Saydah_Taufiq Competitors: 5 YouTube Channels Compared to @Saydah_Taufiq
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@Saydah_Taufiq (34K subs, 1,000 videos) sits in the DIY/repair/tools lane, and the closest direct competitor in the scraped set is @ToolsLog (47.2K subs, 787 videos), another US channel in the power-tools space. The key difference: ToolsLog runs leaner — more subs from fewer uploads.
Channel data · captured Jun 21, 2026
- Handle
- @Saydah_Taufiq
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
The competitor list here is honestly uneven, so worth calling out upfront. Saydah_Taufiq lives in the DIY-hacks, construction, plumbing, and repair space, US-based, with a heavy upload schedule — 1,000 videos for 34K subs works out to roughly 34 subs per video, which is the classic high-volume, low-per-video pattern you see in churn-style tutorial channels. Of the five channels pulled as similar, only @ToolsLog genuinely sits in the same niche. The other four overlap on creator size more than on topic. Flag that going in so you're not expecting a clean head-to-head across all five.
@ToolsLog (47.2K subs, 787 videos, US) is the obvious peer. Same country, same content area — power tools, outdoor tools, automotive tools — basically the same "I solve work-site problems with the right gear" energy. Their subs-per-video ratio is ~60, roughly double Saydah's ~34. That gap probably means ToolsLog is landing better on thumbnails, pulling more search traffic on specific tool-review keywords, or both. If you're scouting the DIY-tools competitive set seriously, ToolsLog is the channel to watch — they're proof the audience is there, and they're likely the channel Saydah_Taufiq's algorithm is benchmarking against in the suggested feed.
@Shivendrachaubey0001 (23.9K subs, 1,300 videos, India) isn't a content overlap at all — it's a gaming channel. But the volume-vs-subs pattern is almost identical to Saydah's: 1,300 videos for 24K subs lands at ~18 subs per video, even lower than Saydah's. This is the "post constantly, hope volume compounds" playbook. Reading these two side by side won't help with DIY tactics, but it does suggest output isn't the bottleneck for Saydah_Taufiq — Shivendra is grinding harder and converting worse. Topic and packaging probably matter more than cadence at this scale.
@kylebanks (35.9K subs, 97 videos, UK) is a complete outlier here. He's a game developer documenting a shipped indie title (Farewell North, available on Steam, Xbox, Switch, PS5). 97 videos for 36K subs is roughly 370 subs per video — over 10x Saydah_Taufiq's rate. Different niche, different country, different content philosophy entirely (rare-but-deep uploads vs. churn). My read on why he's in this similar-channel set: sub-count proximity to Saydah's 34K triggered the match. Useful only as a contrast — this is what the opposite end of the upload-strategy spectrum looks like at the same subscriber tier.
@Shehzadi_003 (29.7K subs, 248 videos, India) makes WhatsApp, Instagram, and Snapchat story templates — aesthetic short-form social content. Close to Saydah_Taufiq on subs but totally different audience: she's making for teen and young-adult women looking for story templates, vs. Saydah's mostly-male DIY audience. Her ratio (~120 subs per video) is much healthier, probably because aesthetic short-form scales harder than tutorial work. Don't follow if you're tracking DIY; do follow if you want to see how a similar-sized creator pulls more weight per upload in a softer-effort format.
@msquaretech.official (46.1K subs, 85 videos, India) is tech reviews — smartphones, gadgets, accessories. Adjacent to Saydah_Taufiq in the "useful stuff" lane but a different specialty. Their ratio is the wildest in this set: 85 videos for 46K subs = ~540 subs per video. That's the tech-review premium showing up — review channels with strong picks land massive per-video pickup. The relevant takeaway for Saydah_Taufiq: any video that drifts into "this specific tool is worth buying" is competing for a slice of msquaretech's audience attention, and probably losing on production polish.
If you actually watch @Saydah_Taufiq, the only channel from this set worth bookmarking is @ToolsLog. The rest are either adjacent (msquaretech) or unrelated (the gaming, indie-dev, and social-media channels). My honest read: this similar-channel set looks algorithm-pulled on sub-count proximity more than topic match, so treat it as a loose scout rather than a tight competitive map. The real competitive territory for Saydah_Taufiq lives in DIY/repair/plumbing search, where ToolsLog is the most visible peer in this snapshot.
Common questions
Who are @Saydah_Taufiq's biggest competitors on YouTube?
The most direct competitor in this scraped set is @ToolsLog (47.2K subs, 787 videos), another US channel covering power tools, outdoor tools, and automotive — same niche, slightly larger. @msquaretech.official (46.1K subs, India) is adjacent via tech reviews. The other three matches (@Shivendrachaubey0001, @kylebanks, @Shehzadi_003) sit in unrelated niches — gaming, indie game dev, and social-media story ideas — so they share sub-count proximity but not audience. The real competitive map for Saydah_Taufiq is the DIY/repair/plumbing search lane, where ToolsLog is clearly the channel to watch.
How does @Saydah_Taufiq compare to @Shivendrachaubey0001?
Different niches entirely — Saydah_Taufiq makes DIY/repair content from the US, while @Shivendrachaubey0001 (23.9K subs, India) is a gaming channel. The interesting overlap is the upload pattern: Shivendra has 1,300 videos for 23.9K subs (~18 subs per video), and Saydah_Taufiq has 1,000 videos for 34K subs (~34 per video). Both are running the high-volume strategy. Saydah is converting roughly twice as well per upload, which suggests their topic has stronger search demand or thumbnails land harder — but the underlying "post constantly" playbook is the same.
What channels should I watch alongside @Saydah_Taufiq?
Honestly, only @ToolsLog from this set is worth pairing — 47.2K subs, 787 videos, US-based, same DIY/tools content area. Their ~60 subs-per-video ratio is roughly double Saydah_Taufiq's, useful as a benchmark for what the niche can do with sharper thumbnails or tighter topic selection. If you want to broaden into tech product reviews, @msquaretech.official (46.1K subs, India) is loosely adjacent. The gaming, indie-dev, and social-media story channels in this set won't help — they were probably matched on sub count rather than topic overlap, so skip those if you're scouting the DIY space specifically.
Is @Saydah_Taufiq the biggest channel in their niche?
Not in this scraped set. @ToolsLog (47.2K subs) is larger and lives in essentially the same niche, and @msquaretech.official (46.1K subs) is bigger but in adjacent tech-review territory. Saydah_Taufiq sits at 34K subs, mid-pack against the visible competitors here. Worth noting this is a small sample — the broader DIY/construction/plumbing space on YouTube has multi-million-sub channels (the bigger players didn't surface in this comparison set), so Saydah's actual position in the wider niche is probably smaller than this five-channel cut suggests. Treat the ranking here as relative, not absolute.
What's the difference between @Saydah_Taufiq and similar creators?
The clearest difference is upload volume relative to subscriber payoff. Saydah_Taufiq has shipped 1,000 videos for 34K subs — about 34 subs per video. Compare to @kylebanks at ~370 subs per video (97 videos, 36K subs, deep-rare uploads), or @msquaretech.official at ~540 subs per video. Saydah_Taufiq is running the high-volume DIY playbook; most of these "similar" channels are running tighter, more curated strategies. The lesson isn't that volume is wrong — it's that thumbnail and topic selection probably matter more than upload count once a channel hits this tier.
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