation creator tier (David Ondrej, Liam Ottley, etc.), which hasn't yet shown up in his similar-channel graph at 8,770 subs.

How does @KushalDuball compare to @businessweapon74?

Both are India-based, similar size (Kushal 8,770 subs, businessweapon74 11,700), with comparable catalog depth (192 vs 223 videos). The visible difference is positioning. Kushal has a clear thesis — AI and automation ROI for businesses, backed by 16 years running an IT services company — and the channel description spells out what he won't do ("not here to sell hype"). @businessweapon74's description is just a greeting plus a contact email, suggesting looser brand discipline. Kushal is more focused; businessweapon74 is roughly 34% larger but harder to pin a specific viewer promise on.

What channels should I watch alongside @KushalDuball?

Honestly, only @businessweapon74 from this scraped set is worth adding — and even that's parallel, not overlapping. If you came to Kushal for the AI-and-automation-for-real-businesses angle, you'll get more mileage subscribing outside the algorithm's suggested set: think English-language AI-agent builders and Indian B2B operators. The other four channels in this competitor list (@rxyy-1-w6m, @heyitsmepiu, @helloasia7857, @nixo-i8l) span Taiwanese artistic shorts, study aesthetics, Japanese travel and Indian gaming respectively. Useful as contrast, not as supplementary viewing.

Is @KushalDuball the biggest channel in their niche?

No, and it's not particularly close. At 8,770 subscribers, Kushal is mid-pack even within the small similar-channel surface here — @helloasia7857 sits at 15,900 and @businessweapon74 at 11,700. In the broader AI/automation-for-business space globally, channels in the 100K-500K range dominate the topic. What Kushal has that most of them don't is a verified 16-year operator background in IT services, which is a credibility moat the larger generalist AI channels can't easily replicate. Size isn't the only stat that matters in B2B niches.

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

The clearest difference is specificity of promise. Kushal's channel pitches one thing: technology that actually pays off for businesses, currently focused on AI and automation, filtered through someone who's been running an IT company for 16 years. Looking at the sub-per-video efficiency, Kushal sits at 45.7 subs per video — roughly 4x more efficient than @helloasia7857 (10.6) and on par with @businessweapon74. That ratio suggests his videos are converting viewers at a healthier rate than the broader media-style channels in his algorithmic neighborhood, which usually points to clearer audience-fit.

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