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Competitor comparison · @wealthforall

@wealthforall Competitors: 5 Similar YouTube Channels Analyzed

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@wealthforall (44,000 subs, 73 videos) sits closest to @TheSwagWalaPM (48,300 subs) and @alex.heiden (47,500 subs) by sub count, but none of those five are direct topical rivals in stock market education. The real differentiator: @wealthforall publishes far less yet converts views at roughly 603 subs per video — the highest in this set.

Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026

Handle
@wealthforall
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

First, an honest framing. The five channels YouTube surfaces next to @wealthforall don't actually teach what Abhishek Chouhan teaches. @wealthforall is a stock market, SIP, and personal finance channel run by a presenter with 15+ years of experience. The competitor set includes a product management coach, a software-company-in-60-days creator, a 6th-to-10th grade science teacher, and two general Hindi education channels. What ties them together is probably audience demographic — Indian, educational, viewers who lean into longer talking-head explainers — not subject matter. Worth keeping in mind as you read the rest, because the strategic takeaway changes when your "competitors" are actually adjacent audiences rather than head-to-head rivals.

@TheSwagWalaPM (48,300 subs, 603 videos, India) is the closest by sub count but the furthest by content. They've shipped 603 videos to @wealthforall's 73 — roughly 8x the catalog for only 10% more subscribers. That's a volume-vs-efficiency story: TheSwagWalaPM averages about 80 subs per video published; @wealthforall averages around 603. Different game entirely. Follow them if you're a product manager or want PM career content. If you're researching SIPs or equity strategy, they're noise. The reason they appear here is probably the Indian English/Hinglish educational-explainer format overlap, not subject relevance.

@DailyperfectClasses (26,100 subs, 1,500 videos, country=India) is the most extreme example of the volume strategy in this set. 1,500 uploads for 26.1K subs works out to roughly 17 subs per video published — the channel is built on quantity. The description ("deepak classes") and the format suggest exam-prep or syllabus coverage for Indian school students. Useful comparison for @wealthforall only as a counter-example: this is what happens when you publish constantly without strong per-video pull. @wealthforall's lean catalog plus higher conversion is the opposite playbook. Don't follow DailyperfectClasses for finance — there's no overlap.

@alex.heiden (47,500 subs, 324 videos, country unlisted) is the outlier — Western audience, software/SaaS founder content ("Want my help building a software company in 60 days?"). The 47.5K subs / 324 videos ratio (~147 subs/video) shows a more mature content engine than the Indian education channels, but the audience is global tech founders, not Indian retail investors. Why does it show up in this set? Likely English-language educational longform with a coaching/mentor positioning. A @wealthforall viewer who's also building a side business might find value here. Most won't. Worth a look only if you're crossing over into entrepreneurship content yourself.

@AnjusScience (42,100 subs, 808 videos, India) teaches science to 6th-10th grade students using animations and pictures. 808 videos, 42.1K subs, ~52 subs per video — high-volume curriculum coverage. This one's interesting because it shares @wealthforall's "teacher-explainer" tone but for a totally different audience: school kids vs working-age investors. The lesson worth borrowing: AnjusScience's animation-first approach is a format @wealthforall could probably steal for explaining compounding or expense ratios. Otherwise, no audience overlap — parents researching this channel aren't researching mutual funds in the same session, mostly.

@Srifactual_Fact (27,900 subs, 148 videos, India) is the smallest in the set but has the second-best subs-per-video ratio at roughly 188 — a Hinglish facts/general knowledge channel ("Educational, Knowledgeable and Facts Ke Video"). The lean catalog suggests they're picking topics carefully like @wealthforall does, but the content is broad-interest infotainment, not niche financial education. Follow them for casual evening watching, not for portfolio decisions. The real comparison value is again strategic: small catalog + careful topic selection seems to be the pattern that works for the 25K-50K Indian creator tier in this sample.

If you watch @wealthforall, the only one of these five you should add to your rotation for the same reason is honestly… none of them directly. The closest functional substitute would be other Hindi-language SIP/mutual fund creators not in this competitor set — names like Pranjal Kamra, Akshat Shrivastava, or Rachana Ranade actually compete for @wealthforall's viewer attention. The five channels above are what YouTube serves as "similar" based on audience graph signals, but a creator scouting real competition should treat this list as a sanity check on audience overlap, not a topical hit list. The most useful observation buried in this data: @wealthforall's 603 subs-per-video efficiency is roughly 3-12x better than everyone else here, which says the catalog is doing more work per upload than the comparables. Whatever they're doing with topic selection and thumbnail strategy is worth studying — by themselves more than by comparison.

Common questions

Who are @wealthforall's biggest competitors on YouTube?

By YouTube's audience-graph signals, the closest channels are @TheSwagWalaPM (48,300 subs), @alex.heiden (47,500 subs), and @AnjusScience (42,100 subs). But none teach stock market or personal finance — they're a product management coach, a SaaS founder, and a school science teacher respectively. The real topical competitors for @wealthforall's Hindi-language SIP and mutual fund content sit outside this scraped set: established creators like Pranjal Kamra, Rachana Ranade, or Akshat Shrivastava. Treat the scraped list as audience-overlap signal, not head-to-head competition.

How does @wealthforall compare to @TheSwagWalaPM?

Same approximate audience size — 44,000 vs 48,300 subs — but completely different content engines. @TheSwagWalaPM has published 603 videos to @wealthforall's 73. That's roughly 8x the catalog for only ~10% more subscribers. Per video published, @TheSwagWalaPM converts at about 80 subs/upload; @wealthforall converts at around 603 subs/upload. TheSwagWalaPM is running a high-volume product management coaching playbook. @wealthforall is running a lean, high-conversion finance education playbook. Different topics, different strategy, similar end size.

What channels should I watch alongside @wealthforall?

Honestly, none of the five competitors in the scraped set are great companion watches for someone there for finance content. @AnjusScience and @Srifactual_Fact share the Indian educational-explainer format but cover school science and general facts. @alex.heiden could appeal if you're crossing into building a software business alongside investing. For actual portfolio-adjacent watching, look outside this set toward Hindi-language finance creators like Akshat Shrivastava or Rachana Ranade. The scraped set is more useful as a strategic mirror than a content rotation.

Is @wealthforall the biggest channel in their niche?

Not even close — Indian personal finance YouTube has multiple creators in the millions of subscribers, so 44K places @wealthforall firmly in the growing-mid tier. What's noteworthy is the efficiency: 73 videos to reach 44,000 subs works out to about 603 subs per upload, which is the highest ratio across the five comparison channels (ranging from 17 to 188 subs/video). That suggests strong topic selection and per-video pull, even if the absolute sub count is modest. Room to grow, but the engine looks healthy.

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

Three observable differences. One: catalog size — 73 videos vs comparables ranging from 148 to 1,500. @wealthforall publishes selectively. Two: subs-per-video efficiency — about 603, roughly 3-12x higher than the others in the set, which points to better-than-average per-upload performance. Three: topical specificity — stock market, SIP, mutual fund education with a credentialed presenter (Abhishek Chouhan, 15+ years experience), while the "similar" channels are mostly general education, PM coaching, or kids' science. The set looks alike to YouTube's algorithm but the strategies barely overlap.

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