SEO Certification vs Google Digital Marketing & E-commerce 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.
HubSpot Academy · Business & Marketing
SEO Certification
Google (Coursera) · Business & Marketing
Google Digital Marketing & E-commerce Professional Certificate
Per-criterion
Eight lessons and 26 videos give clean, well-structured coverage of search fundamentals, on-page and technical SEO, keyword research, link building, and structured data. Production and clarity are strong, but the depth stops at introductory and several modules lean toward HubSpot's inbound framing rather than execution.
Lessons are delivered by HubSpot Academy professors with a clear, approachable teaching style that beginners consistently praise. There is less external practitioner depth than HubSpot's social or content certifications, and experienced SEOs find the instruction conceptual rather than hands-on.
Entirely free — course, exam, and shareable certificate with only an email signup. No audit-versus-paid split. The zero-cost structure is the single most cited reason reviewers recommend it, even those who criticise its depth.
Useful frameworks for title tags, meta descriptions, keyword intent, topic clusters, and reporting via Google Analytics and Search Console. Critics note the course is heavily theory-driven and light on hands-on implementation, so frameworks need supplementing with real practice.
Good grounding for content marketers and copywriters who touch SEO, and the SERP and on-page lessons transfer directly. But SEO changes fast, advanced technical and programmatic topics are absent, and the certificate carries modest hiring weight versus Google or hands-on portfolios.
Seven well-produced courses take a true beginner from marketing fundamentals through SEO, email, social, paid ads, analytics, and e-commerce, with hands-on labs in real tools. The honest weakness is that the Google Ads and Analytics modules lag the current GA4 interface, so some screens and terminology feel dated.
Lessons are taught by Google employees and subject-matter experts, and the production is clean, structured, and approachable for someone with zero background. It is recorded video rather than live instruction, so there is no personalised feedback — but for a self-paced foundation the teaching is consistently rated highly.
At $49/month on Coursera and a typical three-to-six-month completion, most learners finish for under $300 — and the materials can be audited free without graded quizzes. For a recognised, Google-branded credential plus a capstone portfolio piece, reviewers consistently call this the strongest part of the deal.
You build real ad campaigns, set up a Shopify store, design assets in Canva, and work through customer-journey and marketing-funnel frameworks rather than just reading theory. Reviewers describe it as "job training, not school." The frameworks are entry-level, not advanced strategy.
The capstone produces a portfolio piece you can show in interviews, and Google reports 75% of graduates see a positive career outcome within six months. The fair caveat from independent reviewers: the certificate opens interviews, it does not guarantee a job, and coverage stays surface-level.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.