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Competitor comparison · @ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial

ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared

@ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial sits at 15,600 subs across 1,200 uploaded videos — roughly 13 subscribers earned per video, the lowest per-upload yield in this comparison set. Closest by sub count are @ABSTARYAAR (19,000) and @Indgamer_official (25,400), though neither operates in the study-abroad niche. The real differentiator across this set is volume strategy versus content focus.

Channel data · captured May 13, 2026

Handle
@ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

Honestly, the first thing worth flagging here is that the scraped competitor set for @ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial doesn't include any actual study-abroad channels. You've got a gaming creator, a YouTube growth coach from Think Media, a gaming-stick reviewer, a facts-shorts channel, and an aviation careers guy in the UK. If you're a competitor scout looking for IELTS prep or university-shortlisting creators, this list won't directly help. What it does show is the kind of mid-tier YouTube neighborhood Shiksha lives in by sub count — somewhere between 9K and 30K, mostly smaller operations punching above their video output. That comparison is still useful, just not in the way you might expect.

@Indgamer_official sits at 25,400 subs with 479 videos — roughly 53 subscribers per video, four times Shiksha's per-video yield. The channel description is just "More about this channel," which is basically a placeholder, but the math tells a story: less than half the upload volume, 60% more subscribers. For a study-abroad brand that's uploaded 1,200 videos, that's the kind of efficiency gap worth sitting with. Different niche entirely though — gaming content in India runs on different algorithm signals than test prep. Follow Indgamer if you're studying Indian gaming creator economics; don't follow them expecting overlap with overseas-education audiences. The only real takeaway for Shiksha here is the per-upload efficiency comparison.

@kraigpruett is interesting because he's the closest thing in this set to a meta-channel: 30,500 subs, 265 videos, lead content creator at Think Media, focused on helping other creators grow on YouTube. US-based, English-language, 115 subscribers per video — the best ratio in this set by a wide margin. For @ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial specifically, Kraig is worth watching not as a competitor but as a how-to source. If you're running 1,200 videos and stuck at 15K subs, a creator who's pulled 30K out of 265 uploads has solved something you haven't. Different audience demographic, different content vertical entirely, but the upload-to-growth math is worth studying.

@ABSTARYAAR has 19,000 subs across 237 videos, India-based, focused on gaming stick reviews and unboxings. This is the closest match to Shiksha by subscriber count (within 22%), and the geographic overlap matters because both channels are pulling from the Indian YouTube audience. But the content couldn't be further apart: gaming hardware versus GMAT prep. ABSTARYAAR's per-video subscriber yield is around 80, versus Shiksha's 13. Same country, similar channel size, six times the efficiency. Worth following if you're tracking how niche Indian product-review channels are growing, but completely unrelated audience overlap. A study-abroad viewer is not your gaming-stick reviewer's viewer.

@Bgyanfacts is the smallest in the set at 9,920 subs, 143 videos — a facts channel running primarily on YouTube Shorts. India-based, Hindi-leaning from the description's tone. The Shorts-first format is the angle here: 143 videos to nearly 10K subs is 69 subs per video, second-best ratio in this group despite being the smallest channel. For Shiksha, the relevant question this raises is whether short-form content could pull better numbers than the long-form study-abroad explainers that seem to dominate the 1,200-video catalog. Bgyanfacts isn't a study-abroad competitor — it's a structural reference point. Different content, same country, much better velocity per upload.

@BenLovegrove is the closest in spirit to what Shiksha actually does: career guidance content. UK-based, aviation-focused, 26,600 subs across 750 videos. The career-counseling angle (pilots, engineers, flight attendants, ATC) is structurally similar to study-abroad guidance — both are help-me-figure-out-my-future content. 35 subs per video, almost three times Shiksha's ratio with a smaller catalog. If you wanted one creator in this set to actually study for content modeling, it's Lovegrove. His niche is narrower, his upload count is lower, but his audience knows exactly what they're showing up for. That clarity of positioning is what study-abroad content often misses when it tries to cover IELTS, GMAT, SAT, GRE, TOEFL, PTE, university shortlisting, and applications all in one feed.

