The Lifting & Rigging Channel® focuses on safer, smarter lifting and material handling, including rigging, crane training, fall protection, and related safety practices. Content spans how-to tutorials, gear breakdowns, and expert interviews, plus a podcast, Safety Factor, with an overall emphasis on best practices and inspections. The channel publishes 633 videos since 2014, with an average of about 1.6K views per video and a typical runtime around 8 minutes; it operates from the United States and has 43.9K subscribers and 5.8M total views.
Similar Channels
We found 39 YouTube channels similar to The Lifting & Rigging Channel®
Both channels target rigging and lifting professionals, sharing searches like rigging training and rigging inspection checklists, with Crosby’s content aligned to industry-grade rigging practices (content similarity 76%) and strong audience overlap (search 100%, total 86% match).
rigging trainingrigging hardware inspectionlashing and rigging
They cover rigging topics such as rigging training and hardware inspection, aligning with The Lifting & Rigging Channel’s audience on practical rigging how-tos, though their content style is less similar (content 70%) than their audience overlap (search 92%).
ITI’s focus on crane operation safety and rigging inspection mirrors The Lifting & Rigging Channel’s safety and rigging fundamentals, yielding a high audience alignment (search 84%) while their content approach remains moderately distinct (content 75%).
Both channels address lifting and crane safety basics for a broad safety audience, sharing core queries like lifting equipment safety, though HSE STudy Guide’s content style diverges more (content 69%) from The Lifting & Rigging Channel (search 70%).
HSE Hub targets lifting and crane safety similarly to The Lifting & Rigging Channel, resulting in notable search overlap (59%) and a strong content alignment (73%), indicating similar topics but differing in delivery.
Both channels produce safety-focused content touching on crane operation and load securing, leading to overlapping search terms (57%) and solid content alignment (72%), though SafetyVideos.com covers broader safety topics beyond rigging.
Content Landscape
Top competitors include Crosby (86% match) and Industrial Training International (79% match), both aligning with overlapping queries like rigging training and rigging inspection checklists. Baxter Builders LLC (79% match) also aligns on rigging training and hardware inspection. HSE STUDY GUIDE (70% match) and HSE Hub (67% match) share broader safety-focused queries such as lifting equipment safety and crane operation safety. Crosby, with 19.4K subscribers, and Industrial Training International, with 6.8K subscribers, dwarf The Lifting & Rigging Channel® in audience size, illustrating a range of established players in rigging safety and training alongside smaller, specialized channels. All identified competitors center on similar topics: rigging training, crane and lifting safety, and inspection-related queries.
Which YouTube channels are most similar to The Lifting & Rigging Channel®?
The Lifting & Rigging Channel®'s biggest competitors on YouTube are Crosby (86% match, 19.4K subscribers), Baxter Builders LLC (79% match, 3.3K subscribers), and Industrial Training International (79% match, 6.8K subscribers). They share a focus on lifting and rigging training, safety, and related industrial equipment, targeting professionals in handling, rigging, and crane operations.
What type of content does The Lifting & Rigging Channel® make?
The Lifting & Rigging Channel® creates instructional and safety-focused content related to lifting and rigging, including topics like chain vs synthetic slings, SRLs, crane maintenance, and fall protection. The channel has an average of about 1.6K views per video, and an unspecified weekly upload frequency, with recent videos ranging from 306 to 12.7K views.
How do we determine which channels are similar to The Lifting & Rigging Channel®?
We analyze The Lifting & Rigging Channel®'s recent videos, generate topic-relevant search queries, check YouTube search results, and compare the meaning of each channel's content to measure similarity. The result is a ranked list sorted by SERP overlap, semantic similarity, and search appearances.