If you own a small or medium-sized business, you know all too well the frustration of chasing new customers instead of attracting them automatically. The vast majority of SME owners experiment with random tactics from social media, hoping one of them works. That's exactly the problem the YouTube channel Obaz was built to solve.
Instead of one more channel overflowing with surface-level advice, Obaz markets itself as a resource for entrepreneurs and SME owners who are tired of marketing built on luck and searching for a system instead of a gamble.
What the Channel Actually Teaches
Driving the channel is their signature framework the Customer Magnet Process. In place of one-off strategies, the content guide business owners step-by-step through a structured approach to attracting and converting customers. At a high level, the channel covers three core areas:
Finding your unique advantage — showing business owners how to pin down exactly who their ideal buyer is.
Building intent-based marketing strategies — so that the business attracts demand rather than chasing it.
Converting customers into long-term advocates — stretching the return from each customer far past the first sale.
The approach isn't a hype-driven sales pitch. It's built around doing the work, which is a refreshing change from the typical "guru" content filling up YouTube's business space.
Who It's For
The channel is clearly aimed at founders running an established or growing business — rather than complete beginners with no business yet. It's tailored to those with some existing operations, and the emphasis is growing it a system that generates customers on autopilot.
Why It Stands Out
The thing that makes Obaz notable is its check here focused positioning: nearly each piece of content reinforces the core promise — moving businesses from unpredictable, hope-based marketing into a structured acquisition system. As an SME owner drowning in too many "shiny object" tactics, that kind of focus can be a welcome relief.
The Bottom Line
If your business is trying to move past random marketing experiments, the Obaz (Online Business A to Z) channel is worth a look. This isn't a channel that will sell you a shortcut — but it provides a clear, structured path for business owners who want customers on demand.