If you watch @ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial, the genuinely similar adjacent watch from this list is @BenLovegrove — same career-decision audience archetype, different field. The rest of this set is more useful as benchmarks than alternatives: Kraig Pruett for YouTube strategy itself, Bgyanfacts for short-form efficiency, Indgamer and ABSTARYAAR for what mid-size Indian channels look like with tighter catalogs. None of them will tell you anything about actually studying abroad, which is the gap a real Shiksha competitor analysis would fill.

Common questions

Who are @ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial's biggest competitors on YouTube?

Based on the scraped competitor set, none of them are actual study-abroad channels — the closest by sub count are @Indgamer_official (25,400 subs, gaming) and @kraigpruett (30,500 subs, YouTube growth coaching). Real niche competitors would be channels covering IELTS prep, GRE strategy, or university applications, but those didn't surface in this data. If you're scouting actual study-abroad rivals, you'll want to search by content topic directly rather than rely on YouTube's similar-channel recommendations, which seem to be pulling on signals other than topical overlap in Shiksha's case.

How does @ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial compare to @Indgamer_official?

Different niches entirely — Shiksha covers overseas education and exam prep, Indgamer covers gaming content. By the numbers: Shiksha has 15,600 subs across 1,200 videos (13 subs per video), while Indgamer has 25,400 subs across 479 videos (53 per video). Both are India-based, which is the only meaningful overlap. Indgamer's per-video yield is roughly four times Shiksha's, which suggests either much stronger algorithmic pickup or a less saturated micro-niche. The comparison isn't really competitive in any direct sense — it's structural, useful only for benchmarking efficiency.

What channels should I watch alongside @ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial?

From this competitor set, @BenLovegrove (26,600 subs, aviation careers) is the closest in spirit — career-decision content for a specific industry, similar structure to study-abroad guidance. @kraigpruett (30,500 subs) is worth watching if you care about YouTube creator strategy itself. For genuinely similar study-abroad content, though, you'd need to look outside this scraped set — try searching for IELTS, GRE, or country-specific guides like "study in Germany" or "study in Canada," which is where most of the real niche competitors actually live on YouTube.

Is @ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial the biggest channel in their niche?

Hard to say from this data, because the competitor set doesn't include any other study-abroad channels. At 15,600 subs, Shiksha is the second-smallest in this comparison group, with only @Bgyanfacts (9,920 subs) below them. But that's not a niche comparison — that's a random adjacent-channel comparison. In the actual study-abroad space in India, there are likely much larger players covering similar territory. Channels affiliated with brands like LeapScholar or Yocket tend to dominate that vertical, often with sub counts well into six figures, but they aren't surfacing in this scrape.

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

The clearest difference is upload volume versus yield. Shiksha has 1,200 videos and 15,600 subs — about 13 subscribers earned per upload. The other channels in this set range from 35 (Lovegrove) to 115 (Pruett) subs per video. That's a 3x to 9x efficiency gap. A likely cause: Shiksha covers a very broad slate (IELTS, GMAT, SAT, GRE, TOEFL, PTE, university shortlisting, applications) in one channel, so individual videos seem to compete with each other for distinct sub-audiences instead of compounding around a tighter content identity.

Why don't the listed competitors match @ShikshaStudyAbroadOfficial's niche?

Genuinely fair question — the scraped set includes a gaming creator, a YouTube coach, a gaming-stick reviewer, a facts channel, and an aviation careers creator. None are in study-abroad. YouTube's similar-channel signals seem to be pulling on factors like audience overlap, geography, or watch-time patterns rather than content topic here. For a channel with 1,200 videos in one vertical, that's actually a flag worth noticing — if the algorithm isn't clustering Shiksha with niche peers, the content may not be strongly categorized as study-abroad, which would hurt long-term discoverability inside the niche.

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