Somewhere in India, a student preparing for a government exam wakes up early, opens Telegram, and finds five or six live class links already waiting. That is essentially the daily reality inside Rojgaar with Ankit, one of the more prolific government job preparation channels operating on the platform today.
The channel, run under the brand of educator Ankit, is squarely aimed at aspirants chasing sarkari naukri — government employment in India. This is an enormous and intensely competitive space, covering exams like SSC, Railways, banking, and state-level recruitment boards. Millions of young Indians spend years preparing for these tests, and the demand for affordable, accessible coaching has fueled an entire ecosystem of YouTube educators and Telegram channels. Rojgaar with Ankit is a well-established name within that ecosystem, boasting over 1.27 million subscribers on this channel alone, with a broader presence across multiple YouTube channels, a dedicated app, and a helpline number for direct support.
In terms of posting frequency, the channel is relentless. On a single day — April 7, for instance — six YouTube live session links were dropped between early morning and midday. The pattern repeats daily, with sessions covering what are presumably different subjects or exam categories, each handled by different educators under the broader Rojgaar with Ankit umbrella. The channel also occasionally cross-promotes associated educators, such as a recent post directing followers to Sonveer Malik RWA, suggesting a network of teachers rather than a solo operation.
Here is where honest criticism is warranted: the Telegram channel itself functions almost entirely as a notification board. Every post is a bare YouTube link — no context, no subject label, no description of what the session covers. A newcomer scrolling through has no way of knowing whether a given link is about mathematics, general awareness, English grammar, or current affairs. For a channel serving over a million subscribers, this is a surprisingly bare-bones approach to content curation.
That said, the sheer volume of free live content being pushed through is genuinely valuable for its target audience. Students who are already familiar with the format and the educators know what to expect and can pick sessions relevant to their exam. The ecosystem — app, YouTube, Telegram, helpline — suggests a serious operation rather than a fly-by-night coaching account.
The channel works best as a supplementary tool for someone already enrolled in or following the Rojgaar with Ankit ecosystem. If you stumble upon it cold, the wall of unlabeled links offers little orientation. But for a dedicated government exam aspirant in India looking for a constant stream of free live classes, this channel delivers volume and consistency that few rivals can match. Subscribe if you are in that specific lane — skip it if you are not.