@businessweapon74 Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Analyzed
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@businessweapon74 (11,700 subs, 223 videos, India) sits in a loosely-defined competitor set where @helloasia7857 (15,900 subs) is the largest and @anaamrasool (10,400 subs, also India) is the closest peer by region and size. The set spans business, study, travel, and AI — so overlap is partial, not direct.
Channel data · captured Jun 21, 2026
- Handle
- @businessweapon74
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
Honestly, the first thing worth saying about this competitor set is that it's not a clean one. YouTube's "similar channels" graph pulled five accounts that vary wildly — a Japanese travel show backed by Yoshimoto, an Indian AI engineer, a Taiwanese artistic shorts channel, a study-aesthetic creator, and a vague lifestyle account. @businessweapon74 has 11,700 subs and 223 uploads, which sits roughly in the middle of the pack. Real audience overlap probably only exists with one, maybe two of these. The rest are adjacency, not competition.
@anaamrasool (10,400 subs, 367 videos, also India) is the closest direct peer in this set. She's a Bangalore-based software engineer covering AI agents, automation, NoCode, and SaaS — and the India + tech-business angle is the most plausible audience crossover with a channel literally named businessweapon. Her video count (367 vs @businessweapon74's 223) suggests a higher publishing tempo over the same general lifespan, which usually means she's iterating faster on what works. If a creator is studying @businessweapon74's positioning, anaamrasool is the one to watch — same country, similar mid-five-figure subscriber range, overlapping business-adjacent topic territory. Follow her if you want to see how an Indian tech creator structures a faster upload cadence.
@helloasia7857 (15,900 subs, 1,500 videos, Japan) is the largest channel here and the least directly comparable. This is an institutional channel run by Yoshimoto talent agency, covering Asia travel and street-food content with local hosts. 1,500 videos against 15,900 subs is, frankly, a tough ratio — that's roughly 10 subs per video, which suggests the upload firehose isn't translating into subscriber growth proportional to effort. The lesson sitting in that data isn't "do what they do." It's the opposite: a giant catalog can mask weak per-video performance. Worth following if you want to study what high-volume travel content looks like when it plateaus.
@rxyy-1-w6m (6,210 subs, 251 videos, Taiwan) is the most off-axis competitor in this set. The description is an EDSA artistic-content disclosure for original short films — basically a creator who films dramatized scenes and has to legally declare child-actor safety protocols. Audience overlap with a business channel is essentially zero. The reason YouTube probably surfaced them is structural — similar sub range, similar video count (251 vs 223), similar upload pattern. If you're scouting competitors for actual content strategy, skip them. If you're studying how YouTube's recommendation graph clusters channels by metadata rather than topic, they're a useful data point.
@heyitsmepiu (7,270 subs, 45 videos) is the most efficient channel in the set by a wide margin. Forty-five uploads to get above 7K subs works out to roughly 160 subs per video — significantly better than @businessweapon74's ~52 per video and dramatically better than @helloasia7857's ~10. The study-life aesthetic niche is having a real moment in 2026, especially among South and Southeast Asian audiences, so the per-video efficiency might be partly category tailwind and partly tight content focus. They're not a direct competitor to a business channel, but the upload-efficiency benchmark is worth noting. Forty-five videos doing the work of 200+ is the model.
@cocos157 (8,440 subs, 61 videos) is hard to read because the channel description is literally just "More about this channel" — they didn't fill it out. The 61-video count combined with the 8,440 subs suggests they're either coasting on a few hits or operating in a niche where the algorithm rewards them disproportionately. Without clearer positioning data, this is the competitor I'd watch passively rather than actively study. Could be coincidence, but channels with empty descriptions often telegraph that the creator isn't actively optimizing — which can be opportunity or a warning sign depending on what's actually working in their content.
If you watch @businessweapon74, the channel you should also follow is @anaamrasool. Same country, similar size, adjacent topic territory, and a higher publishing tempo that makes her a useful comparison point. @heyitsmepiu is worth a follow purely as an efficiency benchmark — what 45 videos can accomplish when the niche works. The other three are background noise unless you're actively studying how YouTube's similarity graph behaves at this subscriber tier.
Common questions
Who are @businessweapon74's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Within the set YouTube clusters them with, the closest peer is @anaamrasool (10,400 subs), another Indian creator covering AI, automation, and SaaS — same country, similar size, overlapping business-adjacent topics. @helloasia7857 (15,900 subs) is the largest by subscriber count but isn't a true competitor since it's a Japanese travel channel run by Yoshimoto. The rest of the cluster (@cocos157, @heyitsmepiu, @rxyy-1-w6m) overlap structurally rather than topically. So the realistic competitive answer is one direct peer and one larger but unrelated channel anchoring the size range.
How does @businessweapon74 compare to @rxyy-1-w6m?
These two have a strange amount in common on paper and almost nothing in common in practice. @businessweapon74 has 11,700 subs and 223 videos; @rxyy-1-w6m has 6,210 subs and 251 videos — close upload counts, comparable sub tier. But @rxyy-1-w6m is a Taiwanese artistic short-film channel that has to publish a child-actor safety disclosure under YouTube's EDSA policy. There's no real audience overlap with an Indian business channel. They're paired by the algorithm based on metadata signals, not content. Don't model strategy on this comparison.
What channels should I watch alongside @businessweapon74?
Watch @anaamrasool (10,400 subs) for the closest peer comparison — she's covering AI agents, automation, and SaaS from Bangalore, which sits adjacent to the business-channel territory. Watch @heyitsmepiu (7,270 subs, 45 videos) as an efficiency case study — that's roughly 160 subs per video, the best ratio in the set. Skip @helloasia7857 and @rxyy-1-w6m unless you're studying YouTube's recommendation graph itself. @cocos157 is hard to evaluate because their channel description is essentially empty, which usually signals a creator who isn't actively optimizing.
Is @businessweapon74 the biggest channel in their niche?
No. @helloasia7857 leads this cluster at 15,900 subs, though it's a Yoshimoto-backed travel channel and not really competing for the same audience. Within the actually-comparable subset, @businessweapon74 sits at 11,700 subs — slightly above @anaamrasool (10,400) and well above @cocos157 (8,440), @heyitsmepiu (7,270), and @rxyy-1-w6m (6,210). So in the realistic peer group, they're roughly the top of the second tier. There's no dominant channel-of-channels here; the cluster is fragmented across topics and regions.
What's the difference between @businessweapon74 and similar creators?
The main difference is positioning clarity. @anaamrasool spells out her niche (AI, automation, NoCode, SaaS) and her background (software engineer, Bangalore). @heyitsmepiu commits to a specific aesthetic (study life). @helloasia7857 has explicit category structure. @businessweapon74's description is mostly emojis and a contact email — no stated niche. At 223 uploads with 11,700 subs, that works out to roughly 52 subs per video, which is mid-pack for this set. Tighter positioning is probably the biggest unlock available — the data suggests the audience is there, but the description isn't telling them why to subscribe.
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