Most people now check a creator's video before buying a tool — for an honest demo, a real opinion, a use-case they can trust. MGS.Creator is one of the channels they're watching in India. This is a quick look at the audience, the numbers, and how a partnership could work.
A Hindi-first YouTube channel for video editors, freelancers, and creators in India who are trying to build something real.
I'm Gaurav Kukreti — the creator behind MGS.Creator. I make videos in Hindi for video editors and freelancers in India who want to actually make money from their craft.
The channel sits at the intersection of three things people search for daily: editing tutorials, creator setups & tools, and freelancing systems — finding clients, pricing work, learning English, and getting paid internationally.
Most viewers don't stumble onto the channel. They come looking. Around 70.5% of the traffic comes from YouTube search — meaning the audience is already trying to solve a problem when they land on a video.
For a brand, that's a useful detail. The viewer isn't being interrupted by an ad — they're being introduced to a tool while they're already shopping for one.
Here are the last 90 days — pulled directly from YouTube Studio. Real screenshots below the highlights, so nothing here is dressed up.
A clearly defined audience, not a demographic mix. Most viewers fall inside the same age, gender, and region — which makes targeting predictable.
Three things the dashboard alone doesn't show — but matter when you're picking a channel to work with.
The audience is mostly young men in India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, aged 18–34, interested in editing, freelancing, and online income. If your product is built for that person, the targeting is already done.
Most channels in this niche speak English to an Indian audience. MGS.Creator speaks Hindi — the language viewers actually think in. That builds a kind of trust English channels can't easily reach.
A recent video on the best Mac setup for editing under ₹60K became a strong outlier within two weeks. Hardware, software, and setup content tend to work — which lines up neatly with what most sponsors want to talk about.
A snapshot of recent performers. A sponsorship would sit alongside videos like these.
These are the formats my audience already watches on the channel. If your tool fits naturally into one of them, the integration tends to feel less like an ad and more like a recommendation.
Walkthroughs, best-tool roundups, and "X vs Y" videos for editors choosing what to learn or buy next.
Mac, PC, and mobile editing setups built around real Indian budgets — the videos viewers come back to before a hardware purchase.
How to land clients, write proposals, run cold outreach, and price work as a freelance editor or creator from India.
Practical guides for receiving USD, comparing platforms, and reducing fees on international payments.
How freelancers and creators build a portfolio site, pick a host, and look credible to international clients.
Honest reviews and use-cases for the AI tools changing how editors and freelancers work day to day.
Tutorials and reviews of software that helps freelancers run their work — invoicing, scheduling, client management.
Stock footage, music, presets, LUTs, and templates editors actually need to deliver client work faster.
Pick the format that fits the goal. Pricing on request — every package is shaped around what your team actually needs.
A 60–90 second native segment inside a relevant tutorial or setup video. Reads like a recommendation, not an ad.
A full-length video built around your product — review, tutorial, or "best tool for X" angle. The most space and the most trust.
A multi-video package for brands that want to be present over several months. Better economics, steadier results.
Send a quick note about what you sell and what you'd want from the partnership. I'll come back with a proposal shaped around your goal — not a generic rate sheet.