Building Systems with the ChatGPT API vs Google Data Analytics Professional Certificate
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
DeepLearning.AI · AI & ML Courses
Building Systems with the ChatGPT API
Google (Coursera) · AI & ML Courses
Google Data Analytics Professional Certificate
Per-criterion
Across 11 short lessons (roughly 90 minutes total), the course covers a complete pipeline for multi-step LLM systems: how language models and tokenisation work, the chat format and system-user message separation, input classification for query routing, the OpenAI Moderation API, chain-of-thought prompting to handle multi-step questions, chaining several focused prompts where each consumes the previous output, output checking, and a two-part section on evaluating LLM responses at the system level. Reviewers consistently praise the logical progression and the theory-to-practice balance. The principal mark-down is age and depth: the course was built on GPT-3.5 Turbo in 2023 and has not been meaningfully updated, so it predates tool calling, structured JSON outputs, and reasoning models, and it stops short of real-world deployment concerns such as latency management, cost at scale, and production observability.
Isa Fulford, Member of Technical Staff at OpenAI, leads the code demonstrations while Andrew Ng frames the broader concepts and asks the questions a beginner would actually ask. Reviewers across blogs and Coursera call the pairing "highly knowledgeable and effective communicators." The teacher-demonstrator dynamic mirrors how a learner thinks through a new problem step by step, keeping each lesson of five to twenty minutes focused and coherent. Because Fulford comes directly from the team that built the ChatGPT API, the design decisions behind the Moderation API, the chat format, and tokenisation carry genuine authority rather than third-hand explanation.
The course is free on the DeepLearning.AI platform with every Jupyter notebook runnable directly in-browser — no OpenAI API key, no local Python environment, and no subscription required. The Coursera guided-project version is also free to audit. For roughly 90 minutes of hands-on instruction from two of the most credible names in the field, delivering reusable architecture patterns for multi-step LLM systems, the value proposition is essentially unmatched among paid or free alternatives. The only caveats are that a graded assignment and certificate on the Coursera version sit behind a paid enrolment, and the free tier leaves no portfolio artefact by default.
The patterns taught — classify the input, moderate for safety, reason in steps, chain focused prompts rather than one monolithic prompt, then evaluate the output — are exactly how production LLM features are structured in practice. Multiple reviewers note that the progression from basic API calls to a multi-stage orchestrated system reflects real engineering work. The gap is that the 2023 course predates the patterns now central to production LLM development (tool calling, structured outputs, retrieval-augmented generation), and at least one practitioner reviewer noted that the finished chatbot example would require substantial hardening before it approached something ready for deployment beyond a prototype.
Every lesson pairs a video with a runnable Jupyter notebook, and the course builds one coherent end-to-end example: a customer-service chatbot that classifies incoming queries, runs them through the Moderation API, applies chain-of-thought prompting to multi-step reasoning, chains successive focused prompts, retrieves product information, and evaluates whether its own output actually addresses the user's question. The Coursera version holds a 4.7/5 rating across 346 learners. The caveat is that there is no graded project or kept portfolio artefact on the free tier, and the supplied notebooks now require fixes (deprecated API syntax, missing helper files) to run locally outside the course sandbox.
Broad 8-course survey of Sheets, SQL, Tableau and (since 2025) Python — covers the analyst toolchain. Reviewers flag weeks 1-3 as filler career talk and the SQL/Tableau modules as too shallow given how central both are to analyst work.
A roster of Google practitioner-instructors with different styles per course — Sally on data cleaning draws praise, others draw fire for narrating instead of teaching. No single pedagogical voice, quality swings hard between modules.
$49/month Coursera subscription with a 7-day free trial — most learners finish in 3-6 months for $150-300 total, financial aid available, free audit possible. The Google brand carries modest but real CV weight for entry-level analyst roles.
Browser-hosted labs remove install friction. Beyond that, support is forum-only — no live TAs, no office hours — and the capstone uses peer grading that draws consistent complaints about low-effort feedback and no instructor sign-off.
Capstone produces a portfolio piece, but reviewers note the bike-share dataset breaks free RStudio and SQL exercises rely on copy-paste. Pairing with Kaggle, a BI tool like Power BI and personal projects is flagged as necessary before applying for analyst jobs.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.