IBM Applied AI Professional Certificate vs Machine Learning Engineering for Production (MLOps) Specialization
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
IBM / Coursera · AI & ML Courses
IBM Applied AI Professional Certificate
DeepLearning.AI (Coursera) · AI & ML Courses
Machine Learning Engineering for Production (MLOps) Specialization
Per-criterion
The seven-course structure covers AI fundamentals, IBM Watson services, chatbot development without programming, Python for data science, Watson APIs, and computer vision with OpenCV — a well-rounded beginner sweep. Hands-on labs and working model projects are consistently praised. The honest weakness is the heavy IBM Watson dependency: Watson holds roughly 0.05% AI market share versus OpenAI's 13%, and critics note that Watson-specific skills have limited transferability outside enterprise IBM environments. The program has been updated to add generative AI content, which partially addresses this, but earlier cohorts encountered considerable Watson lock-in.
Instructors are IBM employees — data scientists, software engineers, and subject matter specialists with documented LinkedIn profiles. Reviewers consistently describe them as knowledgeable and credible. The main criticism is not quality but style: some technical terminology in the Introduction to AI module assumes prior knowledge, and learners without IT backgrounds report needing supplementary resources to keep up. No single standout educator equivalent to an Andrew Ng anchors the series, which is a noticeable gap compared to other Coursera professional certificates.
At approximately $49/month and a three-month target completion, the total cost runs around $147 — competitive for a beginner professional certificate. However, the program is not included in the Coursera Plus subscription, which reviewers flag as a significant friction point when budgeting against other Coursera content. The IBM digital badge and Coursera certificate add credential value, and the IBM brand carries weight specifically in enterprise hiring contexts. For learners already on Coursera Plus for other content, the separate cost feels harder to justify.
Support follows standard Coursera self-paced norms: discussion forums, peer review assignments, and no live instructor access. Peer grading on Coursera has attracted repeated platform-wide complaints about inconsistency and slow turnaround. One documented support case involved a student whose account was migrated to the updated IBM AI Developer version mid-course, requiring a chat support escalation to resolve. Lab instructions were cited by multiple reviewers as lacking sufficient detail, creating friction particularly for complete beginners.
The program's strongest suit is its portfolio of working deliverables: learners build an AI-powered chatbot integrated with Watson Discovery, a custom image classifier, a computer vision application, and a deployed web app using Watson APIs. These are tangible projects suitable for LinkedIn and GitHub. The limitation is context: IBM Watson tools are dominant in enterprise accounts but rarely encountered in startups or consumer tech; hiring managers outside IBM's ecosystem may be unfamiliar with the toolchain. Supplementing with broader cloud-platform and open-source framework experience is widely recommended.
Course 1 (Ng's ML production lifecycle) is widely praised as the strongest conceptual MLOps material on the market, but courses 2-4 lean heavily on TFX and Google Cloud labs that look increasingly out of step with the MLflow/Airflow stack most teams actually run.
Andrew Ng's lectures in Course 1 get near-universal praise; Robert Crowe and Laurence Moroney (both Google) are competent on the TFX material but reviewers consistently note Course 2's instruction is denser and harder to follow than Ng's.
As of May 2024 DeepLearning.AI closed enrollment for the full 4-course specialization — only Course 1 remains as a standalone. The remaining course is strong for $49/month, but the bundle most reviewers analyzed is no longer purchasable.
Active DeepLearning.AI community forum and browser-hosted Jupyter labs work well in Course 1, but recent Coursera reviewers flag that discussion forums on the standalone course were removed and ungraded labs are now paywalled behind the certificate subscription.
The data-centric AI framing and Course 1's production-system thinking transfer cleanly to any ML team. The deeper TFX pipeline work in courses 2-4 transfers only if your team is on the Google/TensorFlow stack — for MLflow, Kubeflow, Metaflow or PyTorch teams much of it does not.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.