Microsoft UX Design Professional Certificate vs Graphic Design Masterclass - Learn GREAT Design
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Microsoft via Coursera · Design
Microsoft UX Design Professional Certificate
Udemy · Design
Graphic Design Masterclass - Learn GREAT Design
Per-criterion
The certificate is four courses, completable in roughly two months, and covers human-centred design fundamentals, UX research, accessibility and inclusive design, and prototyping. Reviewers consistently describe the content as up-to-date and aligned with current industry practice, with a notable emphasis on AI in UX and on Microsoft's own Fluent 2 design system. The trade-off versus Google's seven-course program is breadth: Microsoft's path is more concise, which beginners like but which leaves less room for depth on research methods.
Like most Coursera professional certificates, this is a curriculum-by-organisation production rather than a single charismatic instructor. Reviewers credit the Microsoft brand for lending credibility and praise the clear, structured presentation, but there is no standout teacher personality that learners rally around the way they do with a single-instructor Udemy or Domestika course. Delivery is polished and professional rather than memorable.
At Coursera's roughly $49/month, a motivated learner can finish in two months for under $100 — genuinely strong value for a portfolio-producing UX program, and cheaper than completing the longer Google certificate. Multiple reviewers single out cost-efficiency as a reason to pick it. The audit option and financial aid lower the barrier further. The main caveat is the subscription clock: slow finishers pay more.
The program includes hands-on projects in Figma and PowerPoint that build toward a professional portfolio, and reviewers value that you leave with tangible artefacts rather than only quizzes. The recurring criticism is that the Figma practice is too light for true beginners — one reviewer wanted dedicated hands-on workshops to get newcomers comfortable with the tool before the projects, rather than learning it on the fly.
Skills map to real corporate UX work, especially within Microsoft-stack and Fluent environments, and the accessibility/inclusive-design emphasis is genuinely employer-relevant. The honest limit, repeated across reviews, is that the certificate alone does not make you job-ready or guarantee a role — it is a solid foundation plus a starter portfolio, and Microsoft's brand carries less UX-hiring recognition than Google's.
A genuinely broad beginner-to-intermediate curriculum — typography, colour theory, layout and composition, photo editing, magazine layout, branding and logo design, plus the basics of Photoshop, Illustrator and InDesign across 16+ hours of video. Praised for blending design theory with software, not just one or the other. Capped because the same breadth means no single topic (type, branding, motion) gets specialist depth.
Lindsay Marsh is the most-cited strength across our corpus — calm, clear, well-paced, and good at breaking theory into digestible segments. Two decades of freelance brand work give her real credibility. The one recurring caveat reviewers raise is that her background is freelance and small-to-medium brands rather than large-enterprise design teams.
The strongest dimension. A 16+ hour project-based course that lists at ~$200 but realistically sells for ~$12 during Udemy's near-constant sales, with lifetime access, certificate of completion and downloadable templates. For the sale price the value case is hard to argue with — the main caveat is the well-known Udemy price-anchoring discount theatre.
Real-world projects (magazine layouts, logo work, branding exercises) build a beginner portfolio and are the part learners credit most for making the theory stick. Downloadable templates support each project. Capped because Udemy offers no graded submission or peer critique — you complete projects alone with no structured feedback loop.
Learners report the fundamentals and software workflows transfer directly to freelance and junior design work, and recent updates add current skills like Photoshop generative fill. Limit is that a single Udemy certificate is not a hiring credential on its own, and the course does not cover client process, pricing or the business of running design work.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.