Inbound Sales Certification vs Digital Marketing Foundations
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
HubSpot Academy · Business & Marketing
Inbound Sales Certification
LinkedIn Learning · Business & Marketing
Digital Marketing Foundations
Per-criterion
Reviewers consistently describe the production and structure as polished and beginner-friendly. The four-stage Identify, Connect, Explore, Advise framework gives newcomers a clear consultative model, and the Adilo review praises the material as high-quality work any newbie can use. The trade-off is depth — experienced sellers flag the content as foundational rather than advanced, and several note the buyer's-journey framing is presented through HubSpot's specific vocabulary rather than a vendor-neutral textbook.
HubSpot Academy's instructors come across as credible and easy to follow, and the brand weight reassures beginners. A HubSpot Community member called the video tutorials and explanations from the academy professors very user friendly and easy to follow. The mild criticism is that production polish outpaces individual instructor depth, and the discipline of selling lives in judgement that short videos can only gesture at.
The credential is globally recognised and a genuine tiebreaker for junior and HubSpot-centric roles, and reviewers report it adds weight to a resume. But the consensus across the HubSpot Community and blogs is blunt: certifications alone do not land a job, they signal foundational literacy that must be paired with real pipeline experience to matter.
The certification is video plus a multiple-choice exam — there are no graded hands-on projects inside the free Academy version, which is the main practical gap reviewers raise. Forum members repeatedly stress that the academy teaches the basics but you only really learn by doing actual sales. The Coursera-hosted version of the same material does add a guided final project, which is the better route for learners who want applied practice.
The course and the shareable certificate are both completely free with a HubSpot Academy account, with no audit-versus-paid split. Reviewers across Lean Labs, Bluleadz and Adilo single this out as the strongest argument for taking it. The only recurring value caveat is expiry — the credential lapses after roughly one to two years and must be re-taken to stay current on a LinkedIn profile.
A 2-hour beginner course that spans funnels, buyer journeys, value propositions, paid channels, social, email and analytics. Reviewers call it "concise" and "well-organized", though a few note it is broad rather than deep on any single channel.
Brad Batesole, LinkedIn's in-house marketing author, is the most-praised element. Learners describe the instructor as "GREAT" and say he explains concepts clearly enough for people from outside marketing to follow.
Included in a LinkedIn Learning subscription (~$39.99/mo monthly, less annually) rather than a one-time purchase — strong value if you use the wider catalog and the LinkedIn profile certificate, weaker for a single 2-hour course.
Built around reusable frameworks — the marketing funnel, buyer-journey mapping, value propositions, personas, KPIs and growth loops — that learners say they could "understand and apply". The funnel model is the course's backbone.
Concepts map directly to real campaigns (paid ads, social, email, analytics) and a Nike case study. The main gap reviewers raise platform-wide is limited hands-on practice — it is video-led, so you apply it on your own.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.