@keshavkrishnanai Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Compared
@keshavkrishnanai (15,100 subs, 238 videos) sits in the AI automation and no-code creator niche. Of the five channels scraped as comparable, only @dgikaos (12,800 subs) overlaps directly on topic. The others — @ABSTARYAAR, @Bgyanfacts, @BenLovegrove, @PixelSTEVE07 — share size or geography, not subject matter.
Channel data · captured May 20, 2026
- Handle
- @keshavkrishnanai
- Subscribers
- —
- Videos
- —
- Country
- Not listed
First thing worth saying upfront: this competitor set is a mixed bag. @keshavkrishnanai's bio is pretty specific — AI agents, no-code platforms, helping non-technical people work with AI tools. Out of the five scraped lookalikes, only one (@dgikaos) is actually plugging at the same audience. The rest are India-based channels in the same loose subscriber tier, or channels that happen to overlap on the algorithm's idea of "creator help". I'll go through them honestly rather than pretending they're all head-to-head rivals.
@dgikaos (12,800 subs, 156 videos, US) is the only true niche match. Their bio is barely two lines — "Digital Support for Creators / AI Video Creation and More!" — and that's the same workspace @keshavkrishnanai is mining. The numbers are interesting: @dgikaos has fewer videos (156 vs 238) and slightly fewer subs, which means their subs-per-video ratio is meaningfully higher (~82 vs ~63). Could just be older content compounding, could be tighter packaging. If you're a creator scouting how the AI-for-creators angle is being played in the US market, this is the channel to study. Follow @dgikaos when you want to see how the same topic gets framed for a Western audience.
@ABSTARYAAR (19,100 subs, 238 videos, India) is a gaming stick reviews channel. Identical video count to @keshavkrishnanai, which is a fun coincidence and nothing more — the audiences don't overlap. The reason the scraper probably surfaced them is the shared India geography and the same publishing volume. Worth noting because if you're @keshavkrishnanai looking at how channels in India at the ~20K mark are pacing themselves, the video cadence is a useful reference point even if the niche is wrong. Don't follow them for content ideas. Maybe study their thumbnail style — Hindi-market gaming channels have figured out high-contrast face-forward thumbnails that AI/tech channels in India still seem to be experimenting with.
@BenLovegrove (26,600 subs, 756 videos, UK) is the biggest channel in this set and the one with the most lessons buried in the numbers. He's been at it long enough to ship 756 videos in an aviation careers niche. That's roughly 3.2x the publishing volume of @keshavkrishnanai, and he's earned roughly 1.8x the subs. The takeaway isn't "upload more" — it's that highly specific, career-oriented niches (pilot career advice, in his case) can sustain a creator long-term without ever going viral. @keshavkrishnanai's niche has the same quality: practical, career-shaped, evergreen. Follow Ben if you want to see what a 4-5 year compounding curve looks like in a non-trendy expert niche.
@Bgyanfacts (9,950 subs, 144 videos, India) is a Hindi-language facts shorts channel. It's in this set almost certainly because of country match and the shorts-heavy format. Honestly not a competitor in any meaningful sense — facts channels live or die on shorts volume and don't share retention dynamics with how-to AI content. The one thing worth noticing is the subs-per-video ratio (~69) sits in the same range as @keshavkrishnanai's (~63), which is more about the YouTube India median than any real similarity. Skip this one unless you're studying shorts-only growth as a separate exercise.
@PixelSTEVE07 (8,480 subs, 346 videos, India) is a gaming channel with the highest video count of anyone here besides @BenLovegrove. 346 videos for 8,480 subs is a tough ratio — about 24 subs per video — which probably reflects gaming being a brutally crowded vertical in India right now. The lesson for @keshavkrishnanai isn't anything content-wise; it's a quiet reminder that being in a less saturated niche (AI/no-code for non-technical folks) is itself an advantage. Same effort, better leverage. Don't follow for content.
If you watch @keshavkrishnanai, the only one of these five I'd actually queue up alongside it is @dgikaos. The rest are useful as data points — for cadence, for niche-density comparison, for thumbnail study — but not as viewing companions. Honestly, the bigger story this competitor set tells is that @keshavkrishnanai is in a niche thin enough that the scraper struggled to find direct rivals at this subscriber tier. That's usually a good sign, not a bad one.
Common questions
Who are @keshavkrishnanai's biggest competitors on YouTube?
Among the scraped set, the only true topical competitor is @dgikaos (12,800 subs), who also covers AI tools and content support for creators. The others — @ABSTARYAAR (gaming sticks), @Bgyanfacts (facts shorts), @BenLovegrove (aviation), @PixelSTEVE07 (gaming) — share geography or subscriber tier rather than subject matter. The honest read is that @keshavkrishnanai's niche (AI automation and no-code for non-technical creators) is narrow enough that direct head-to-head competitors at the 15K range are surprisingly scarce in the India market specifically.
How does @keshavkrishnanai compare to @ABSTARYAAR?
Both channels are India-based and have published exactly 238 videos, which is the only meaningful similarity. @ABSTARYAAR has 19,100 subs reviewing gaming sticks — a hardware/gaming niche. @keshavkrishnanai has 15,100 subs in AI/no-code. There's no audience overlap. The interesting comparison is purely structural: @ABSTARYAAR converts the same publishing volume into about 4,000 more subs, likely because gaming hardware reviews have stronger search demand than emerging AI-tutorial content in Hindi-speaking markets. Not a content rival, just a cadence reference point.
What channels should I watch alongside @keshavkrishnanai?
Realistically just @dgikaos (12,800 subs) from this scraped set. They cover AI video creation and creator support, which sits in the same workspace as @keshavkrishnanai's AI automation and no-code angle. If you're building a watch list for the AI-tools-for-creators category, those two cover similar ground with different geographic framings — India-first vs US-first. The other channels here serve niches that don't overlap (gaming, aviation, general facts shorts), so adding them won't expand your understanding of @keshavkrishnanai's actual lane.
Is @keshavkrishnanai the biggest channel in their niche?
Within this comparison set, no — @BenLovegrove (26,600 subs) and @ABSTARYAAR (19,100 subs) are bigger, but neither shares the niche. Among channels actually working the AI/no-code-for-creators angle here, @keshavkrishnanai (15,100 subs) is slightly larger than @dgikaos (12,800 subs). Across the wider AI-tools YouTube ecosystem there are obviously much larger channels not in this scrape. What this set suggests is that at the 15K mark, @keshavkrishnanai is roughly mid-pack for an India-based educator channel with a tightly defined niche.
What's the difference between @keshavkrishnanai and similar creators?
The clearest difference is positioning: @keshavkrishnanai explicitly targets non-technical creators and entrepreneurs entering AI, framed for an India-first audience. @dgikaos, the closest topical match, frames similar material for a US creator audience with looser bio messaging. @BenLovegrove offers a structural lesson — 756 videos compounded into a sustainable career-advice niche over years — which is the closest analogue to where @keshavkrishnanai's content style could plausibly head. The gaming and facts channels in this set aren't comparable on content, only on local algorithmic neighborhood.
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