Marketing Analytics with Python vs Excel Essential Training (Microsoft 365)
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
DataCamp · Business & Marketing
Marketing Analytics with Python
LinkedIn Learning · Dennis Taylor · Business & Marketing
Excel Essential Training (Microsoft 365)
Per-criterion
Marketing Analytics with Python
The seven-course sequence is logically ordered and covers the full marketing analytics stack — campaign analysis with pandas, social media data, market basket analysis, customer segmentation, churn prediction, and A/B testing. Reviewers of DataCamp's analytics tracks consistently praise the curriculum architecture as "very well thought out." The main deduction comes from breadth winning over depth: each course runs only four hours, so topics like statistical significance in A/B testing and machine learning for CLV forecasting are introduced rather than thoroughly worked through.
The track uses specialist instructors per course — including Karolis Urbonas (Head of ML at Amazon) for Customer Segmentation and Machine Learning for Marketing, which draws strong learner praise for real-world credibility. Presentation quality across DataCamp is consistently polished, though with seven different instructors across the track there is no single pedagogical voice, and quality variation between courses is a recurring theme in DataCamp reviews broadly.
At roughly $25-39 per month (or $13-16 on the annual plan), the DataCamp subscription unlocks this track alongside 670+ additional courses in Python, SQL, R, Power BI, and Tableau — making it exceptional value for committed learners using the platform across multiple tracks. Reviewers consistently flag that the annual subscription is mandatory for good value; the monthly rate at $39 draws frequent criticism and is difficult to justify for a single track. Most experienced users recommend waiting for promotional pricing (commonly 50% off).
The track covers genuinely applied marketing topics — campaign funnel analysis, cohort analysis, RFM segmentation, churn modelling with scikit-learn, and market basket analysis — using real retail and social media datasets. Multiple reviewers of DataCamp's analytics courses note a persistent gap between the clean, pre-structured platform datasets and the messy, undocumented data analysts encounter in real roles. The fill-in-the-blank exercise format limits independent problem-solving and does not replicate the experience of working in a local IDE or Jupyter environment.
There is no live instructor access, no peer cohort, and no moderated community forum specific to marketing analytics. Learners navigate hints, an AI code reviewer, and DataCamp's general community. Self-directed marketers with some Python background cope reasonably well; total beginners who get stuck mid-track have limited recourse beyond repeating exercises. This is a structural platform limitation that affects all DataCamp tracks equally.
Excel Essential Training (Microsoft 365)
Clear, well-paced and current — the 2025 Microsoft 365 refresh covers PivotTables, charts, multi-sheet formulas and Microsoft Copilot inside Excel. Depth stops at "essential," so power users wanting Power Query, dynamic arrays or VBA outgrow it quickly.
Dennis Taylor has taught Excel on this platform since the Lynda.com era. Reviewers reach for the same words — calm, clear, methodical. The 4.7-star aggregate from 8,000+ LinkedIn Learning ratings reflects unusually consistent praise for delivery.
Bundled in the LinkedIn Learning subscription (~$40/month or via LinkedIn Premium). HN commenters repeatedly flag that most US public libraries offer free LinkedIn Learning access via library card — which moves this to effectively free for many readers.
Coherent walkthrough of the daily Excel surface — data entry, formulas, formatting, charts, PivotTables, multi-workbook references, Copilot prompts. Stops short of the analyst-grade stack — Power Query, Power Pivot, dynamic arrays, LAMBDA — driving modern Excel work.
Excel is one of the most universally job-applicable skills in business, and Taylor's coverage maps cleanly onto what finance, ops, marketing and admin touch daily. Ceiling — data-analyst roles still need Power Query and deeper pivots this course barely touches.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.